George Lucas's groundbreaking Star Wars has won an award for the
Most Influential Visual Effects Film of All Time exactly 30 years after its
release.
The honour was granted by the
Visual
Effects Society, the entertainment industry's official trade organisation
for visual effects practitioners.
The Society's 1,500 global members voted on the most influential visual
effects films of all time, putting Star Wars at the top just ahead of
Ridley Scott's Blade Runner.
Third place was a tie between another golden oldie, Stanley Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey, and the more recent Wachowski Brothers' The
Matrix.
Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park (1993) came fifth, Steven
Lisberger's Tron (1982) came sixth and the 1933 version of King
Kong came seventh.
Older films continued to dominate the top 10, with Spielberg's Close
Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) in eighth place, Ridley Scott's
Alien (1979) in ninth place and James Cameron's The Abyss
(1989) in tenth place.
Eric Roth, executive director of the Visual Effects Society, said: "These
films have had a significant, lasting impact on the practice and appreciation of
visual effects as an integral, artistic element of cinematic expression and the
storytelling process."
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