The Guardian (USA)

Bohemian Rhapsody's visual effects team 'owed thousands'

- Catherine Shoard

A team involved in the visual effects on Oscar-winning Queen movie Bohemian Rhapsody have yet to be paid, according to media and entertainm­ent union Bectu.

The union says it is handling cases worth £53,000 relating to the bankruptcy of Halo VFX, a London-based company that contribute­d to the film’s visual effects.

Bectu says the plight of the out-ofpocket workers highlights the need for a new industry code of practice to protect freelance workers when businesses go into administra­tion.

Bectu’s assistant national secretary, Paul Evans, said: “I’ve never had a situation where individual Bectu members have been hit this badly. We can’t just shrug and move on.

“It’s not acceptable for VFX artists who have contribute­d to the success of multimilli­on-pound features to be the ones to carry risk and go unpaid for their hard work and talent.”

More generally, many risks, he said, were shouldered by freelance VFX workers, who were forced to accept long periods of unpaid overtime and antisocial hours, which eroded creativity and productivi­ty. “It’s an industry that drives talented people out. The gender ratio is particular­ly male-heavy. Women often can’t stay in an industry that expects almost unlimited unpaid overtime as short notice.”

Bohemian Rhapsody, which has made almost a billion dollars at the global box office, won four awards on Sunday night: best actor for Rami Malek, best editing, best sound editing and best sound mixing.

• This article was amended on 27 February to reflect the fact the Halo VFX were not the only visual effects team working on the film.

 ??  ?? Rami Malek in Bohemian Rhapsody … Halo VFX oversaw the film’s visual effects. Photograph: Twentieth Century Fox
Rami Malek in Bohemian Rhapsody … Halo VFX oversaw the film’s visual effects. Photograph: Twentieth Century Fox

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