Digital Domain | |
Type: | Private |
Key People: | Daniel Seah (CEO) |
Industry: | Motion picture |
Owner: | Digital Domain Holdings Limited |
Homepage: | |
Founders: | James Cameron Scott Ross Stan Winston |
Location City: | Playa Vista, Los Angeles, California |
Location Country: | United States |
Digital Domain (also known as Digital Domain Media Group or DDMG) is a global visual effects and digital production company headquartered in Playa Vista, Los Angeles, California.
Digital Domain produced effects for more than 500 films, including Dante's Peak, Titanic, Apollo 13, What Dreams May Come, The Fifth Element, Armageddon, and The Day After Tomorrow.
The company is known for creating digital imagery for future films, episodics, advertising and games, and virtual and immersive experiences from its nine locations across North America and Asia in Los Angeles, Vancouver, Montreal, Hyderabad, Luxembourg, Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong.[1]
The company was founded by film director James Cameron, Stan Winston and Scott Ross in 1993. They began producing visual effects in 1993 with its first three films, True Lies, Interview with the Vampire, and Color of Night, being released in 1994.
In October 2002, Digital Domain launched a wholly owned subsidiary, D2 Software, Inc., to market and distribute its Academy Award-winning compositing software, Nuke.[2]
In 2002–2003, Digital Domain co-produced its first feature film, Secondhand Lions, written and directed by Tim McCanlies and starring Michael Caine, Robert Duvall, Haley Joel Osment, and Kyra Sedgwick.[3] [4]
The founders were known for feuding, principally due to internal conflicts over the film Titanic. Founder Scott Ross announced plans to raise $100 million in financing to become more active as a production company.[5] This plan never materialized, forcing management to seek a buyer of the company.
In May 2006, Digital Domain was purchased by an affiliate of Wyndcrest Holdings, LLC, a private holding company. Wyndcrest's principals then included founder John Textor, director Michael Bay, former Microsoft executive Carl Stork and former NFL player and sports television commentator Dan Marino.[6] The buyers purchased the company for an estimated $35 million. Textor and Bay would become co-chairman of Digital Domain and Stork was named CEO.
In 2007, Wyndcrest also acquired The Foundry which was tasked with taking over the development of Nuke. The Foundry was subject to a management buy-out in 2009.[7]
In 2011, Digital Domain Media Group entered into the film production business with a major investment into the feature film Ender's Game, which was a co-production with OddLot Entertainment and Summit Entertainment. The film was released November 1, 2013.[8]
In November 2011, DDMG took the company public through an initial public offering (IPO), and the company was listed on the NYSE under the symbol DDMG, achieving a market valuation of more than $400 million.[9]
In 2012, subsidiary Digital Domain created a virtual likeness of the late rap star Tupac Shakur for Dr. Dre's and Snoop Dogg's show at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. The performance earned Textor's studio the Titanium Award at the 59th annual Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.[10] [11] Digital Domain also announced that the company would create virtual Elvis Presley in partnership with CORE Media Group.[12]
In 2015, the UFC hired Digital Domain to create a commercial series for their UFC 189 event.[13]
In 2016, the Pokémon Company hired Digital Domain to create the visual effects for their "Train On" Super Bowl ad, released to celebrate the Pokémon series' 20th anniversary.[14]
In 2017, Voltron Chronicles, a VR game Digital Domain co-developed with Universal based on Netflix's Voltron Legendary Defender, went live. Fans can play this game on PSVR, Oculus Rift and HTC Vive for $15.[15]
In 2018, Digital Domain celebrated its 25th anniversary while announcing the opening of its second Canadian studio in Montreal, Quebec.[16]
In 2019, Digital Domain Head of Software and virtual avatar DigiDoug presented a talk during TED2019 as the first digital human to give a TED Talk in real-time.[17]
In 2020, Digital Domain introduced Masquerade 2.0, the next iteration of its in-house facial capture system, rebuilt from the ground up to bring feature film-quality characters to next-gen games, episodics and commercials.[18] Masquerade 2.0 uses the same tech that was utilized to create Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. The development allows the technology to be applied to smaller projects, bringing the full depth and emotion of an actor’s performance to any screen.[19]
In 2021, Digital Domain utilized its new proprietary face-swapping tool, Charlatan, to create a realistic hologram/digital human combination of Vince Lombardi for Super Bowl LV.[20]
In 2022, Digital Domain announced “Zoey,” the world’s most advanced autonomous virtual human.[21] Powered by machine learning and created using an advanced version of the technology and process that helped bring Thanos to the big screen, the photorealistic Zoey can engage in conversations with multiple participants at once, remember people, access the internet to answer questions and more, paving the way for the next step in the evolution of AI.
