VFX Legion Completes “Madam Secretary” Finale With Stunning CG Effects

VFX Legion Completes ‘Madam Secretary’ Series Finale, Wrapping Its Third Season, Digitally Taking the Show Where Film Was Unable to Go

The LA/B.C.-based Company Caps Off Work on The Political Drama with Large-Scale CG VFX for the Series Finale and Releases a Break-Down Reel Showcasing Some of the Trickiest CG Shots Its Team Created for CBS’s Political Drama

‘Madam Secretary’ began its final season with the highly anticipated premiere episode revealing that Secretary of State, Elizabeth McCord (Téa Leoni), had won the race for the presidency. Capping off three years of contributing digital effects to the show, VFX Legion created a mix of large-scale CG shots for this last season, right through to the series finale.

The team has been called on to create over 140 of the CBS show’s most complex visual effects over the last three seasons: From CG environments built from the ground up that transport the live-action to locations throughout the world – to technically challenging effects designed to elevate the visual impact of the show.

VFX Legion first came onboard during ‘Madam Secretary’s’ fourth season.

“The high-quality digital environments, built from the ground up, were indistinguishable from practical footage – and got us in the door.”

Before/After: Show’s stars, Téa Leoni + Tim Daily /Computer Generated section of White House

‘Madam Secretary’ had been using stock footage of the White House, as well as other locations, and working around their limited flexibility. The cost of taking the New York production to D.C., as well as tight deadlines, and actors’ schedules made filming multiple environments unrealistic. An alternative: photo-real computer-generated environments custom-designed to seamlessly match the show’s live-action footage while enabling locations that don’t permit film crews on-site to be recreated digitally with spot-on accuracy.

“The high-quality, complex visual effects we turned around quickly and on the budget for that first episode led to the expansion of the role,”

“We became the go-to VFX specialist for ‘Madam Secretary’ as the writer’s room started developing scripts with a broader range of scenarios that took advantage of our CG assets.”

Madam Secretary’ was shot in New York, and set in the country’s political epicenter, Washington D.C., addressing issues requiring international diplomacy that took storylines beyond the borders of the U.S. The White House was a crucial fixture in the show. CG environments enabled scenarios to play out in political hotspots around the globe, taking the show digitally where it was unable to go to on film.

“Our team created computer-generated environments throughout the world, from Syria and Turkey to Iraq and Mexico. We were fortunate to be given the freedom to design shots that were innovative, dramatic, and of a scale rarely seen on ‘Madam Secretary,’”

Before/After: Computer-Generated Set Extension with Iranian refugees

Legion created numerous virtual crowd sequences over the years – adding large numbers of individuals in motion. Towards the end of season six, its team took digital crowd simulation to the next level. Compositors, animators, and artists created a CG motion capture sequence, digitally building large groups of people gathered in D.C. to support the president.

Before/After: Computer-Generated Set Extension with Iranian refugees

During season five, they simulated a crowd of hundreds of people that augmented original footage of displaced Syrians.
When the producer realized that the numbers didn’t reflect the massive scale of the Syrians making the trek to the Turkish border, the VFX company stepped in to create a digital motion capture sequence that dramatically bulked up the number of refugees.

Most recently, they completed many visual effects for the series finale. The episode closed with an elaborate wedding scene in the Rose Garden that took full advantage of the White House asset. The team used SpeedTree software to generate virtual trees, which they animated to match the wind that was blowing on the day they shot the sequence. They used large blue screens to add sections of the White House’s facade visible in the background.

Before/After: Computer-Generated Set Extension with Iranian refugees

“Producer Tony Palermo, and Associate Producer Drew Ysais, worked with us as a team, communicating and collaborated throughout the VFX process,”

“Their approach maximized the efficiency of our pipeline, enabling us to meet tight deadlines with ease – and gave us more time to focus on getting the most production value out of every shot.”

“We’re thrilled that our work met high standards and grateful to have had the opportunity to create challenging visual effects that elevated the visual impact of this hit series,”