![]() The effect is technically called a 'spatially warped cross-dissolve'. ![]() The technology behind Elastic Reality earned two Academy Awards in 1996 for Scientific and Technical Achievement going to Garth Dickie and Perry Kivolowitz. Elastic Reality was later purchased by Avid, having already become the de facto system of choice, used in many hundreds of films. At VisionArt Ted Fay used Elastic Reality to morph Odo for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. For high-end use, Elastic Reality (based on MorphPlus) saw its first feature film use in In The Line of Fire (1993) and was used in Quantum Leap (work performed by the Post Group). Other programs became widely available within a year, and for a time the effect became common to the point of cliché. Other early morphing systems included ImageMaster, MorphPlus and CineMorph, all of which premiered for the Commodore Amiga in 1992. The first application for personal computers to offer morphing was Gryphon Software Morph on the Macintosh. In 1991, morphing appeared notably in the Michael Jackson music video 'Black or White' and in the movies Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
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