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MPC magically restored 1970’s period with almost invisible VFX work for Alfonso Cuarón’s ‘Roma’

Roma is a visual effects film. It would have been impossible to create Roma without visual effects.”         -Alfonso Cuarón

 The most personal project to date from Academy Award-winning director and writer Alfonso Cuarón (Gravity, Children of Men, Y Tu Mama Tambien) is Roma. The movie shares the chronicles of a turbulent year in the lives of a middle-class family in 1970s Mexico City.  Cuarón, inspired by the women from his childhood, delivers an artful ode to the matriarchy that shaped his world.  The movie is a semi-autobiographical take by the director starring Yalitza Aparicio and Marina de Tavira .

M PC Film overall VFX Supervisor David Griffiths and VFX Producer Bryce Nielson led the team to create the photoreal visual effects of Roma. Stepping back from the complex blockbuster VFX the studio is known for putting talent and technology to craft stunning invisible effects for the movie.

To deliver Cuarón’s vision, MPC had to work around variety of sequences, with the main focus on compositing. Other work included animation, set extensions and restoring 1970’s Mexico City.

The director worked with MPC from the early stages of preproduction, to plan how to seamlessly integrate VFX into the movie and discussing the detail required to build the universe that the movie portrays.  Here are some of the invisible VFX integration in the movie as per Cuaron :

Netflix had acquired publication rights of the movie, however, it did not publicly disclose box-office figures for Roma, according to some reports  the film made $90,000–120,000 from three theatres in its opening weekend, 23 to 25 November, and a total of $200,000 over the five-day. Overall the movie’s magical portrayal of the waking of colourful world towards glorious day with exciting, spontaneous possibilities has made it stand out of the lot.

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