31.08.18 by Kimi

“Leaving Podgorica” by Dr. Bowman

So many great shots in this poetic short by Amsterdam/Brussels-based directing duo Dr. Bowman. Striving to break the stigma of depression and mental illness, “Leaving Podgorica” offers a portrait — both honest and dream-like — of a man who dares to reach beyond his own inner thoughts and solitude.

 

Starring Matthieu Sys & Lara Verheijden

Produced, written and directed by Dr. Bowman
aka Laurens Jans & Herman van den Bosch
Cinematographer: Herman van den Bosch
Gaffer: Jamie Drossaert
Montage: Koen Timmerman
Music: Brian McBride
Costum: Lara Verheijden, Ushi De Wijngaert
Head of Postproduction: Hervé Closset
Sound design: Christophe Loerke
Visual Effects: Antoine De Schuyter
Color Grading: Kene Illegems

Thanks to:
LOVO/POST, Camalot, Francois Mercier,
Patrice Gautot, Orlando Van Saelen

 

This video was submitted by Laurens Jans and selected by our team. Consider participating here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

30.08.18 by Kimi

King Krule – “Biscuit Town”

Love the look of this video for King Krule’s track “Biscuit Town” directed by London duo cc Wade (aka Michael and Paraic Morrissey). Cinematography by Ula Pontikos.

30.08.18 by Kimi

Son Little – “The Middle” (Mature)

A young couple dance out their passion and heartbreak in this wonderfully raw video for Son Little’s track “The Middle” by Israel/Paris-based director and cinematographer Daria Geller.

 

Starring Julia Loboda & Slava Kostyakhin
Director & DOP: Daria Geller
Cameraman: Artem Burko
Color Correction: Dmitriy Litvinov

 

This video was submitted by Daria Geller and selected by our team. Click here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

30.08.18 by Kimi

“Mayday Relay” by Florian Tscharf

A powerful short by German filmmaker Florian Tscharf“Mayday Relay” follows a father and daughter as they struggle to deal with an urgent distress call from an unknown ship.

 

Starring Rainer Sellien & Odine Johne
Voice Actors: Warsama Guled & Gil Webster

Writer, Director, Producer: Florian Tscharf
Director of Photography: Fabian Gamper
Editor: David Kuruc
Sound Design: Moritz Drath
Production: Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg

 

This is just one of the many wonderful submissions we’ve received in the past week. Consider participating here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

29.08.18 by Kimi

Premiere: Sam Tudor – “New Apartment”

Vancouver-based filmmaker Lucas Hrubizna takes us on a surreal trip into the universe of musician Sam Tudor for his track “New Apartment.” Part of an ongoing collaboration, the pair push the limits of a no-budget, no-crew music video, with Hrubizna spending months working on the effects and putting everything together on a 2009 iMac in his bedroom after just a single afternoon of shooting.

The concept behind the visuals emerged from the lyrics — specifically: “who are we but the floating remnants of a collision at the start of all time?” Using that as a starting point, Hrubizna began to think about the objects that are discarded in the process of moving and “the picture they paint for the new tenant about who or what came before them.” As he further shared with us:

“Exploding this idea to a larger scale, I sensed a parallel in the hints left to us by the universe that allow us to piece together an understanding of reality. As the camera floats through a freshly-rented space, the remnants of a previous tenant become increasingly clustered and organized, like molecular structures or celestial bodies, revealing a strange reality behind the empty walls of a new apartment.”

Check out “New Apartment” above and full credits below!

 

Director: Lucas Hrubizna
Editor: Lucas Hrubizna
Visual Effects: Lucas Hrubizna
Colourist: Lucas Hrubizna
Cinematographer: Blake Davey
Song written and recorded by Sam Tudor

 

 

Lucas Hrubizna’s Website

Lucas Hrubizna on Vimeo

Lucas Hrubizna on Instagram

 

29.08.18 by Kimi

Baby FuzZ – “Shadowland”

A simple yet poignant visualization of American life and the darkness just beneath the surface by Baby FuzZ for his new song “Shadowland.”

28.08.18 by Kimi

Premiere: “A Thousand Faces” by Andrew Winghart

Los Angeles-based director and choreographer Andrew Winghart challenges the conventions of dance on film in this stunning piece, starring dancer Emma Portner (previously featured here). Inspired by Joseph Campbell’s The Hero With a Thousand Faces, a personal favourite of Winghart’s, the project ultimately became a way of pushing himself to develop an idea he’d held onto for years exactly the way he wanted. As he explains further:

“My hope is that those watching will see dance in a way they haven’t experienced before. Not entirely narrative. Not entirely abstract. Finding beauty in the in between.”

