Two technicians had a particularly formative impact on the evolution of special effects in Germany. Film pioneer Guido Seeber favoured methods like multiple exposure composites, which allow the cinematographer to excel both technically and creatively. Aiming at forging convincing composite spaces on screen, Eugen Schüfftan invented the only widely used commercial special-effects technique originating in Europe, the Schüfftan process. In similar ways, Seeber’s photographic and Schüfftan’s perceptual effects construe technology as cinema’s core creative tool and the cinematic image as fundamentally malleable. Both shared technoromantic views, which is apparent from their devotion to the goal of film art and commitment to devising medium-specific means for transcending material reality and expressing emotions and ideas.