Thursday, September 23, 2010

Portside Pirates! (Barefoot Books)

Here is our new animation for Barefoot Books. The process on this one was a little more difficult than the past two animations we have done for them, but it turned out well I think. My favorite scenes are when the storm is brewing at 57 seconds and continues on to the huge waves and the little pirate who is overboard at 1:49. I think it is the part that works best with this kind of 3D animation and really brings the book to life.

Let me know what you think and show it to young people you think who might enjoy it.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

BEIJING TAXI | a film by MIAO WANG

No Flash

One of my former Parsons graduate students, Miao Wang is doing some great promoting of her documentary film, Beijing Taxi. It comes to NY on Oct 4th at the IFC Center so if you're in town, you should go (I unfortunately will be in CA). Miao has been working very hard on this film for a number of years and is finally being recognized for her dedication to the project. Watch the trailer and I think you will be intrigued enough to see more.

The shots she has in the trailer are beautiful and the narrative of the drivers is really interesting to learn about as it draws you in slowly. I love her variety of shots from extreme close-ups to wide shots with the music punctuating the natural rhythm of life in China today. I am very interested to see the finished film so am watching the schedule to see if she has more NYC screenings.

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BEIJING TAXI: A Film by MIAO WANG

One of my former Parsons graduate students, Miao Wang is doing some great promoting of her documentary film, Beijing Taxi. It comes to NY on Oct 4th at the IFC Center so if you're in town, you should go. Miao has been working very hard on this film for a number of years and is finally being recognized for her dedication to the project. Watch the trailer and I think you will be intrigued enough to see more.

The shots she has in the trailer are beautiful and the narrative of the drivers really is interesting to watch. I love her variety of shots from extreme close ups to wide shots with the music punctuating the natural rhythm of life in China today.

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Sufjan Stevens - The Lakes of Canada - A Take Away Show

This is old, but I have just had a hankering to listen to Sufjan Stevens these days. Love his track, Too Much Love which Asthmatic Kitty is helping to promote by releasing a free MP3 on their site. Check it out. It's cool. Not the version that I would have hoped for as I love his live version from the road.

Like this song, , "The Lakes of Canada" particularly because of the beginning as he is coaxed to try it on the roof and the final product is so clean, that you barely hear any wind at all. Nice song and love hearing the banjo. His voice is wonderful and Nat and I really like this song.

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Three Quarters by WHITE HILLS on Vimeo

Whoa. This is intense. Love this new video by Ego Sensation to "celebrate" the official release of their new album. Ego is making some amazing statements these days with her filmmaking. Love the little "scene" at the beginning of the video (shot in the Darkroom in the Lower East Side I believe), and I was curious the whole time with how the video was going to end. Liked the power of her looking in the "box" to experience today's world's crises and her reaction. Also liked the close up shots of her with the mantra "They don't care" and Dave's voice. Very powerful with her deadpan stare.

In other news about White Hills, there was a great shout-out about them in regards to their fashion sense from the NPR "All Songs Considered" Blog :

"In addition to their relentless in-the-red, w ah-w ah'd psych-rock, the members of White Hills definitely had the best outfits of the weekend." --Lars Gotrich.

Ego's photo is #37 of 50 photos, so scroll through.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/allsongs/2010/09/07/129707926/all-tomorrow-s-parties

And if you want to listen to Jim Jarmusch talk about the curation of the "All Tomorrow's Parties" weekend, you can tune in here. He again mentions White Hills in saying how much he likes them and that they are not so well-known at the moment.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129529392

Of course, we are thrilled that White Hills is getting so many wonderful mentions these days and know that they will only keep hurtling towards the very top.

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Sunday, September 12, 2010

NSFW. A hunter shoots a bear!

Fascinating interactive advertising that you should all check out. Click through and make a few choices and you will enjoy. I read the comments a little to see which choice would be best. Liked "kisses" and "chews". Smart way to get people to interact with the content. Liked how this could have been shot in Central Park it looked like such a universal location.

I think for our generation- raised on Mad Libs and "Choose Your Own Adventure" books that this type of ad will become more popular. Was teaching over the weekend and was asked about future video trends in publications and the iPad came to mind with interactivity being tantamount to the "online experience". I don't really care what the Tipp-EX product is or does, but I will remember this ad for a long time.

Enjoy it and let me know if you find any good skits.....

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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Brendan Hoffman « The New Breed of Documentary Photographers

Thought this was a great resource for documentary photography. My friend Rion http://rion.nu/mentioned it in her blog. Like this photo a lot and the commentary and then the links to all the talent out there. Very inspired by these photos.

