Pulse (4K) by Mike Olbinski


Song by Tony Anderson: “The Way Home“ (Licensed through The Music Bed: http://ift.tt/1utaT9A)
Follow me: http://ift.tt/HQz2lJ / http://www.twitter.com/mikeolbinski / http://ift.tt/2cOYIHr / http://ift.tt/2cP05G6

For quite a few years now I’ve been wanting to do something different with my time-lapse films. I love color. Storms are full of color. The blues, the greens, the warm oranges and reds at sunset. The colors are sometimes what make a simple storm into something extra special.

But black and white speaks to my soul. I love it. There is something when you remove the color that lets you truly see the textures, movement and emotion of a storm.

And then you hear a song. I had asked my buddy Jay Worsley (http://ift.tt/1p7SHri) if he had heard anything lately that might rock for a black and white storm film, and he linked me to Tony Anderson’s „The Way Home.“ The moment I heard it, I knew that was the song. My recent films have a frantic pace to them and people occasionally tell me they’d love to see the footage in a much slower speed. I already knew that going with the monochrome style sorta demanded something more solemn and poetic…and the song was perfect for that.

I also went with a much wider aspect ratio than I’ve ever done before. I feel like it actually feels like it brings you in closer to the action, almost like you were standing right there with me.

I held myself back for a long time in doing this project because I wasn’t very knowledgable about using tools like Premiere Pro to color grade footage, and all I thought was that I’d have to re-render all my clips as black and white before doing the film. And that’s a lot of work. But the past few years have brought me tons of experience in Premiere Pro, plus help from my buddy Jay, and I figured out how to do it all there and without a ton of effort.

The film is made up of some of my favorite clips from the past few years. A mix of the monsoon and supercell plains chasing. I’m so inspired by the songs I choose for these videos. Kerry Muzzey, Tony Anderson. Their songs are so powerful and moving and the stories they tell themselves are amazing. I went with clips that felt right with each beat of the song and while I usually try to tell a story with these films, I mostly decided to let the music be that here.

Thanks to Tony Anderson for such an incredible piece of music, and to Jay for pointing it out to me. And also to my friend and fellow time-lapser, Brian Miner (see him on Vimeo: http://ift.tt/2hMheCJ), who did some B&W work this past fall and reminded me of what I’ve wanted to do for so long now.

I hope you enjoy this! The creative juices were flowing and I also have some serious withdrawals from chasing storms. I HAD to work on something to hold me over until spring gets here. Only around four months to go before I hit the road to chase supercells and tornadoes in April, May and June!

I have a couple of tornado chasing tours going this spring, if you are interested in checking those out, here you go: http://ift.tt/2iJZ95e

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Captured with a Canon 5DSR, 5D3, 11-24mm, 16-35, 35mm, 50mm and 135mm.
Processed using Lightroom, LR Timelapse, After Effects and Premiere Pro

Scavengers by Joseph Bennett


WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY
Joseph Bennett
Charles Huettner

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS
Matt Harrigan
Dave Newberg

ANIMATION
Joseph Bennett
Charles Huettner
Caleb Wood
Nelson Boles
Jonathan Djob Nkondo
Sean Buckelew

BACKGROUND ART
Charles Huettner
Joseph Bennett

SOUND DESIGN
Mike Jansson

MUSIC
Joe Wong
Didier Leplae

Turtle (Wugui) by Jordan Schiele


A woman has bigger plans for the construction worker whose turtle she agrees to buy.

Official Selection 52nd New York Film Festival
Awarded Grand Jury Prizes at Atlanta Film Festival, New Orleans Film Festival and Best Asian Short of the Year at the 21st annual Hong Kong short film and video awards, audience prize.
Follow the film on Facebook: http://ift.tt/2iwXa4u

Film Comment Magazine: http://ift.tt/2hLGiIv
„An astute study on identity, class, and the potential for connection between strangers. Embedding a great deal of substance in his grey scale, minimalist aesthetic, Schiele is definitely a director worth keeping an eye on.“

Film International: http://ift.tt/2iwL6jR
„What transpires between the artist and her unexpected model climaxes in a powerful, quietly shocking finale. Wu Gui is extremely well filmed by Schiele (who did the cinematography), and he captures the balance of power between the characters perfectly…This short is a knockout.“

myDylarama: http://ift.tt/2hLGkA7

Festivals + Awards

52nd New York Film Festival
Leeds International Film Festival
Chicago Film Festival (Nominated Gold Hugo)
Atlanta Film Festival (Best Narrative Short, Oscar-qualifying)
Bermuda International Film Festival
Cinema Jove
Odense Film Festival (Storyteller award finalist)
Cinefiesta
Kratkofil Plus Film Festival
Guanajuato Film Festival
Traverse City Film Festival
Encounters Film Festival (myDylarama award for Best Actor and funniest short)
La Guarimba Film Festival
Bar Harbor Film Festival
New Orleans Film Festival (Grand Jury Award)
Kaohsiung Film Festival

TRAIN SURFERS | AFI Docs Official Selection by Adrien Cothier


„In Train Surfers, thrill-seeking young men tempt fate doing stunts on Mumbai’s high-speed trains“ AFI Docs

AFI interview: http://ift.tt/2j0M22V

Director: Adrien Cothier
Director of Photography: Deepak Thomas
Producer: Anders N. Berg
Executive Producer: Timothee Verrecchia for Verrecchia and Partners
Co-Executive Producer: Jake Hanly
Editor: Jesse Overman
Composer: Max Barbaria
Sound Recorder: Anthony Karbhari
Sound Design and Mix: David Forshee
Color: Mikey Rossiter @ The Mill

GABRIEL by Pudim


Gabriel Neris is a 16 years old para-athlete who’s not afraid of pursuing his dreams.

He got famous after losing his prothesis in the middle of a 100m competition in São Paulo, Brazil.
Even under a lot of pain, he made a way to reach the finish line.

This film dives inside Gabriel’s life and background, leading us through his fellings and motivations.

Directors: Douglas Bernardt and Squarehead
Director of Photography: Lucas D. Oliveira

Produced by Stink São Paulo

Pregame by Jeff Chan


A group of friends collapses under the pressure of New Years Eve.

A short film by Jeff Chan & Andrew Rhymer

Cast: Scarlett Bermingham, Christine Bullen, Maya Erskine, Brian McElhaney, Nick Reinhardt, Aaron Schroeder, Patrick Woodall
DP: Guy Godfree
1st AC: Daniel Worlock
Production Designer: Francesca Palombo
Art Assistant: Katherine Reed
Production Sound: Anthony Kozolowski
Post Sound Mixer: Steve Oliver

“Auld Lang Syne” performed by Alex Bleeker

Executive Producers: Matt Campbell & Greg Beauchamp

A Bindery Film
See more @ binderynyc.com

THE PASSION OF JUDAS (LA PASIÓN DE JUDAS) by DAVID PANTALEÓN


This film is based on a local tradition of some Spanish and Latin American villages in which, at Easter, a doll representing Judas Iscariot is stoned, lynched or burned for his betrayal to Christ.

Esta película está basada en una tradición local de algunos pueblos españoles e iberoamericanos en los que, se apedrea, lincha o quema un muñeco que representa a Judas, por su traición a Cristo.

Director: David Pantaleón
Screenplay: David Pantaleón
Production Company: Los De Lito Films
Producer: David Pantaleón
Cinematography: Cris Noda
Edition: Oscar Santamaría
Sound: Himar Soto
Art direction: Laura Millán
Music: Hector Lavoe
Runtime: 10 min.
Format: HD
Language: Spanish
Subtitles: English
Country: Spain
Year: 2014