It’s Not What You Know by Aaron Abrams


A struggling actor shows up at a Los Angeles house party with a plan and a mysterious lunchbox – but things take a turn when he runs into someone from his past.

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Written and Directed By:
Aaron Abrams

Cinematographer:
Rob Scarborough

Starring:
Aaron Abrams (Hannibal, Blindspot, Masters of Sex)
Carly Pope (Popular, Suits, Arrow)

Produced By:
Aaron Abrams
Tommy Dingwall
Carly Pope
Rob Scarborough

Associate Producers:
Brendan Gall
Martin Gero

Edited By:
Mike Banas

Poster:
Ryan V. Hays

About The Production:
Shot on an Alexa Mini.

„It’s Not What You Know“ was filmed in one night at Ava Gardner’s old home.

SLURP by CHLOE PLAT


L’histoire d’une mignonne petite langue qui s’échappe de la bouche de son humain pendant la nuit.
The story of a cute little tongue who escapes from the mouth of his human during the night.

Réalisateurs : Paul AUTRIC, Pedro PILLOT, Chloé PLAT, Juan Pablo DE LA ROSA.

Mails:
Chloé Plat: chloe.plat@hotmail.fr
paul Autric: paul.autric@gmail.com
Pedro Pillot: pillot.anim@gmail.com
Juan Pablo De La Rosa: juanpdelar@hotmail.com
Simon Chapuis: simon.chapuis1@gmail.com

Chloé Plat tumblr : http://ift.tt/2zNCroY
Paul Autric blog : paulatk.blogspot.fr

サマタイム(Summer Time) / 東郷清丸 (Official Music Video) by furifurisoshiki


Music by 東郷清丸 /TogoKiyomaru
http://ift.tt/2AX6Ixz
http://allright-inc.jp/

Animated by soshiki hakase / ソーシキ博士

WEB: http://ift.tt/1mpOgG6
Twitter: http://twitter.com/soshikihakase
Instagram: http://ift.tt/2AWJHuS

CASINO, Steven Woloshen by Vidéographe

Steven Woloshen, Canada, 2016, 3 min. 58 sec.
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“A film for my father, who gambled with love.“

“Un film pour mon père, qui a tout misé avec amour.“

Distributed by / Distribué par: Vidéographe
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Contact: Jade Wiseman / festival@videographe.org

The Monolith by Angelo G.


Pioneering NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, enters a midtown art studio only to find that her skyline view will soon be blocked by the construction of yet another high-rise hotel.

But as the perspective out her window permanently shifts, so does the artist’s point of view.

The Monolith is directed by Angelo J. Guglielmo, Jr. (The Woman Who Wasn’t There), produced and shot by Andy Bowley, EP’d by Andrea L. Smith. Rosie Walunas adeptly employed the Adobe Creative Suite to bring over 200 pieces of Leech’s beautiful artwork to life using Animation, Motion Graphics and Compositing.

Leech has exhibited her work across the United States and the UK in museums, commercial galleries, public art spaces, and alternative venues. For additional information on the artist, please visit: http://gwynethleech.com

DIRECTOR: ANGELO J. GUGLIELMO, JR.
PRODUCERS: ANDY BOWLEY, ROSIE WALUNAS
EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: ANGELO J. GUGLIELMO, JR., ANDREA SMITH
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY: ANDY BOWLEY
EDITOR: ROSIE WALUNAS
COMPOSER: ABRAHAM CLEMENTS
SOUND MIXER: DAVID WILSON
STILL PHOTOGRAPHY: BEN KESSLER
ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY: GWYNETH LEECH, SARA KERENS, MARIANNE BARCELLONA
COLORISTS: BEN BROOKSBY, SAM WILES

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OY „MADE OF LOVE“ by Moritz Reichartz


This is the music video for the song „Made of Love“ of OY’s [oy-music.com/video] new album Space Diaspora.

AFRO PUNK (US) writes:
Ghanaian-Swiss singer Joy Frempong and producer & musician Lleluja-Ha are back from outer space, and they’ve brought a new sound with them that might make the future a little more colorful—if we listen. Making up the duo OY, the video to their latest single is as catchy and eye-popping as the message is powerful. In the experimental clip directed by Moritz Reichartz, Frempong chants off different nationalities as head-like shapes of various colors gyrate against each other while floating on a clear sea, leading to a climax where the heads congregate in front of a giant wall, making so much love that the partition is destroyed.