The company has a sub-division called New Media Group, which is currently led by Hanno Basse, the Chief Technology Officer. This sub-division provides machine learning-based scanning and digitization services to create immersive experiences for any screen.The process involves two programs called Masquerade and Direct Drive, which use high-resolution scans and motion capture technology. The data generated by these programs can be mapped and animated to create compelling visual experiences.[22]
In 2009, Digital Domain parent company DDMG launched Tradition Studios in Florida to develop and produce original, family-oriented CG animated features. The studio moved on January 3, 2012, to a new 115000square feet facility in Port St. Lucie, built with the city's incentives.[23] The studio attracted a number of creators, including Aaron Blaise, the director of Brother Bear, and Brad Lewis, co-director of Cars 2, who together were developing an animated feature film The Legend of Tembo for a planned 2014 release.[24] [25] [26] [27]
In November 2011, DDMG completed a successful IPO capital raise for $40 million. Textor's Florida expansion plans did not overcome the continuing negative cash flow of Digital Domain's primary visual effects business. In the summer of 2011, Lydian Private Bank failed.[28] As DDMG's principal lender and major shareholder, this had a major impact during the peak of DDMG's capital consumption. Lydian's sizable stake was sold to a hedge fund affiliated with Florida Power & Light which was then traded to hedge fund and lender Tenor Capital. Tenor Capital engaged in heavy short-selling of DDMG's publicly listed stock as a strategy to pull cash proceeds from the daily trading of DDMG stock.
Once considered critical funding for the future of DDMG, the IPO became the vehicle by which hedge funds could prevent the company from accessing capital while profiting from the decline in DDMG's stock price.[29] Tenor became a stakeholder in DDMG in early May 2012, with DDMG stock price trading at an all-time high,[30] but DDMG would soon be unable to access the cash needed to fund its Venice operations and its Florida studio growth.[31] Documents and emails demonstrate that Digital Domain senior management believed they had options to put cash into the company. However, Tenor Capital had significant weight as a chief lender and, according to Palm Beach Capital and the Tenor strategy, may have been shorting DDMG stock to profit from its failure.[32]
When a deal to fund the company failed on July 31, Tenor Capital cited a violation of a minimum cash covenant and demanded $51 million on August 20 as repayment for its $35 million loan made four months earlier. The lenders appointed Mike Katzenstein as interim chief operating officer of the company who acted without conferring with DDMG senior management, deciding to close the Florida studio, causing Chairman John Textor to submit a letter of resignation "in profound disagreement" with this decision.[33]
On September 7, 2012, it was announced that all of DDMG's Port St. Lucie's operations—including Tradition Studios—were to be shut down, laying off nearly 300 newly trained and recruited employees.[34]
On September 11, 2012, Digital Domain Media Group Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after the company's hedge fund lenders alleged the company defaulted on a minimum cash covenant relating to a $35 million loan. DDMG's lenders proposed a deal to sell its operating businesses–Digital Domain and Mothership—to a private investment firm, Searchlight Capital Partners, for $15 million. At the public auction on September 21, 2012, Digital Domain's visual effects business and its principal animation feature film properties were instead acquired by a joint venture led by a leading DDMG shareholder Beijing Galloping Horse America, LLC in partnership with Reliance MediaWorks (USA) The sale was approved on September 24, 2012.[35]
In July 2013, approximately nine months after Digital Domain filed for bankruptcy, the majority ownership was acquired by Hong Kong listed public company Sun Innovation. This acquisition placed an approximate $3.5 billion valuation on Digital Domain, with Reliance MediaWorks continuing to own the minority stake. Daniel Seah was appointed CEO.[36] Seah spearheaded the bankruptcy acquisition and protection of Digital Domain by DDMG shareholder Beijing Galloping Horse America, LLC.
