Ross Lincoln is a Deadline contributor.
Just over two weeks after reports that troubled VFX studio Rhythm & Hues would be establishing operations in Taiwan, the company is courting new employees for its facility in the city of Kaohsiung. The studio is seeking a variety of creative personell, including special effects engineers and 3D animation artists, according to the China Post. The U.S.-based firm was running a booth at a job fair at National Chung Hsing University in Taichung.
Whether the jobs being offered in Taiwan represent a new beginning for Rhythm & Hues or a respite before a bitter end remains unclear. The company declared bankruptcy on February 11, mere hours after Life of Pi won the BAFTA for Special Visual Effects (The movie went on to win Best Director for Ang Lee and Best Visual Effects at the 85th Academy Awards.) On March 8, a federal bankruptcy court in Los Angeles approved a stalking horse bid by Korean media concern JS Communications, a move designed to encourage competitive bidding among interested buyers. A stalking horse arrangement can result in the breakup of a bankrupt company and the sale of its assets to several buyers, as was the case in January with video game publisher THQ.
Rhythm & Hues’ difficulties have rallied VFX professionals to protest what they contend is a race to the bottom for the industry, citing reliance on offshore labor and tax subsidies in Canada and elsewhere as particularly brutal impediments to profitability for California-based effects houses. Current and former Rythm & Hues employees organized a demonstration the afternoon of the Oscars to call attention to these problems that was ultimately attended by over 400 people. Since then calls for a trade organization or full unionization for the industry have grown, though there is no agreement among VFX industry professionals about the most productive course of action.


Ever visit a new utility/manufacturer/assembly plant/studio in Asia? (Emphasis on new.) 5 will get you 10 they will be far more green, far more state-of-the-art than in the US. We are allowing the oligarchs to turn us into a Banana Republic, and I don’t mean that cheapo retail clothing store.
Shame on us. And both parties are culpable.
Yes! Excellent point.
You’ve written exacly what I’ve been thinking, saying, and writing for quite some time now.
To quote a recent blockbuster “BIG THINGS HAVE SMALL BEGINNINGS.” This decline in the industry and across our country, has been and will continue to move slowly but surely. Horrible events don’t transpire right away – it takes plenty of time. We are headed for something quite bad in the U.S. over the next few decades.
Our society is at a crossroads, we must decide where we want to go and act upon it. PEOPLE MUST RISE UP – it is the only option because the politicians, business leaders, and elite don’t care about average people at all!
Inaction or relying on others will lead to disaster. Rise.
charming
>”calls for a trade organization or full unionization for the industry have grown”
My impression is there’s a general consensus today that politicians and bureaucrats simply cannot be trusted because of the endless conflicting and powerful/resourceful/wealthy power blocs pulling everybody in half-a-dozen different directions. Everyone will get tempted by something.
If that’s the case, will anything really get solved by creating more bureaucrats and politicians? I have no idea what the answer is (just getting smart and flexible and “dealing with” the existing complexities?) but creating more opportunities for graft/corruption doesn’t seem like a good choice.
So employing 200 here in the U.S. is bad business, but hiring 200 in Taiwan is perceived as good business?
Short-sighted, and morally disgusting given recent events.
I am a Film Student at USC. I feel bad for all the ANIMATION MAJORS here at USC that will graduate…and be unable to find work…because most ANIMATION/SPECIAL EFFECTS is now being outsourced to other countries. My suggestion to ANIMATION MAJORS…change your Major. My suggestion to ANIMATORS…learn another craft.
THE “LIBERALS” THAT RUN HOLLYWOOD ARE JUST A BUNCH OF MIT ROMNEYS….
Time for a third party….
California is goverened by the LIBERAL Democratic party and the public employee unions.
The carpenters and below the line crews went thru this 15 years ago. FILM IS OVER IN CALIFORNIA…………
Well isn’t this interesting. R+H kicks 200 to the curb In LA. The industry races to their defense , and the facility management just slaps those poor folks out of work, with unpaid overtime right across the face. Lovely. I guess they are proving to the studios how cold they can be.
yea…the empire is falling appart