Particularly like:
Ami Vitale http://www.amivitale.com/main.html
Siddharth Jain http://www.siddharthjain.co.in/singles/6.html
Samantha Appleton http://www.samanthaappleton.com/#/portfolio/12appleton
Morgan Hagar http://www.morganhagar.com/#/The%20Border%20Chronicles/Why%20Go%20Home/21
Matt Slaby http://luceoimages.com/photographers/matt-slaby/
Holly Pickett http://hollypickett.com/

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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Jim Jarmusch's Showtunes - Page 2 - Music - New York - Village Voice

Did you work with Neil Young in a similar way? Neil, in a way, was the opposite procedure, because Neil played directly to the film live, in a couple of takes, two and a half times through the film. So, what he recorded I did not move, you know? He reacted to it as if his music became a character. It wasn't something I could really slide around; I didn't want to.

Has there ever been an artist you've wanted to use for a movie and you couldn't make it happen? So far, no. I've been really lucky. Although I had to pay through the teeth in Mystery Train to use "Mystery Train" and "Blue Moon" by Elvis. That was ex-pen-sive.

Notice that his hair is not glued to the goddamn wall.

Diego Tripodi
Notice that his hair is not glued to the goddamn wall.

You've been using musicians as actors in your movies for years and years. . . . It's not like, "Well, what musicians would be good actors?" It was more like, "What people do I know who I could imagine being that character?" And they happen to be musicians—actors are different. It doesn't matter if they're musicians or plumbers or strippers or what. Joe Strummer, he stayed kind of close to the text because he felt he liked having a map; Waits will improvise more. But that's true of someone like Bill Murray—he'll improvise more. Or someone like John Hurt, who doesn't improvise. Iggy's a great actor, potentially—if he trusts you. He is really smart, and his body is an instrument for him already, so for him to be a character—as long as you get him trusting you, and he feels like he understands the character, he's fantastic. Waits, I want to work with him as an actor again sometime, I just have a lot of fun with him. Tom and I met some casting director a few years ago when they were doing the second Austin Powers or something. Tom and I swooped in on it and said, "We want to be in it—we could be brothers, whatever, we want to be a team." Never heard anything from them, of course.

It's hard to imagine such a huge presence as Tom Waits taking directions. But he's a collaborator, he understands. We had a big fight once when I made a music video for his song "I Don't Wanna Grow Up." We had a fight because he wanted me to edit something differently that I didn't want to do. In fact, I locked Tom inside an indoor parking lot behind a metal door, and he was pounding on it, screaming. I got two great things out of this experience: One, hearing Tom yell at me, "Goddamn it Jim! I'm going to glue your fucking hair to the wall!" which I had never heard as a threat before. That was pretty Waits-ian. And what I really learned, in the end, is that he was right, and I edited it the way he wanted. He was absolutely right. He taught me, Jim, this isn't your film. This is my video for my record and your voice is in it by the fact that you made it, but it's a thing on TV. I really learned that collaboration has its parameters. I was really happy to learn that lesson.

Do you have a soundtrack for a next project that you're thinking of? I'm working on it, but I can't talk about it in advance. I'm trying to get a film going for early next year. One of the characters is a musician of unusual, outside music—electric stuff. It's going to be a mixture of—I don't know how you'd call it—avant-instrumental electric guitar . . . with some lute music. There will be some Arabic music, some vintage rockabilly stuff, so, again, a mixture of things. I have a great cast, but I don't have the financing yet because it's really weird out there right now. I've got Tilda Swinton, Michael Fassbender, Mia Wasikowska, and John Hurt—I've got these four ready to do it, but I don't have the money yet. I'm gonna get it. I'm gonna get it even if I have to do something highly illegal, I don't know what.

Was there a narrative to your All Tomorrow's Parties selections? No. I just wanted it to be innovative, interesting, potentially mind-blowing live. I wanted some girls in there, so I got the Vivian Girls and Hope Sandoval. White Hills has a girl. And then I got Girls, who aren't actually girls. My first thought was, "I'm going to make it all girls." Then I thought that's a bit too restrictive. My only daunting thing was I couldn't pick enough bands. I had a hundred. I could go on forever . . . I'm open to all forms of music . . . except maybe showtunes. I never really quite connected with that. There's a lot of showtune-isms in rock 'n' roll—so-called rock 'n' roll. Like Billy Joel and Meatloaf might as well just be Broadway garbage. Anyway, we're not going to have the cast of Mamma Mia! at ATP, I don't think.

Some big Bob Fosse routine around the lake . . . Yeah, with the Wu-Tang. The Bob Fosse Massacre.

All Tomorrow's Parties comes to Kutsher's Country Club in Monticello, New York, September 3 through 5, atpfestival.com

Yes, the brilliant Mr. Jarmusch commented on including White Hills in the All Tomorrow's parties Festival, "White Hills has a girl". Go Ego Sensation! How cool to get a shout out from one of New York's cinema and music icons. I am also attending their upcoming Bowery Ballroom show this weekend as it sounds like it will be the show to see in town.

Can't wait and GO EGO!

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