Wes Takahashi Explained

Wes Takahashi
Birth Name:Wes Ford Takahashi
Occupation:Visual effects artist and animator
Yearsactive:1981–present
Notable Works:Back to the Future
DreamWorks logo
Nationality:American
Education:Hampshire College
University of California, Los Angeles

Wes Ford Takahashi is an American visual effects animator and animation supervisor who has worked for motion picture visual effects company Industrial Light & Magic.[1] He is known for his special effects work on numerous films; his efforts includes animating the time travel sequences for all three Back to the Future films and the "boy on the moon" in the DreamWorks logo.[2] [3] He is the former head of ILM's animation department.

Education and career

Takahashi attended Hampshire College in Massachusetts, as well as the University of California, Los Angeles, both of which enabled him to study computer graphics and animation. He began working at Industrial Light & Magic in the early 1980s and subsequently rose to become the head of its animation department. After essentially ceasing work with ILM in the 1990s, he helped to establish the New Zealand-based effects studio Weta Digital with filmmaker Peter Jackson. He has been with International Technological University since 2011 and currently works as the department chair of its Digital Arts Faculty.

Along with Charlie McClellan and Richard Taylor, Takahashi received a nomination for Best Special Effects at the 23rd Saturn Awards in 1997 for their work on the 1996 film The Frighteners. Takahashi has acted in minor roles in several Rob Schneider comedy films and served as an external art director for the 2006 video game Eragon.

Selected filmography

As animation supervisor

As visual effects supervisor / producer

As actor

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Subject: Wes Ford Takahashi. Animators' Hall of Fame. 14 June 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160812020742/http://www.agni-animation.com/fullerton/halloffame/Wes_Ford_Takahashi.html. 12 August 2016.
  2. News: Failes. Ian. 21 October 2015. The future is today: how ILM made time travel possible . FXGuide. 12 June 2016.
  3. Web site: Digital Arts Faculty. International Technological University. 16 June 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20151022193041/http://itu.edu/digital-arts/faculty/. 22 October 2015.