The bankruptcy and financial restructuring of Digital Domain triggered a number of lawsuits naming John Textor, former Apple CEO John Sculley and the entire Board of Directors, the auditors and others involved in the business and in the IPO offering.[37] [38] [39] [40]
In February 2015, the Supreme Court of New York and the Inspector General of the State of Florida cleared Textor of any financial wrongdoing,[41] [42] and The Athletic reported that he had received a settlement from the hedge fund that caused the collapse.[43] [44]
Palm Beach Capital, the largest investor in DDMG, identified hedge funds, Tenor Capital et al., as the primary cause of the company's difficulties. Palm Beach Capital cited unlawful finance penalties and possible illegal short selling strategies designed to damage the company's public stock price.[45] [46] Ultimately, the hedge fund lenders agreed to settle outstanding claims by the DDMG parties through a May 2016 settlement agreement awarding $8.5 million to former CEO John Textor and $3 million each to the city of Port Saint Lucie and the state of Florida.[47] The settlement also assigned all technology assets of Digital Domain's Florida studio.
Year | Films | Director(s) | Studio(s) and distributor(s) | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | Color of Night | Richard Rush | $40 million | $46.7 million | |
True Lies | James Cameron | $100–120 million | $378.9 million | ||
Interview with the Vampire | Neil Jordan | $60 million | $223.7 million | ||
1995 | Apollo 13 | Ron Howard | Universal Pictures Imagine Entertainment | $52 million | $355.2 million |
Strange Days | Kathryn Bigelow | $42 million | $17 million | ||
1996 | Sgt. Bilko | Jonathan Lynn | Universal Pictures Imagine Entertainment | $39 million | $7 million |
Chain Reaction | Andrew Davis | 20th Century Fox | $50 million | $60.2 million | |
The Island of Dr. Moreau | John Frankenheimer | New Line Cinema | $40 million | $49.6 million | |
1997 | Dante's Peak | Roger Donaldson | Universal Pictures | $116 million | $178.1 million |
The Fifth Element | Luc Besson | Gaumont | $90 million | $263.9 million | |
Red Corner | Jon Avnet | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | $48 million | $22 million | |
Titanic | James Cameron | 20th Century Fox Paramount Pictures Lightstorm Entertainment | $200 million | $2.264 billion | |
Kundun | Martin Scorsese | Touchstone Pictures | $28 million | $5.7 million | |
1998 | Armageddon | Michael Bay | Touchstone Pictures Jerry Bruckheimer Films | $140 million | $553.7 million |
What Dreams May Come | Vincent Ward | Polygram Filmed Entertainment | $85‒90 million | $75.4 million | |
1999 | EDtv | Ron Howard | Universal Pictures Imagine Entertainment | $80 million | $35.2 million |
Lake Placid | Steve Miner | 20th Century Fox | $27–35 million | $56.9 million | |
Fight Club | David Fincher | $63–65 million | $101.2 million | ||
Year | Films | Director(s) | Studio(s) and distributor(s) | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Supernova | Walter Hill Uncredited: Jack Sholder Francis Ford Coppola | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | $60–90 million | $14.8 million |
Rules of Engagement | William Friedkin | Paramount Pictures | $60 million | $71.7 million | |
O Brother, Where Art Thou? | Joel and Ethan Coen | Touchstone Pictures Universal Pictures StudioCanal | $26 million | $71.9 million | |
X-Men | Bryan Singer | 20th Century Fox | $75 million | $296.3 million | |
Red Planet | Antony Hoffman | Warner Bros. Pictures | $80 million | $33.5 million | |
