Shrek 2
Shrek 2

Greatest computer-generated movie sequences - Shrek 2

Tuesday's nomination: Ian Lynch speaks out for everyone's favourite ogre in Shrek 2

Ian Lynch

He's big, green, grumpy and looks nothing like Wayne Rooney, and his best mate's a penguin called Tux. Let's hear it for Shrek.

OK, so he has no mates and a donkey fills the position of annoying talking animal/sidekick, rather than a too-innocent looking penguin, but without Linux would DreamWorks have been able to create quite such the spectacular that is Shrek 2?

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DreamWorks needed as much computing power as possible to implement the newly developed computer graphics techniques it wanted to use to add greater depth to its animation in Shrek 2.

These included subsurface scattering for more realistic skin, global illumination for more realistic lighting, better looking hair and larger crowd scenes with more complex characters than seen in the original Shrek.

Over 330 HP workstations were used running Red Hat Linux 7.2, dual-Intel Xeon 2.4GHz processors, nVidia Quadro4 XGL graphics cards, 2GB Ram and dual monitors.

No, I don't know why they needed dual monitors but the hefty provision of Ram allowed animators to store more frames of animation, while the chosen systems allowed recalculated frames to have more detailed geometry which helped the animators to pre-visualise and make decisions before rendering.

At the back end, the Shrek 2 render farm comprised 347 LP-1000 1.2GHz P3 dual processor servers with 2GB of Ram, and 433 ProLiant DL360 2.8GHz P4 dual processor servers with 4GB of Ram.

"We are changing what is possible in animation," said Jeffrey Katzenberg, DreamWorks co-founder, during the film's production.

He was near enough right and, thanks to its jokes-on-all-levels dialogue and the Banderas/Zorro addition of Puss in Boots, it's a damn fine movie.

Pixar's Toy Story may be the father of CGI, but the combination of Linux and DreamWorks makes Shrek 2 the daddy now.

Do you agree? Vote for Shrek 2 here:

Disagree? Vote for an alternative nominee or tell us why we're wrong and what we should have chosen. Click here for our dedicated forum.

Check back on Wednesday to read Steve Ranger's tribute to The Matrix, the last of our nominations.

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Further reading

Morpheus's Rescue

Greatest computer-generated movie sequences - The Matrix

Wednesday's nomination: Steve Ranger asks you to vote for Morpheus's rescue in The Matrix

Battle for Minas Tirith

Greatest computer-generated movie sequences - LOTR

Monday's nomination: Miya Knights puts the case for the the Battle for Minas Tirith from The Return of the King (2003)

Greatest computer-generated movie sequences - Toy Story

Friday's nomination: Gareth Morgan extols the groundbreaking technical wizardry of Toy Story (1995)

Greatest computer-generated movie sequences - Fight Club

Thursday's nomination: Iain Thomson makes the case for the opening sequence of Fight Club (1999)

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