Cinema 4D

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Cinema 4D is a 3D software suite developed by the German company Maxon.

Overview

As of R21, only a single version of Cinema 4D is available. It replaces all previous variants, including BodyPaint 3D, and includes all features of the past 'Studio' variant. With R21, all binaries were unified. There is no technical difference between commercial, educational, or demo versions. The difference is now only in licensing. 2014 saw the release of Cinema 4D Lite, which came packaged with Adobe After Effects Creative Cloud 2014. "Lite" acts as an introductory version, with many features withheld. This is part of a partnership between the two companies, where a Maxon-produced plug-in, called Cineware, allows any variant to create a seamless workflow with After Effects. The "Lite" variant is dependent on After Effects CC, needing the latter application running to launch, and is only sold as a package component included with After Effects CC through Adobe. Initially, Cinema 4D was developed for Amiga computers in the early 1990s, and the first three versions of the program were available exclusively for that platform. With v4, however, Maxon began to develop the application for Windows and Macintosh computers as well, citing the wish to reach a wider audience and the growing instability of the Amiga market following Commodore's bankruptcy. It was also released for BeOS. On Linux, Cinema 4D is available as a commandline rendering version.

Modules and older variants

From R12 to R20, Cinema 4D was available in four variants. A core Cinema 4D 'Prime' application, a 'Broadcast' version with additional motion-graphics features, 'Visualize,' which adds functions for architectural design and 'Studio,' which includes all modules. From Release 8 until Release 11.5, Cinema 4D had a modular approach to the application, with the ability to expand upon the core application with various modules. This ended with Release 12, though the functionality of these modules remains in the different flavors of Cinema 4D (Prime, Broadcast, Visualize, Studio) The old modules were:

Version history

Use in industry

A number of films and related works have been modeled and rendered in Cinema 4D, including: • The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo • Beowulf • The Ship-boys of Bontekoe • The Golden Compass • Surf's Up • We Are the Strange • Spider-Man 3 • Monster House • War of the Worlds • Chronicles of Narnia • Serenity • Inception • Doom • Prehistoric Park • Homework • Van Helsing • Bernd das Brot • Generation • The Polar Express • TV Patrol (logo and in-newscasting props) • Sausage Party • King Arthur • June 17, 1953, State of Emergency • Open Season • He Was a Quiet Man • Surrogates • Tron: Legacy • Roger Waters: The Wall Live tour projections (some of them) • Iron Man 3 • Pacific Rim • Dick Figures: The Movie (Paris Pursuit sequence and Crookygrin's plane, CG animation by Joel Moser) • The Nut Job • Soul Snatcher (赤狐书生) • Eurovision Song Contest and Junior Eurovision Song Contest (graphics) • Where the Dead Go to Die • Furious 7 • Insignificant / Une espèce à part • Avengers: Endgame • Galaxy Guards (우당탕탕 은하안전단) • Doctor Who, Silence in the Library • Strictly Come Dancing (title graphics)

Cinebench

Cinebench is a cross-platform test suite which tests a computer's hardware capabilities. It can be used as a test for Cinema 4D's 3D modeling, animation, motion graphic and rendering performance on multiple CPU cores. The program "target[s] a certain niche and [is] better suited for high-end desktop and workstation platforms". Cinebench is commonly used to demonstrate hardware capabilities at tech shows to show a CPU performance, especially by Tech YouTubers and review sites.

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