20.08.18 by Kimi

Stimulator Jones – “Give My All”

Los Angeles-based director Patrick Mattes pairs musical instruments with complimentary settings intended to highlight their various qualities in this video for Stimulator Jones’ track “Give My All.” Beautiful work by cinematographer Christian Klein, all shot on Kodak 16mm film, in and around LA.

Director: Patrick Mattes
Cinematographer: Christian Klein
AC / Loader: Andy Huynh
Prep AC: Jackie Bryan
Set Photographer: Jessica Perez
Editor: Patrick Mattes
Colorist: Dante Pasquinelli

Label: Stones Throw Records
Producer: Patrick Mattes and Jessica Perez
Shot on Kodak 16mm Film
Processed at Pro8mm

20.08.18 by Kimi

“The Dawn Chorus” by George Wu

London-based director George Wu (previously featured here) continues to delight with her latest project. “The Dawn Chorus” celebrates both the beautiful and the ridiculous with a brilliant mix of high-end style and puppetry. Inspired by the early morning moment when birds start to welcome the day, the short piece involves a Jazz quintet, meticulously arranged to trigger a series of colourful puppets as they perform a score by composer Athos Tsiopani, created especially for the film.

 

Written and Directed by George Wu
Producer: Cherry Jordan
Music: Athos Tsiopani
Director of Photography: Ian Forbes
Editor: George Wu
Grade: Vic Parker
Art Department: George Wu and Arthur Harmsworth
Camera Assist: Alan McIlrath
Gaffer: Robbie Gray
Double Bass: Doug Kemp
Piano: Athos Tsiopani
Trumpet: Finlay Hetherington
Clarinet: Murray Wham
Drums: Terry Peng
Recorded and engineered by Dee O’Leary

 

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

20.08.18 by Kimi

Premiere: “Dominance” by ANIMALS

A vibrant collaboration between dancer Dominant Namek and directors David Bertschinger Karg and Tobias Bonfanti aka ANIMALS. “Dominance” explores the relationships we’ve built with technology and the necessity of unplugging in the digital age. As the London/Zurich-based directing duo explain further:

“Millennials grew up pretty much entirely without smart phones but use them every day today. A good tool, but we think it is important not to limit yourself and your persona to the online world. Instant gratification is a dangerous need we developed and we think it’s important to have a space where you can be yourself outside of the online world.”

Check out “Dominance” above and see full credits below!

 

Directed by ANIMALS
DoP: Tom Elliott
Producer: Gilles Germann
Production company: HILLTON
Talent: Dominant Namek
Production Designer: Lucy Grahan
1st AC: James Woodbridge
2nd AC: Patrycja Cygan
AC Phantom: Adam Parkes
Gaffer: Jan Wittrowski
Runner: Darina Rauer
Editor: Bela Adami, ANIMALS
Colorist: Joseph Bicknell
Grading House: CHEAT
Animation: Patrice Gerber
Sound design: Chris Banks
Mix: Jingle Jungle
Music: Intro – Luca Zimmermann / Middle – “Fruits” by Beshken

 

 

ANIMALS’ Website

ANIMALS on Instagram

 

17.08.18 by Kimi

Christine and the Queens – “5 dollars”

Video for Christine and the Queens’ track “5 dollars” by director Colin Solal Cardo (previously featured here). Based on an original idea by Christine and the Queens.

17.08.18 by Kimi

“Head in the Clouds”: An Interview with Christine Yuan

Los Angeles-based writer and director Christine Yuan creates a fantastic series of intersecting vignettes for 88rising’s “Head in the Clouds: a midsummer night’s dream.” Featuring Higher Brothers, Joji, Princess Gollum, Kinjaz and Willy Choi, the surreal album-film draws inspiration from the individual tracks as well as broader cultural references like Alice in Wonderland and Akira Kurosawa.

We recently had the chance to ask Yuan about her approach to filmmaking, some of her favourite directors working today and her own dreams for the future. Watch “Head in the Clouds” and check out our full interview with Yuan as well as some behind-the-scenes images from the shoot, taken by fellow director and photographer Anthony Pham!