How the Grinch Stole Christmas | Ron Howard | Universal Pictures Imagine Entertainment | $123 million | $345.8 million | |
2001 | Peter Jackson | New Line Cinema | $93 million | $898.2 million | |
Vanilla Sky | Cameron Crowe | Paramount Pictures Summit Entertainment | $68 million | $203.4 million | |
A Beautiful Mind | Ron Howard | Universal Pictures DreamWorks Pictures Imagine Entertainment | $58 million | $316.8 million | |
2002 | We Were Soldiers | Randall Wallace | Paramount Pictures | $75 million | $115.4 million |
The Time Machine | Simon Wells | DreamWorks Pictures Warner Bros. Pictures | $80 million | $123.7 million | |
xXx | Rob Cohen | Revolution Studios | $88.3 million | $277.4 million | |
Adaptation | Spike Jonze | Columbia Pictures | $19 million | $32.8 million | |
Stuart Baird | Paramount Pictures | $60 million | $67.3 million | ||
2003 | Daredevil | Mark Steven Johnson | 20th Century Fox | $78 million | $179.2 million |
Willard | Glen Morgan | New Line Cinema | TBA | $8.5 million | |
The Italian Job | F. Gary Gray | Paramount Pictures | $60 million | $176.1 million | |
Secondhand Lions | Tim McCanlies | New Line Cinema | $30 million | $48.3 million | |
Joe Dante | Warner Bros. Pictures | $80 million | $68.5 million | ||
The Missing | Ron Howard | Columbia Pictures Revolution Studios Imagine Entertainment | $60 million | $38.4 million | |
Peter Pan | P.J. Hogan | Universal Pictures Columbia Pictures Revolution Studios | $130 million | $122 million | |
2004 | The Day After Tomorrow | Roland Emmerich | 20th Century Fox Lionsgate | $125 million | $552.6 million |
I, Robot | Alex Proyas | 20th Century Fox | $120 million | $353.1 million | |
Flight of the Phoenix | John Moore | $45-75 million | $34.5 million | ||
2005 | Cinderella Man | Ron Howard | Touchstone Pictures Universal Pictures Miramax Imagine Entertainment | $88 million | $108.5 million |
Dark Water | Walter Salles | Touchstone Pictures | TBA | $44.4–49.5 million | |
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | Tim Burton | Warner Bros. Pictures | $150 million | $475.8 million | |
Stealth | Rob Cohen | Columbia Pictures | $135 million | $79.3 million | |
Æon Flux | Karyn Kusama | Paramount Pictures Lakeshore Entertainment | $55-62 million | $52.3 million | |
2006 | My Super Ex-Girlfriend | Ivan Reitman | 20th Century Fox | $30 million | $61.1 million |
Zoom | Peter Hewitt | Columbia Pictures Revolution Studios | $75.6 million | $12.5 million | |
Johnathan Liebesman | New Line Cinema | $16 million | $51.8 million | ||
Flags of Our Fathers | Clint Eastwood | DreamWorks Pictures Warner Bros. Pictures Paramount Pictures Amblin Entertainment | $90 million | $65.9 million | |
Letters from Iwo Jima | $19 million | $68.7 million | |||
The Nativity Story | Catherine Hardwicke | New Line Cinema | $35 million | $46.4 million | |
2007 | The Hitcher | Dave Meyers | Rogue Pictures | $10 million | $25.4 million |
Zodiac | David Fincher | Warner Bros. Pictures Paramount Pictures | $65–85 million | $84.7 million | |
Meet the Robinsons | Stephen Anderson | Walt Disney Pictures | $150 million | $169.3 million | |
Pirates of The Caribbean: At World's End | Gore Verbinski | Walt Disney Pictures Jerry Bruckheimer Films | $300 million | $963.4 million | |
We Own the Night | James Gray | Columbia Pictures | $21–28 million | $55.3 million | |
Transformers | Michael Bay | DreamWorks Pictures Paramount Pictures | $150–200 million | $709.7 million | |
The Seeker | David L. Cunningham | 20th Century Fox | $45 million | $31.8 million | |
The Golden Compass | Chris Weitz | New Line Cinema | $180 million | $372.2 million | |
