Fast & Furious Presents Hobbs & Shaw VFX Breakdown

Fast & Furious Presents Hobbs & Shaw VFX Breakdown

Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw

Lawman Luke Hobbs and outcast Deckard Shaw form an unlikely alliance when a cyber-genetically enhanced villain threatens the future of humanity. Director: David Leitch

VFX Done By

Production VFX Supervisor is Dan Glass.

DNEG -VFX Supervisors: Mike Brazelton & Stuart Lashley Framestore -VFX Supervisor: Kyle McCulloch RISE (VFX Supervisor: Jonathan Weber
One of Us
Crafty Apes

DNEG was the lead VFX vendor on the ‘Fast and Furious’ franchise spin-off ‘Hobbs & Shaw’, directed by David Leitch. They delivered around 1,000 shots across 26 sequences, including complex FX simulations, extensive environment and build work, animation, digi doubles and motion graphics.

DNEG VFX Supervisor -Mike Brazelton, Stuart Lashley

DNEG VFX Producers -Anton Agerbo, Fatemeh Khoshkhou

Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw outpost Outpost VFX Producer Josh Sykes -Outpost VFX Supervisor Roni Rodrigues

We recently had the pleasure of working on the latest instalment of the Fast & Furious franchise: Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, delivering a key, popular sequence that involved invisible VFX.

“It’s always a brilliant opportunity to work on a feature the scale of ‘Hobbs & Shaw’, but especially when it’s part of such a well-loved franchise,’ says Outpost Senior Producer Josh Sykes. “When picturing the visuals in any past Fast and Furious productions, you tend to think of epic set pieces with some pretty ‘in-your-face’ action.

“Outpost’s contribution on this occasion was actually the exact opposite.”

“We were tasked with creating a series of invisible VFX across a sequence, resulting in a seamless outcome that’s been very well received!”

“As the sequence involved invisible VFX, including background greenscreen replacements, it was essential for us to pay close attention to details like lighting, tracking, cars and position and also mimic all the effects that would be generated by the anamorphic lens, all while creating a seamless sequence on a tight deadline,” says Roni Rodrigues, Outpost’s VFX Supervisor on Hobbs & Shaw.

“We were very happy with the final results and it was a fantastic opportunity to work with the director David Leitch.”

Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw Framestore Framestore -VFX Supervisor: Kyle McCulloch .Framestore delivered 235 shots , which involves a perilous car chase and culminates in one of the year’s most audacious action sequences.

Framestore’s first foray into the Fast & Furious universe required a VFX crew to deploy to Hawaii for a five-week stint, where the team captured and processed two kilometres of coastline. “We spent days and days leaning out of cars and hanging out of helicopters shooting array plates,” says VFX Supervisor Ben Loch. “The weather conditions out there kept us on our toes, but in the end we were able to get exactly what we needed. This served us well later on, whether we needed to recreate stretches of the stunning Hawaiian environment wholesale or tweak certain features – like the cliffs – to make them more imposing and dangerous.”

Some of the team’s research, however, was slightly more sedate. “We also spent a lot of time in Hawaiian garden centres and nurseries learning about and cataloguing Hawaiian flora,” says VFX Supervisor Kyle McCulloch. “Being on the ground there was also a real help when it came to digitally recreating the vehicles. It meant we could get granular detail on every aspect of the cars and the helicopter, ensuring we could accurately recreate them aesthetically but also see what happens when the vehicles were put through their paces – the way things flex, bounce and skid, and how the metal tenses under pressure. We were also able to get some great photos of Ben covered head to toe in dust and dirt from being too close to the Black Hawk helicopter.”  

If being on location in Hawaii sounds like a dream gig, it ultimately had a more serious aim: the team knew from the outset that they’d have just 16 weeks to pull the sequence together when they returned to London. “The schedule was obviously tight, but having this wealth of material meant we could hit the ground running and maintain that momentum once we’d got started,” says Loch. “Much like the chase sequence, the pace didn’t let up, and we were getting a new edit every two or three days. We pre-planned everything to the nth degree, and having a crack team to work with made the process go really smoothly.” 

As well as the material captured in-house, the filmmakers were committed to shooting as much as possible, which gave Framestore’s creatives even more to draw from. The film’s final sequence is a seamless blend of CG and live footage, with Framestore replacing and recreating vehicles, adding smoke and dust, conjuring extreme weather patterns, and augmenting practical FX and explosions. Oh, and that two kilometres of cliff face and coastline that were so painstakingly recreated in CG? Chunks of that were gleefully crumbled and blown to smithereens. “One of the fun things about the Fast & Furious films is that the team behind them is always demanding more on-screen danger and more jeopardy for the characters,” says McCulloch. “The filmmakers don’t do anything by halves, so it was all about ramping up the action and kicking things into overdrive. This meant our Comp Supervisor Oliver Armstrong really had his work cut out, but the end result is note-perfect.”  

The sequence culminates in the audacious ‘daisychain’ scene, which sees heroes Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham) take down hi-tech villain Brixton Lorr (Idris Elba) as he tries to make his escape in a sleek Black Hawk helicopter. The chase grows ever more elaborate, with a caravan of four bespoke, souped-up vehicles using winches, grappling hooks, chains and pure human strength to keep Lorr’s helicopter tethered. At one point the chain of vehicles teeters on a cliff edge over the churning Pacific Ocean below – a moment that will have cinemagoers chewing their nails down to the quick. “It goes back to constantly ramping up the danger,” says Loch. “The filmmakers always wanted bigger, better and crazier and that’s what we wanted to deliver. At the same time, though, it had to be somewhat grounded. We want people to be bowled over and inhaling their popcorn, but you don’t want to take them out of the action with something that just looks daft. Ordinarily when we’re working with vehicles on a chase scene you might run it through a sim, but that didn’t really work here because what we were doing was quite literally impossible. Hats off to the show’s Animation Supervisor Max Solomon and his team, because it was their work that adds the crunching sense of weight that helps you suspend your disbelief when the action really goes off the hook.”

The 235-shot sequence drew from Framestore’s wide pool of expert creatives, from its modellers and animators to its environment and comp teams. The result is an adrenalized, explosive, edge-of-the-seat slice of action that is sure to be one of the film’s most talked-about moments, and Framestore was proud to be a part of it. 

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