 

 

Director Christine Yuan

 

Jeff Hamada: I read as many of your previous interviews as I could find! Can you tell me something about yourself that you haven’t revealed in an interview before.

Christine Yuan: I’m learning more and more about the freedom and power of not taking yourself too seriously. I feel like I’m experimenting more than ever and it’s nice to remind yourself constantly that there’s something new to be learned. It don’t stop.

Jeff Hamada: In another interview you defined success as “creating a clear channel through your work to reveal your soul”, I love that. At what point did you feel like your work was starting to really reveal your soul?

Christine Yuan: When I started wearing silk, my soul really began to shine. (っ◔◡◔)っ But for real, this past year has been amazing working with artists and brands who trust your vision and allow you to do your thing. Recently, collaborating with 88rising feels like a turning point.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: What were you like as a kid? What kind of things were you into?

Christine Yuan: I was a mad loner as a kid. I would draw and read a lot. I would stare out the window at trees and fall in love with the wind and how it danced with the leaves. I was into computer games like Lode Runner and Lemmings. I was into collecting Pokémon cards and watching Jackie Chan Adventures after school. I was also into playing teacher, which was probably what prepped me to be a director.

Jeff Hamada: I loved Lemmings too! How do you think you’ve changed since then, and how have you stayed the same?

Christine Yuan: I’ve definitely changed and am a lot more social now. I think my job requires me to be that way. But in some ways, I’m still the same and am still in love with the wind and how it dances with the leaves. I’m now into “computer games” like Adobe InDesign and Premiere.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: Who are some directors that are really exciting you these days?

Christine Yuan: Matilda Finn is a director who really excites me. There’s an integrity to her work I really admire and a darkness there I relate to. Amy Gardner is a director and choreographer whose movement work I’m excited by. There’s a real soul to what she creates. Liza Mandelup excites me as she moves from short form to completing her first feature. Her passion for her subjects and ability to self-initiate projects inspire me.

Jeff Hamada: How would you describe your style? What is someone getting when they hire Christine Yuan to direct?

Christine Yuan: As a Gemini, there are two sides to my style. Dark princess anime and real life human stories. One side of what I do is playful, slightly cryptic, totally cerebral, with an editorial overtone. Another side of what I do is doc based, uncovering a person’s process and digging deep to what their concept of truth may be. By getting to know the truth of each person, maybe we can discover some type of collective truth.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: Let’s talk about “Head in the Clouds.” What was the first seed of the idea and how did it develop?

Christine Yuan: The first seed of an idea for HITC was a party that took place in 24 hours. An Alice in Wonderland type narrative evolved from that, from which I think this concept of dreams took hold. I listened to the album and wrote out a scene for each song that naturally flowed from one to the next. Then I worked with Sean Miyashiro from 88rising to fine tune each beat. Overall, we wanted it to feel like a strange trip.

Jeff Hamada: What were some of the challenges you encountered during production?

Christine Yuan: Time. Time. Time. Time. Time. We shot 17 set ups over the course of 3 days, which is a lot. It took a focused amount of skill, stamina, and planning to hit our days and make sure we captured each set up the right way. The whole team, cast and crew, worked beyond to make it happen. It really takes a village to raise a child (a film child). Another challenge was the heat. We were in the thick of the LA heat wave while shooting so everyone’s sweating up a storm and hovering around a single AC unit between takes. In some ways, the heat created its own memorable atmosphere on set.

Jeff Hamada: Love the choreography by Kinjaz, what sort of direction did you give them?

Christine Yuan: Kinjaz are such pros, I really trusted their own vision for their movement. I watched a lot of videos of their past choreography and used some as reference. To help bridge the worlds and tie them into the overall film narrative, I showed them the first scene of Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams. They really stood as the figures who led us in and out of this dream world.

Jeff Hamada: Do you feel like what you’re doing now is the thing you were born to do?