2008 | Jumper | Doug Liman | 20th Century Fox | $85 million | $225.1 million |
Speed Racer | The Wachowskis | Warner Bros. Pictures | $120 million | $93.9 million | |
Rob Cohen | Universal Pictures | $145 million | $403.4 million | ||
Gran Torino | Clint Eastwood | Warner Bros. Pictures | $25–33 million | $270 million | |
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button | David Fincher | Warner Bros. Pictures Paramount Pictures | $150–167 million | $335.8 million | |
2009 | Star Trek | J.J. Abrams | Paramount Pictures Spyglass Entertainment | $150 million | $385.7 million |
Shawn Levy | 20th Century Fox | $150 million | $413.1 million | ||
Michael Bay | Paramount Pictures DreamWorks Pictures | $200–210 million | $836.5 million | ||
Stephen Sommers | Paramount Pictures Spyglass Entertainment | $175 million | $302.5 million | ||
2012 | Roland Emmerich | Columbia Pictures | $200 million | $791.2 million |
Year | Films | Director(s) | Studio(s) and distributor(s) | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Chris Columbus | 20th Century Fox | $95 million | $226.4 million | |
The A-Team | Joe Carnahan | $100–110 million | $177.2 million | ||
Joseph Kosinski | Walt Disney Pictures | $170 million | $400.1 million | ||
2011 | Thor | Kenneth Branagh | Marvel Studios Paramount Pictures | $150 million | $449.3 million |
Matthew Vaughn | 20th Century Fox | $140–160 million | $353.6 million | ||
Michael Bay | Paramount Pictures | $195 million | $1.124 billion | ||
The Help | Tate Taylor | DreamWorks Pictures | $25 million | $216.6 million | |
Fright Night | Craig Gillespie | $30 million | $41 million | ||
Real Steel | Shawn Levy | $110 million | $299.3 million | ||
Killer Elite | Gary McKendry | Open Road Films | $70 million | $56.4 million | |
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo | David Fincher | Columbia Pictures Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | $90 million | $239.3 million | |
2012 | Brad Peyton | New Line Cinema | $80 million | $335 million | |
The Avengers | Joss Whedon | Marvel Studios Paramount Pictures | $220–225 million | $1.519 billion | |
The Paperboy | Lee Daniels | Millennium Media | $12.5 million | $3.78 million | |
The Amazing Spider-Man | Marc Webb | Columbia Pictures | $200–230 million | $758 million | |
Rock of Ages | Adam Shankman | New Line Cinema | $75 million | $59.4 million | |
The Watch | Akiva Schaffer | 20th Century Fox | $68 million | $68.3 million | |
2013 | Jack the Giant Slayer | Bryan Singer | New Line Cinema Legendary Pictures | $185–200 million | $197 million |
Jon M. Chu | Paramount Pictures Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Skydance Media | $130-155 million | $375.7 million | ||
Oblivion | Joseph Kosinski | Universal Pictures | $120 million | $287.9 million | |
Iron Man 3 | Shane Black | Marvel Studios Paramount Pictures | $200 million | $1.215 billion | |
Her | Spike Jonze | Warner Bros. Pictures Annapurna Pictures | $23 million | $48.3 million | |
Ender's Game | Gavin Hood | Summit Entertainment | $110–115 million | $125.5 million | |
47 Ronin | Carl Rinsch | Universal Pictures | $175–225 million | $151.8 million | |
2014 | Bryan Singer | 20th Century Fox | $200–205 million | $746 million | |
Lost River | Ryan Gosling | Warner Bros. Pictures | TBA | $615,500 | |
Maleficent | Robert Stromberg | Walt Disney Pictures | $180–263 million | $758.5 million | |
Into the Storm | Steven Quale | New Line Cinema | $50 million | $161.7 million | |
Gone Girl | David Fincher | 20th Century Fox | $61 million | $369.3 million | |
