Inside Twickenham’s Virtual Production Revolution With Samsung and Quite Brilliant: ‘We’re Waiting for AI to Catch Up With the Technology’ (EXCLUSIVE)

George Mihalcea

When Sunny Vohra acquired Twickenham Film Studios in 2012 , he inherited more than just soundstages and post-production facilities. He became the custodian of a 113-year-old institution where cinema history was written, from “The Italian Job” through to “Bohemian Rhapsody.” Now, 13 years into his tenure, Vohra is making what he calls “a leap of faith” — one that could position the venerable British studio at the forefront of virtual production technology. The centrepiece of this transformation