Avatar: Fire and Ash led the 24th Annual VES Awards with 7 wins, including Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature and Outstanding Character in a Photoreal Feature. The Visual Effects Society held the ceremony at The Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles, celebrating the year's best work across film, television, commercials, and emerging technologies. Jerry Bruckheimer received the VES Lifetime Achievement Award, while Sir Richard Taylor of Wētā Workshop received the VES Visionary Award.
We covered the VES nominees earlier, with Avatar: Fire and Ash leading the field with 10 nominations. The film's sweep across multiple categories underscores its technical achievement in photoreal visual effects and character animation.
Photoreal Feature Dominance: Avatar: Fire and Ash's wins span the full spectrum of VFX disciplines.
Avatar: Fire and Ash claimed Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature, Outstanding Character in a Photoreal Feature (Varang, played by Oona Chaplin), and Outstanding CG Cinematography. The film also won the Emerging Technology Award for the Kora Fire Toolset, recognizing innovation in VFX software and pipeline development.
Beyond Avatar's wins, Sinners took Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature, and Andor won Outstanding Special (Practical) Effects in a Photoreal Project. The latter recognition highlights the continued value of practical effects alongside digital work.
Animation and Real-Time Excellence: KPop Demon Hunters and Ghost of Yōtei lead their respective categories.
KPop Demon Hunters led animation with 3 wins including Outstanding Animation in an Animated Feature and Outstanding Character in an Animated Feature (Rumi). The film's success reflects the growing sophistication of animation production at scale.
In real-time projects, Ghost of Yōtei won Outstanding Visual Arts in a Real-Time Project, demonstrating the quality bar for game cinematics and interactive media. Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age won Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode, recognizing excellence in episodic television production.
Commercials and Student Work: BMW and Azimuth represent industry breadth.
BMW's Heart of Joy: Meet Okto the Octopus won Outstanding Visual Effects in a Commercial, showcasing high-end VFX in branded content. Azimuth won Outstanding Visual Effects in a Student Project, recognizing emerging talent in the next generation of VFX artists.
Lifetime and Visionary Recognition: Industry veterans honored for career impact.
Jerry Bruckheimer received the VES Lifetime Achievement Award, presented by F1 director Joseph Kosinski. Bruckheimer said: "You create the magic. You create the things that people go to theaters for." His decades-long career spans blockbuster filmmaking and television production, with consistent emphasis on visual spectacle and technical innovation.
Sir Richard Taylor, co-founder and Chief Creative Officer of Wētā Workshop, received the VES Visionary Award, presented by Adam Savage. Taylor's work spans from The Lord of the Rings trilogy through contemporary feature films, establishing Wētā as a leader in practical and digital effects integration.
The ceremony was hosted by the Sklar Brothers for the second consecutive year. Presenters included Oona Chaplin, Haley Joel Osment, Lil Rel Howery, and Omar Benson Miller.