Christine Yuan: I definitely think everything I’ve done so far has led me here. To say I’m doing what I’m born to do, I’m not sure. I’m not sure if I believe that. I believe that I made a series of choices that led me to where I am. I feel affirmed that this is where I’m meant to be because of a dedication I have to exercise my skills, practice my craft, and expand my experience.

 

 

Jeff Hamada: What’s one goal you have for the next year or so?

Christine Yuan: A goal of mine in the next year is to direct a narrative project.

Jeff Hamada: And what about in your lifetime, what’s something you hope to accomplish?

Christine Yuan: Meet many people, laugh and dance a lot, and go to sleep happy.

 

 

Christine Yuan’s Website

Christine Yuan on Vimeo

Christine Yuan on Instagram

 

 

 

Written and Directed by Christine Yuan
Executive Producer: Jesse Chorng, Matt Zolly
Production Company: Snow Beach
Line Producer: Jack Winter
Director of Photography: Ryan Marie Helfant
Production Designer: Liam Moore
Stylist: Chloe & Chenelle
Editor: Chad Sarahina
Choreographer: Kinjaz
Casting Director: Jonathan Buckley
Casting Assistant: Sarah May Levy
Production Manager: Adam Thayer
Production Coordinator: Chris Taylor
1st AD: Parker McMillan
2nd AD: James Cornett
1st AC: Julia Pasternak
2nd AC: Tim Maloney
2nd AC: Will Hecht
Movi Op: Reid Murphy
BTS Photographer: Anthony Pham
Key Grip: Jon Booker
BBG: Logan Justice
Grip: Jake Poole, James Wray
Dolly Grip/Driver: Vic Roca
Gaffer: Arjun Prakash
BBE: Ian Thomas
Electric: Danny Wiliams, Theadore Hyppolite
Stylist Assistant: Haley Appell, Phill Soulliere, Sophia McGhee
Hair and Makeup: Veronica Chanel
Makeup Assistant: Briana Ashlyn, Jennifer Cabezas, Sasha Gold
Leadman: Cameron Ritchie
Art Coordinator: Megan Mantia
Art Assistant: Marko Monroe, Grace Surnow, Shannon Pollak
Sound Mixer: Cody Skully, Joseph Fiorillo, Neil Koprick
Additional Editing: Miles Trahan
End Credit Sequence: Olaf Woldan
Colorist: Derek Hansen @ The Mill
Post Supervisor: Brandon Cotter
VFX Artist: Zongyu Zhang
Titles: Forrest Grenfell
Post Sound: Jack Goodman
Production Assistants: Matt Williams, Edgar Cortez, Marq Robinson, Maddox, Christine Alegre

CAST
Roberto Tejeda, Nan, Byron Rodriguez, Jenny Shibley, Ryon Wu, Sace, Dasha Nguyen, Deven Walters Houston, Cade Michael, Richard Lin, Christian Feng, Jayden Ham, Els Elisakh, Roberto Tejeda, Tezz Yancey, Cameron Reid (Aoyama), Michael Parker, Max Epstein, Byron Rodriguez, Jose Polio, Hector Polio, Michael Heger, Jack Daru, Tarzan Thompson, Mawrence Agustin, Griff Stark Ennis, Ernest Walker, Edgar Arellano, Gazi, Cody, Julian Green, Thom Cao, Aiden Bear, Cameron Aoyama, Jung Yun, Derrick Garcia, Max Epstein, Matt Cwan, Emilio Ventur, Noah, Danielle Taylor, Ronis Aba, Brindi, Monica Molina, Monroe Gallatin, Luna Cover, Greena Ell Park, Emma Czerwin, Alexandria Lozano

CHENGDU UNIT
Director: James Mao
Producer: Christopher Heinrich, Peggy Wu
Director of Photography: Ben Mullinkosson
Production Designer: Casey Homovich
Stylist: Simone Hu
1st AC: Michael Mogler
Gaffer: Yang Chun
Key Grip: Ren Guang
BTS Photographer: Tony Wu
Anthropologist: Lana Larkin
HB Day to Day: Queenie LV
Production Assistant: Liu Ze Rui, Liu Boliang

