Birth Place: | Canada |
Birth Name: | Milan Schere |
Spouse: | Seema Schere |
Years Active: | 2007-Current |
Awards: | Genie 2011 |
Milan Schere is a Canadian matte painter and filmmaker, best known for his work on . In 2011 he received a best Visual Effects in Canadian cinema award nomination by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television for his 1907 New York City skyline period matte painting work in the feature film A Dangerous Method.
Before becoming a visual effects artist, Schere earned a master's degree in Digital Effects from Bournemouth University, England. He remained in England, working in broadcast design on a number of popular BBC documentaries and the motion picture Dredd.
He has overall had a great influence on the matte painting community as he was on the forefront of camera projection mapping and one of the first digital matte artists to implement the 3D texturing tool Mari into the digital environment creation process.
Schere co-authored the book D'artiste Matte Painting 3: Digital Artists Master Class in which he shares of his work process and industry experiences throughout his career. He has also published papers on the subject of matte painting. Interviews of Schere have been featured in multiple media and print publications such as Cinefex and the American Cinematographer for his work on Get On Up.
His filmography includes Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,, RoboCop, The Shape of Water, Greenland and The Addams Family 2. In addition to his feature film work, he is also known to fans of the television series Vikings for the numerous digital backdrops he created.
Besides his matte painting experience as an artist, Schere has directed a number of commercials, music videos and short films. He has worked as visual effects supervisor on development projects and obtained a credit as digital effects supervisor on the Apple TV+ series Shantaram.
Today, Schere is the Head of Environments at award winning visual effects studio DNEG contributing to projects such as The Last of Us, and Mickey 17. The company, formerly known as Double Negative VFX, has received seven Academy Awards for its work on Inception, Interstellar, Ex Machina, Blade Runner 2049, First Man, Tenet and Dune.
for A Dangerous Method (2011)
for (2012)