We were so blown away by the end result we followed up with Winghart to ask him to share more about his process and passion. Check out “A Thousand Faces” above and our full interview with the director below!

 

 

 

Jeff Hamada: How would you describe your style as a choreographer? What makes a piece, an Andrew Winghart piece?

Andrew Winghart: My style as a choreographer is hard to pin down. I have a tendency to cross between styles and pull from a lot of different sources for inspiration. I like my work best when it lives between somewhere between more definite categories, neither fully concert nor commercial. What I think is really exciting about dance is how you can convey complex emotions without any dialogue. Pretty central to all my work however is a sense of scale and intensity.

Jeff Hamada: Were you more of a filmmaker or a dancer as a kid? What things were you into growing up in Wisconsin?

Andrew Winghart: I had a lot of seemingly unrelated interests as a kid. I used to obsessively watch this ‘Riverdance’ VHS in my basement and try to learn all the steps. Then the next week I would get really into baking bread. I also loved doing math workbooks (as a hobby). Dance definitely took up most of my time as I got into my teenage years but I have never lost that need to explore different fields.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: I read that you were also studying architecture at The New School, has that changed the way you approach the work you’re creating?

Andrew Winghart: I took a 5 week program there last summer which was aimed at students entering into design related masters programs from non-related fields. The program was such a joy for me and incredibly eye opening. There was a strong emphasis on finding the balance between rigor and trusting instinct which is something I have been trying to apply in my film and dance work. I used some of the techniques from this course actually in preparation for this film.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: Take us through the creation of your latest film, “A Thousand Faces.” What was the seed of the idea, and how much did it change by the time it was finished?

Andrew Winghart: The gestation of this idea came from the set. I had worked with scale before in terms of number of dancers but had never fully conceived a set piece. Conceptually it is loosely based on Joseph Campbell’s ‘Hero With a Thousand Faces,’ an all time favorite work of mythology that I had been wanting to tackle for a few years. Campbell outlines what he calls the ‘monomyth,’ a story progression that is present in almost all mythology and modern storytelling. My adaptation followed three stages; a Call to Adventure, then a Road of Trials, and finally The Abyss (Death/Rebirth). I thought the two tiered set presented a unique opportunity to tackle this progression in a unexpected way. Knowing the hero could never leave the two platforms forced me to be creative with how I presented the story. So much changed from first draft to final product I wouldn’t even know where to start. But that is all part of the fun of something like this.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: We’re huge fans of Emma Portner, what was it like working with her?

Andrew Winghart: She’s the best! We’ve actually known one another for at least five years. She’s the kind of friend I won’t hear from for a while, then will happenstance be in the same random city I’m in where we’ll go out to a dance club all night long (something we have done on more than one occasion). Working with her was really special, this was our first time collaborating in this capacity. She has such a strong sense of who she is as an artist and choreographer, and I didn’t want to try and remove that with this project. We really challenged each other to try things we both normally wouldn’t.

Jeff Hamada: Did you already have her in mind when you were creating the choreography? Can you talk a little bit about what excites you about her work?

Andrew Winghart: It was all a bit of a happy accident. When I wrote the treatment for the film I used an image of Emma in the page outlining the hero lead. I actually thought she was out of the country at the time. But the next day she came and took a class I was teaching and the rest just fell into place. In her work I love that she is so unapologetically herself. It is both feminine and masculine at the same time. Strong yet fragile. I wanted to capture that duality in this film.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: What do you hope the audience takes away from the film?

Andrew Winghart: Really my goal when I make any dance piece is to try and connect to viewers who have little experience with dance. Contemporary dance often comes across as inaccessibly cerebral but it doesn’t have to be that way. You shouldn’t have to know anything about dance to watch this film. This was entirely a passion project of mine that I fully self-financed because I was passionate about the idea and wanted to make something (hopefully) compelling and beautiful. I hope the audience can see and feel that passion on the screen.

Jeff Hamada: We often end these interviews with the same two questions, what’s one thing you’d like to accomplish this year? And what’s one thing you’d like to accomplish in your lifetime?

Andrew Winghart: I want to keep directing film and music videos and give more of a voice to dance in those spaces. And I would love to collaborate with more artists that inspire and challenge me (Es Devlin, Childish Gambino, Jamie XX just to name a few).

 

 

Andrew Winghart’s Website

Andrew Winghart on Vimeo

Andrew Winghart on Instagram

 

28.08.18 by Kimi

Blood Orange – “Saint”

Devonté Hynes aka Blood Orange self-directs a wonderfully laid back video for his track “Saint.”

