"Before CGI ruled the screen, there were visionaries who quite literally lit the future by hand."
Bruce Logan, the special effects pioneer who helped blow up the Death Star and bring the haunting beauty of 2001: A Space Odyssey to life, has passed away at 78.
Logan's fingerprints are all over some of the most iconic moments in film history — not through flashy fame, but through pure craftsmanship. Imagine being 19 years old, working under Douglas Trumbull, and having Stanley Kubrick scrutinize every frame of your footage for two and a half years. Trial by fire? Try trial by spacefire.
From pioneering miniature explosions in Star Wars to helping birth the digital frontier with Tron, Logan was always at the edge of what cinema could become — and often, he pushed it there. He wasn't just making movies; he was making magic.
As his daughter beautifully put it: "Before CGI ruled the screen, there were visionaries who lit the future by hand."
Bruce Logan's legacy isn't just the incredible visuals he helped create — it's the inspiration he leaves behind for every dreamer who ever wanted to tell a story with light, shadow, and a little bit of fire.
Rest in peace, legend. May the Force be with you always.