Shawn Levy | $127 million | $363.2 million | |||
2015 | Blackhat | Michael Mann | Universal Pictures Legendary Pictures | $70 million | $19.7 million |
Furious 7 | James Wan | Universal Pictures | $190 million | $1.515 billion | |
Pixels | Chris Columbus | Columbia Pictures | $88–129 million | $244.9 million | |
Eye in the Sky | Gavin Hood | Entertainment One | $13 million | $35.4 million | |
2016 | Deadpool | Tim Miller | 20th Century Fox | $58 million | $782.8 million |
Everybody Wants Some!! | Richard Linklater | Paramount Pictures Annapurna Pictures | $10 million | $5.4 million | |
The Huntsmen: Winter's War | Cedric Nicolas-Troyan | Universal Pictures | $115 million | $165 million | |
The Jungle Book | Jon Favreau | Walt Disney Pictures | $175–177 million | $966.6 million | |
Bryan Singer | 20th Century Fox | $178 million | $543.9 million | ||
Akiva Schaffer Jorma Taccone | Universal Pictures | $20 million | $9.7 million | ||
Roland Emmerich | 20th Century Fox | $165 million | $389.7 million | ||
Free State of Jones | Gary Ross | STX Entertainment | $50 million | $25 million | |
Suicide Squad | David Ayer | Warner Bros. Pictures DC Films | $175 million | $749.2 million | |
All I See Is You | Marc Forster | Open Road Films | $30 million | $678,150 | |
Passengers | Morten Tyldum | Columbia Pictures | $110–150 million | $303.1 million | |
2017 | Beauty and the Beast | Bill Condon | Walt Disney Pictures | $160–255 million | $1.266 billion |
Power Rangers | Dean Israelite | Lionsgate | $100‒105 million | $142.5 million | |
The Fate of the Furious | F. Gary Gray | Universal Pictures | $250–270 million | $1.236 billion | |
The Mummy | Alex Kurtzman | $125–195 million | $410 million | ||
Jon Watts | Columbia Pictures Marvel Studios | $175 million | $880.2 million | ||
Thor: Rangarok | Taika Waititi | Marvel Studios | $180 million | $865 million | |
2018 | Black Panther | Ryan Coogler | $200 million | $1.349 billion | |
A Wrinkle in Time | Ava DuVernay | Walt Disney Pictures | $100–130 million | $133.2 million | |
Ready Player One | Steven Spielberg | Warner Bros. Pictures | $155–175 million | $607.9 million | |
Avengers: infinity War | Anthony and Joe Russo | Marvel Studios | $325–400 million | $2.052 billion | |
Ant-Man and the Wasp | Peyton Reed | $130–195 million | $622.7 million | ||
Hidden Man | Jiang Wen | Gravity Pictures | TBA | $85 million | |
Shadow | Zhang Yimou | Tencent Pictures Well Go USA Entertainment | TBA | $91.7 million | |
Aquaman | James Wan | Warner Bros. Pictures DC Films | $160–200 million | $1.152 billion | |
Hello Mr. Billionaire | Fei Yan Damo Peng | Alibaba Pictures | TBA | $367 million | |
Taxiwaala | Rahul Sankrityan | GA2 Pictures | ₹42 crore | ||
2.0 | S. Shankar | Lyca Productions AA Films | ₹400–600 crore | ₹699.89 crore | |
2019 | Krish Jagarlamudi | Vaaraahi Chalana Chitram | ₹50 crore | ₹32 crore | |
Captain Marvel | Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck | Marvel Studios | $152–175 million | $1.131 billion | |
The Curse of La Llorona | Michael Chaves | New Line Cinema | $9 million | $123.1 million | |
Shazam! | David F. Sandberg | New Line Cinema DC Films | $90–100 million | $367.8 million | |
Anthony and Joe Russo | Marvel Studios | $356–400 million | $2.799 billion | ||
Tim Miller | Paramount Pictures 20th Century Fox Skydance Media Tencent Pictures Lightstorm Entertainment | $185–196 million | $261.1 million | ||
Sye Raa Narasimha Reddy | Surender Reddy | Excel Entertainment AA Films | ₹200–300 crore | $34.2 million | |