SPECIAL THANKS
Sean Miyashiro
Ollie Zhang
Cynthia Guo
Preston West
The Pink Motel
The Escarpment
The Mill
88rising Fam

 

 

17.08.18 by Kimi

Rondo Mo – “Arp Chime”

London-based filmmaker Balan Evans plays with light and rippling water in the video for Rondo Mo’s track “Arp Chime.” All effects were created in-camera using a pool built by Studio Kix. As Evans further explains:

“I’ve always been obsessed with water, the way it moves and distorts, and when Robbie played me this track and I instantly thought of the ebb and flow of water. I went swimming that night and it all clicked.”

Check out the results above and full credits below!

 

Director: Balan Evans
Producer: Scarlett Barclay
DOP: Simon Plunket
2nd AC: Alex Shipman
Camera Trainee: Elena Agulla Gil
Gaffer: Hugh Donnelly
Technician: Alex Michaelis

 

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

16.08.18 by Kimi

Steady Holiday – “Mothers”

Video for Steady Holiday’s track “Mothers” by director Isaac Ravishankara (previously featured here). Choreography by Jillian Meyers (previously featured here).

16.08.18 by Kimi

Branded: “The Return of the Mega Crab”

London/LA-based studio Waste Creative draws inspiration from 1940s propaganda art in this bold animation for Boom Beach’s global in-game big boss event. Wanting to create an announcement that would push the game assets in a different direction, the team seamlessly merged 2D elements with 3D modelled characters and backgrounds, before printing out every frame, ripping the paper for a handmade look, and stop-motion animating the entire thing! As they explained to us, their goal was to create a spot that would be “disruptive for the brand, unexpected for the community, and showed a level of care and craft unlike anything created previously.”

Check out “The Return of the Mega Crab” above as well as the short making-of below!

 

 

We love branded content when it’s engaging, funny, innovative, beautiful or anything in between. Click here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!

16.08.18 by Kimi

“In My Dreams I See Volcanoes” by Lexi Kiddo

More stunning work from London-based director Lexi Kiddo (previously featured here). Commissioned by the Barbican Centre for the series The Art of Change, “In My Dreams I See Volcanoes” responds to the theme of LGBT with dance, poetry and a riot of colour. Music by Berlin-based composer Jamie Ross, composed specifically for the film.

 

Director/Producer – Lexi Kiddo
Dance Artists – Harry Price, Layo Adebayo and Ted Rogers
Choreography – Chester Hayes
DOP – Edward David St Paul
1st AC – Edward Grant
Music Composition – Jamie Ross
Production Manager – Kelly Ram
Make-up – Jess Clarke
Graphics – Alex Creed
Colorist – Caroline Morin (CHEAT)
Production Company – The Smalls

 

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

16.08.18 by Kimi

Tom Rosenthal – “It Won’t Be Me”

Video for Tom Rosenthal’s track “It Won’t Be Me” by Bristol-based motion designer and illustrator Chloe Jackson (previously featured here).

15.08.18 by Kimi

Jazzanova – “Let’s Live Well” feat. Jamie Cullum

A beautiful video for Jazzanova’s track with Jamie Cullum by director Savanah Leaf (previously featured here). “Let’s Live Well” follows a pair of young lovers guided by raw energy and connection yet simultaneously tied to lyrics spoken from a place of reflection, warning one not to let love dance away.

15.08.18 by Kimi

“Small Change” by Jamie Gyngell

A delightful character piece about unchecked privilege by London-based writer-director Jamie Gyngell. Inspired by a real life phone call Gyngell and lead actress Pheobe Walsh once overheard at a restaurant, Gyngell further explained to us:

“We’re both lovers of shameless, unapologetic women, and the overlooked art of ‘phone acting’ — so this felt like the perfect marriage!”

Watch “Small Change” above! This film was submitted by Jamie Gyngell and selected by our team. Consider participating here if you have a project you’d like us to check out!






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