28.08.18 by Kimi

Daithí – “In My Darkest Moments”

A captivating video for Daithí by Irish director Lochlainn McKenna. Shot in North Clare, Ireland, “In My Darkest Moments” cinematically explores themes of masculinity and loneliness through a series of repeated vignettes that convey an increasingly ominous sense of boredom and mindless activity. As McKenna further explains:

“We use these slow zooms into negative, empty space to represent their friend who isn’t there anymore. Perhaps they moved abroad, maybe they committed suicide, maybe they just fell out with these two guys – whatever it may have been, we wanted to make that persons absence felt.”

Watch “In My Darkest Moments” above. Full credits below.

 

Starring Shane Doonan & Shane O’Regan
Directed by Lochlainn McKenna
Production Manada: Oisin Fleming
Director of Photography: Karl Poyzer
Assistant Camera: Luke Talbot
Stills Photography: Gemma O’Brien
Colourist: Leandro Arouca @ Element Post

Thanks: Paddy Jordan, The Droney Family,
The people of North Clare, Ethan Pearce, Charles Pierse,
Film Equipment Ireland, Cian G Sweeney, Morris Epstein,
Áine O’Leary, Rachel Ahern, Conor Daly, Cormac McNally

 

This video was submitted by Lochlainn McKenna and selected by our team. Click here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

27.08.18 by Kimi

“Ella” by Dan Chen

Two Asian American teens grapple with life in a small town and the heartbreak of growing up in this wonderful short written and directed by Kansas-born, California-based filmmaker Dan Chen.

 

Written & Directed by Dan Chen
Starring Nichole Bloom and Dallas Liu
with Reilly Donnelly, Kevin Medlin, Sam Neel, Dylan Shillcut, Andre Davis
Produced by Eric Cook, Douglas Kim, and Dan Chen
Cinematography: Philips Shum
Production Designer: Molly Goodman
Editor: Arielle Zakowski
Music Supervisor: Angela Asistio
Music: Jubilant Ecstasy Dream
Executive Producers: DJay Brawner, Douglas Kim, Dinh Thai, Josh Falcon
Co-Producers: Rita Ross, Sheryl Briggs, Clara Lee
Associate Producers: Nick Adams, Caroline Watson, Jonathan Brebner
An Anthem / Evidence / Justice Tech / Varient Production

 

This is just one of the many fantastic submissions we’ve received in the past week! Consider participating here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

27.08.18 by Kimi

Premiere: “Kiss & Describe It” by Andrew Gura

An experimental short by Los Angeles-based director and photographer Andrew Gura, featuring acclaimed musician and poet Saul Williams. Having worked together since the late 90s, “Kiss & Describe It” began with the idea of taking a few portraits at Saul’s home in Los Angeles, but quickly transformed into something else entirely. Following the light and Saul’s improvisations with DOP Jake Bianco, Andrew shares how the story of the film naturally emerged:

“Jake and I would glance at each other, exchange a few words, and swap 1970s Panavision cinema lenses or change our aspect ratio, push in closer or pull way back. Saul and I caught up and joked with each other while we were filming. Some of these casual moments made it into the film. Saul’s wife Anisia joined us at times, her captivating presence bringing out another emotional thread. When we felt like we were ready to move on, we changed location and wardrobe, instinctive as can be. We were done right after lunch.”

The result is a beautiful and intimate portrait, complete with snippets from private audio files of works-in-progress and unreleased songs as well as clips from old footage Andrew shot of Saul years ago, previously unseen by the public. The title similarly comes from Saul’s poetry which deeply inspired the post-production process. As Andrew ultimately describes, it’s a piece of “pure expression,” a chance to “dream along with Saul on his morning walk.”

Watch “Kiss & Describe It” above and see full credits below! Images from the shoot taken by Anisia Uzeyman.

 

Poems & Movement by Saul Williams
Produced / Directed / Edited by Andrew Gura
Cinematography: Jake Bianco
Music: Free Black Press
Sound Design & Mix: Keith Ruggiero
Colour Grade & VFX cleanup: Bill Pollock
Camera: Panavision Woodland Hills
Archival DV footage from 2000 / 2001
Guest appearance by Anisia Uzeyman
Special thanks to Mike Carter @ Panavision

 

 

 

Andrew Gura’s Website

Andrew Gura on Vimeo

Andrew Gura on Instagram

 

27.08.18 by Kimi

St. Lucia – “Walking Away”

Los Angeles-based director Henry Kaplan offers a little twist on the standard performance video for St. Lucia’s track “Walking Away.”






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