Regina Leader-Post

‘The show for geeks’

Canadians set to collect technical Academy Awards

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO Martin Scorsese has nothing on Toronto-based graphics researcher Jos Stam.

Where The Departed director has one Oscar, Stam is about to receive his third on Saturday, for work on an operating system for 3D graphics and special effects that’s been used on major blockbuste­rs including the Lord of the Rings films.

He’s one of two Canadians getting an award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences at what’s considered the Oscars for the scientific and technical worlds.

The other is Derek Bradley, a research scientist from Smiths Falls, Ont., who is being honoured for a technology that can reconstruc­t the 3D shape of actors’ faces in full motion and at a high resolution.

“It’s the (show) for what they call the geeks,” Stam with a laugh.

“My first time it was Rachel Mcadams (hosting). I didn’t know who she was. Now she’s quite big, right? It was like, ‘She’s Canadian, so that’s cool.’

“The second time was Jessica Alba. She was massively pregnant, it was pretty funny, she had to sit down ... My daughter was totally freaked out (with excitement), because she was five at the time. I have a picture of her with Jessica Alba. Some people are very impressed by that.”

For Bradley, it’s an honour he’s been longing for since he became interested in film and onscreen visual effects. “It was really my life goal,” he said from Zurich, where he works for Disney Research.

Stam — along with Pixar co-founder Ed Catmull and the animation studio’s senior scientist Tony Derose — will receive a scientific and engineerin­g award academy plaque for their pioneering work on a technology used by digital artists in most production houses to model and animate through a method known as subdivisio­n surface.

“What I do is I create the brushes, sort of. I hide the math through the animator,” said Stam, who was born and raised in Geneva and moved to Canada in 1989 to get his master’s degree and PHD at the University of Toronto. He later left the city to work abroad, but returned in 2003.

“What you see on the screen is essentiall­y the work of the production house and we just gave them the tools with which they could create these effects.”

Bradley — along with Thabo Beeler, Bernd Bickel and Markus Gross — will receive a technical achievemen­t award academy certificat­e for the conception, design and engineerin­g of Medusa Performanc­e Capture System, developed for Disney. Medusa captures detailed, 3D versions of actors’ faces and tracks their motions, without the traditiona­l motion-capture dots or makeup, for the purpose of visual effects in film.

The technology has been used in films including Star Wars: Episode VII — The Force Awakens, The Jungle Book, Avengers: Infinity War and Solo: A Star Wars Story.

Bradley said when he first heard of the academy honour, he called his parents. “They’re incredibly proud and excited,” said Bradley, who got his PHD at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. “Every time I go home to Smiths Falls, every time I run into someone, they always tell me that my parents have been talking about me.”

Bradley plans to bring his parents, his sister and brother-in-law to the ceremony known as the SCITECH Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif.

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Jos Stam

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