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Film Gimp Adopted at Fourth Movie Studio

Popular open source motion picture image editing program in use at ComputerCafe

BERKELEY, California - February 15, 2003 - Film Gimp has recently been adopted by ComputerCafe, the fourth motion picture studio to use it in making feature films. Film Gimp, a sophisticated image retouching program designed to manipulate high dynamic range 35mm film images, is a collaborative open source project that branched from GIMP in 1998. After years behind the scenes in Hollywood, Film Gimp had its public launch on SourceForge on July 4, 2002.

ComputerCafe, based in Santa Maria, California, is best known for creating elaborate photorealistic 3D sequences for Spy Kids 2, including attacking skeletons, a miniature menagerie, and mutant animals. The studio created special effects for Panic Room, Hulk, Imposter, The One, Armageddon, Flubber, and Battlefield Earth. ComputerCafe is using Film Gimp in current feature film productions.

Film Gimp is in use at three studios besides ComputerCafe. At Rhythm & Hues it was used in Scooby-Doo, Harry Potter, Cats & Dogs, Dr. Dolittle 2, Little Nicky, Grinch, Sixth Day, Stuart Little, and Planet of the Apes. Hammerhead Productions used it for Showtime and Blue Crush, and is using it for The Fast and the Furious II. Sony Pictures Imageworks used Film Gimp for Stuart Little II. Although not in movie production yet, developers at DreamWorks and ILM are contributing to the Film Gimp code. ILM recently made open source its OpenEXR code, the studio's wavelet compression image file format for high dynamic range images. Film Gimp was one of the first external applications to support OpenEXR, thanks to a Film Gimp plug-in developed at ILM.

In Los Angeles on Tuesday, February 18th, a distinguished panel discusses the past and future of Film Gimp at the Linux Movies conference track during Creative Cow West in Los Angeles. This is the first time an open source project has figured so prominently at a motion picture industry event. The all-day Linux Movies track features speakers from motion picture studios describing the state-of-the-art in Linux motion picture technology. The Film Gimp panel includes Ray Feeney, winner of four Academy Awards for Scientific and Engineering Achievement, president of RFX, and founder of the Film Gimp project in 1998; Caroline Dahllöf, a programmer at Rhythm & Hues and a founding developer of Film Gimp; Sam Richards, a CG supervisor at Sony Pictures Imageworks and release manager of Film Gimp; Thad Beier, effects supervisor at Hammerhead Productions and a user of Film Gimp; and Robin Rowe, a partner at MovieEditor.com and project leader of Film Gimp on SourceForge. The all-day Linux Movies track costs $100. Immediately following the event at the Westin LAX there is a free open meeting of the Linux Movies Group.

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Questions to rower@movieeditor.com
Created February 15, 2003; updated February 15, 2003