CREDITS:
Music: OY [oy-music.com]
Derection, Design, Animation and Images: Moritz Reichartz

More infos at: momade.de

Resynthesis – Max Cooper by Kevin McGloughlin


Max Cooper:
I had a lot of high speed train journeys recently and I love watching the wires seemingly dance around outside the window. I wondered if we could be getting fooled by a similar process during our usual experience of time, and thought it would be an interesting project for a music video set to the music created during the same journeys.

The wires outside the window are static but they appear to move because of our motion past them. Perhaps our usual experience of movement could be explained by a similar process, where time is a physical dimension into which everything grows, with the present as the surface of this inflating structure. It ties in to a lot of physics ideas which are very common, and I thought it could make for an interesting music video, if I could find someone who might be able to pull it off!

Luckily for me, one of my favourite visual artists, Kevin McGloughlin had already been experimenting with linked techniques and ideas, and he’s gone to town on it with a multitude of techniques and editing precision to create something pretty special. And yes, there’s certainly a nod to the original time-stretch slitscan effects of Kubrick’s 2001.

I wanted to show the transition from our normal experience of time to a stretched out past as a physical structure when viewed from an alternative perspective outside of the dimensions we’re usually constrained to.

One other interesting thing about this model of time is that it helps with some mind-pickling metaphysical conundrums around the sense in which the past exists. In this model it literally exists out there behind us as a physical 4D structure. If we could travel outside of our growing surface somehow and went back to the past it wouldn’t be much fun though, we’d just find solid lifeless stretched out versions of ourselves.

For the music I wanted to bring these ideas of frozen moments of the past into play, and no better excuse to get stuck in with the Prophet 6 on some lush classic analogue synth sounds for the main chord sequence, and plenty of nob noodling for a dance of modulating sounds around the main sequence. I wanted to keep it fairly sparse to let the chord patch be central, and just focus on trying to make every element, including the percussion, warp a little, so you can either listen to the track from a distance and hear the harmonic ideas, or delve in to find all sorts more hiding in there. Kevin did an amazing (and painstaking) job of warping the video to sync with the audio detailing.

If you’d like to receive exclusive music, mixes, video and news you can sign up to the site at http://ift.tt/2zmlBJl

Kevin McGloughlin:

Max Cooper and I discussed ideas about space-time before embarking on the Resynthesis project.
We were on the same page for the most part, though, working with Max is always insightful and he enlightened me with some really fascinating ideas about space – time.

I was delighted to once again collaborate, especially with reference to ‚time‘, which is such a relatable and unavoidable part of everyone and everything.

The track is really beautiful, I saw the visuals in the music quite clearly from the offset.
I could hear the ‚time stretching‘ in the melodies and synths and I was greatly inspired by it.

My aspiration in this piece was to create a journey for the viewer, a passage through space and time, in an effort to represent time as a dimensional structure.

I aimed to convey existence as a solid component of time, an effort to glimpse the idea that our past still exists out there in a stretched, distorted dwelling..

I wanted to capture a human / mortal essence of time, displaying brief impressions of human interactions and activity, traveling in time.

All the fundamental assets were captured employing photography and realtime footage.

I stretched time in both 3d and 2d space using a wide variety of time displacement techniques, ranging from ‚in camera‘ work to quite laborious post production work.

Fun Fact..Some of the clips contain exactly one googol videos playing simultaneously.
(using a method I devised some time ago, ie.the second last very short clip)

Most of footage/photography was shot in Dublin Ireland, with additional shots from Co. Sligo.

Working with Max always makes for an interesting time.

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http://ift.tt/1CxR98Z

Herman Miller: Ward Bennett at 100 by Dress Code


Celebrating the centenary—and new Phiadon monograph—of Ward Bennett a design renaissance man.

Client: Herman Miller

Produced by: Dress Code
 (dresscodeny.com)
Executive Creative Director: Dan Covert

Director: Wes Ebelhar
Executive Producer: Brad Edelstein

Head of Production: Tara Rose Stromberg


Design: Elena Chudoba, Peter Harp, Simone Noronha, Wes Ebelhar
Animation: Wes Ebelhar
, Rasmus Löwenbrååt, Wei-Shen Wang

Music & Sound: YouTooCanWoo

VO: Ward Bennett from an archival interview courtesy of Dr Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel

Check out the full story:
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