Year | Films | Director(s) | Studio(s) and distributor(s) | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | Kelly Marcel | Columbia Pictures | $110 million | TBA | |
Koratala Siva | N. T. R. Arts | ₹300 crore | TBA | ||
The Greatest of All Time | Venkat Prabhu | AGS Entertainment Romeo Pictures | TBA | TBA | |
2025 | Julius Onah | Marvel Studios | $375—400 million | TBA | |
Blade | TBA | TBA | TBA | ||
Year | Title | Network | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013–2020 | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | ABC | ||
2015–2016 | Black Sails (seasons 2–3) | Starz | ||
2016–2020 | The Good Place | NBC | ||
2017 | The Mist | Spike | ||
Outlander | Starz | |||
2018–2019 | A Series of Unfortunate Events (seasons 2–3) | Netflix | ||
2019–2020 | The Twilight Zone | CBS All Access | ||
2019–2021 | Lost In Space (seasons 2–3) | Netflix | ||
2020–present | Disney Junior | |||
2021 | WandaVision | Disney+ | ||
2022 | Ms. Marvel | |||
2023 | Citadel | Amazon Prime Video |
1994 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | True Lies | Nominated | ||
1995 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | Apollo 13 | Nominated | ||
1997 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | Titanic | Won | ||
1998 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | What Dreams May Come | Won | ||
2004 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | I, Robot | Nominated | ||
2008 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | The Curious Case of Benjamin Button | Won | [49] | |
2011 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | Real Steel | Nominated | ||
2011 | Academy Award for Best Visual Effects | Nominated |
1998 | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) Scientific and Technical Achievement Award | Dr. Douglas R. Roble | Track (tracking software) | [51] | |
2001 | AMPAS Scientific and Technical Achievement Award | Bill Spitzak, Paul Van Camp, Jonathan Egstad and Price Pethel | Nuke (compositing software) | [52] | |
2004 | AMPAS Scientific and Technical Achievement Award | Alan Kapler | Storm (volumetric renderer) | [53] | |
2007 | AMPAS Scientific and Technical Achievement Award | Dr. Douglas R. Roble, Nafees Bin Zafar and Ryo Sakaguchi | Storm (fluid simulation system) | [54] |
Digital Domain artists and technologists have been recognized with ten Academy Awards: three for Best Visual Effects (Titanic, What Dreams May Come, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button); and seven for Scientific and Technical Achievement for its proprietary technology such as Track (tracking software), for Nuke (compositing software), for Storm (volumetric renderer), and for its fluid simulation system.[55]
The company's work has been nominated for eleven Academy Awards for Best Visual Effects (Apollo 13, True Lies, I, Robot, Real Steel,, Iron Man 3, , , Ready Player One,, and Free Guy). In addition, its excellence in digital imagery and animation has earned Digital Domain multiple British Academy (BAFTA) Awards.[55]
Digital Domain's advertising division provides digital imagery and animation for television commercials, working with top commercial directors. To date, it has been awarded 21 Clio Awards, 25 AICP Awards, 15 Cannes Lion Awards and numerous other advertising honors.[50] The advertising division has also produced multiple music videos working with artists (including The Rolling Stones, Faith Hill, Creed, Janet Jackson, Busta Rhymes, Björk, Celine Dion, Michael Jackson and Nine Inch Nails) which have earned Grammy and MTV "Music Video of the Year" Awards.[56]