http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/digital-domain-mova-tech-banned-906902
Digital Domain's New Legal Setback Freezes VFX Tech Used by Major Studios
Digital Domain's New Legal Setback Freezes VFX Tech Used by Major Studios
The vaunted motion capture technology known as MOVA can no longer be used by its exclusive licensee, prominent Hollywood visual effects company Digital Domain, according to a recent preliminary injunction issued by a federal judge in San Francisco.
The preliminary injunction, which is explained in publicly available legal documents, effectively freezes the technology and forces all of its licensees, including Digital Domain and major Hollywood studios, to stop using it until further notice, or until a trial resolves the issue.
Prominent Hollywood visual effects company Digital Domain 3.0 has lost the right to use one of its most powerful tools, a facial motion capture technology known as MOVA that has been featured in top-grossing hits like Deadpool, Guardians of the Galaxy and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.
The court also ordered the MOVA hardware to be physically transferred within ten days to a place chosen by the defendant, in this case Rearden Inc, LaSalle’s former employer.
“For Hollywood, the technology is temporarily out of play,” says Nancy Mertzel, head of the Intellectual Property Group at Herrick, Feinstein in New York, an attorney who reviewed the legal documents for The Hollywood Reporter, “Movie studios who licensed MOVA from Shenzhenshi, VGH or Digital Domain 3.0 must stop using it. A studio that is currently using MOVA, or planned to, will have to wait for the injunction to be lifted, or find an alternative.”
The spat is over who owns a novel method of electronically capturing the performances of human actors, including every smile and twitch of their facial muscles, and using the data to bring computer-generated characters to life on the screen. The technology, called Mova, won a technical Academy Award for a group of developers last year.