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This Is Vanity - Short Film

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‘This Is Vanity’ is the dark and tragic tale of a tiring mother who struggles to protect both herself and her disabled teenage daughter from the continual attacks of local adolescents. Repeatedly rebuffed and frustrated by the authorities, she ultimately turns to a far greater power than can be found on her failing human plane.

Winner:
Best Drama at Magnolia Independent Film Festival 2013
Winner Audience Choice at Bermuda international film festival 2013
Audience Choice at Lowcountry Shorts Fest 2013

Nominated:
Best Short Film at Shnit International Film Festival
Best Short Film at Fingal International Film Festival
Best Short Film at Brantford International Film Festival
Best Short Film at Crystal Palace International Film Festival
Best at Festival at Crystal Palace International Film Festival

Official Selection: Zinebi, London Short Film, Brooklyn, Hoboken, Rochester, London Independent and Emmetaler Filmtage.

Director: Oliver Goodrum / olivergoodrum.com
Writer: Alexander Craig / alexander-craig.com
Director of Photography: Justin Brown / justinbrowndp.com
Producer: Rob Leonard
Exec Prod: James Goodrum & Luke Jacobs
Production Company: Friend London / friendlondon.tv
Editor: Simon Halsall / m-s-halsall.blogspot.co.uk
Production Designer: Regina Sinatra

Trailer: vimeo.com/52605146
FB page: facebook.com/ThisIsVanity

*With Spanish Subtitles.

Cast:Oliver Goodrum and Justin Brown

Tags:Short Film, Drama, Dark, Tragic, Oliver Goodrum, Justin Brown, Lucy Brown, Dominic Mafham, Richard Crehan and Spanish subtitles


Short Film 'The Black Hole'

Impasse

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Without words, we're left to consider whether love and attraction can break through the impasse of human intolerance.

Director: Bram Schouw
Screenplay: Bram Schouw & Jasper Wolf
D.O.P Jasper Wolf
Editor: Brian Ent
Production: ART FOR THE WORLD in coproduction with Hazazah Pictures

Winner NFTVM VERS AWARD
Special Mention Amsterdam International Film Festival
Official Selection TOKYO International Film Festival

artfortheworld.net/wwd/2008/collectiveFilmProject/theFilmProject.htm

Cast:Bram Schouw

Tags:Bram Schouw Impasse Hazazah Pict

Burn - Short Film

Dear Guardians - A Burning Man Short Film

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Since 2002, the Guardians have held an integral role at the Temple of Burning Man. They have remained largely invisible, holding space from the shadows. Until now.

Directed by VISION WEAVER ianmack.com
Music by HIATUS soundcloud.com/hiatus

Additional footage
ROY TWO THOUSAND roy2k.com
MATIAS SEVEN CLOUDS vimeo.com/sevenclouds

Sound design by JEREMY THERRIEN
jeremytherrien.com

“The Temple rises apart from Black Rock City, an oasis of calm out in the deep playa that stands resolute, able to bear what participants bring and to be what we need at the moment we call on it.

Behind the Temple stands a group that has quietly watched over those structures each year since 2002. The main duty of the Temple Guardians is to protect the Temple and those who visit it. We abide with love for the Temple and everything that it represents.” – The Temple Guardians

templeguardians.org

Cast:Ian MacKenzie

Tags:burning man, temple guardians, death and love

Oliver $ & Jimi Jules - Pushing On (Official Video)

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Watch with commentary from me! - bit.ly/1vaqvVA
irobertson.co.uk
twitter.com/ianR0B

Director: Ian Robertson
Producer - Corin Taylor & Brian Welsh (US)
Executive Producer - Nathan James & Tamsin Glasson (US)
Production Company - Colonel Blimp
DOP - Pablo Berron
1st AD - Travis Knight
Choreographer - Tamara Levison
Art Director & Stylist - Alexis Johnson
Editor - Peter O'Donovan @ Final Cut London
Colourist - Houmam Abdallah @ ETC
Commissioner - Caroline Clayton

Cast:Ian Robertson, Houmam Abdallah and Pablo Berron

Tags:

Dust - Short film starring Alan Rickman & Jodie Whittaker

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Short film starring Alan Rickman, Jodie Whittaker & Lola Albert
Written and directed by Ben Ockrent & Jake Russell
Produced by Catherine Bailey

**BAFTA LONG-LISTED 2014**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION PALM SPRINGS INT. FILM FESTIVAL**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION ASPEN SHORTSFEST**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION AUSTIN FILM FESTIVAL**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION ENCOUNTERS SHORT FILM FESTIVAL**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION FLICKERFEST INT. SHORT FILM FESTIVAL**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION MILWAUKEE SHORT FILM FESTIVAL**
**OFFICIAL SELECTION DINARD BRITISH FILM FESTIVAL**

imdb.com/title/tt2404728/

Copyright Catherine Bailey Ltd, Micro Productions Ltd, One Giant Production Ltd

Cast:Jake Russell

Tags:Alan Rickman, Jodie Whittaker, short film and BAFTA

Mike Mago - The Show (official music videoclip)

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Director : Clemens Habicht
Production : 75
Producer : Sarah Boardman
Label : Ministry of Sound
VFX : PE Joubert

Cast:Alexa MJ

Tags:vevo


La Carnada

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"La Carnada" is a short film that follows a 13 year old boy from Tijuana (Manny) as he embarks on his first drug smuggle across the "Devil's Highway," a notoriously fatal stretch of desert on the Arizona/Mexico border.

See more about the film at lacarnada.com

Writer/Director: Josh Soskin
Cinematographer: Rob Hauer
Editor: Matthew Sultan
Producers: Ivan Diez Robeldo and Grace Jackson

Manny : Angel Gabriel Soto
Beto: Carlos Valencia
Davey: Pete Reinert
Anne: Carla Short
Mom: Angélica González Ríos

Cast:Josh Soskin, Grace Jackson and SULTANOSCOPY

Tags:

Arbor Skateboards :: James Kelly - Burn It Down

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On a rare occasion, you see a video that makes you stop - stop what you’re doing, stop what you’re thinking, even stop how you’re breathing - a video that masters your emotions and alters your vitals. At that moment, when your heart jumps into your throat, and your nerve endings fire, you realize you’re seeing something memorable.

With that we invite you to see a piece we filmed with Arbor team rider, James Kelly, to support the launch of his new pro model. The final product stopped us in our tracks. It reminded us once again why in downhill skating James is called the American Dream. A title he’s been burning down for years with a humble approach and an unmatched intensity at speed.

About James: Born in Petaluma, CA - James grew up riding with some of downhill’s most influential skaters. For years, he’s been showing that there’s no road that can’t be conquered. He has perfected his abilities to skate anything at speed, while building the discipline required to keep calm when the consequences are high. James is no stranger to the racecourse and podium, yet he’s most at home on the hills surrounding his family cabin in the Western Sierras, where this video was filmed.

About the New Model: The new James Kelly Pro Model is the result of years of skating at speed. More hours than can be counted went into the design, refinement, and road testing. The shape reflects the rider, the lines he rides, and serious nature of what he does. The shape has a long wide platform, multiple wheelbase options, and the right amount of rocker. It provides versatility and confidence when approaching speed. Dimensions: length 38.50” – width: 9.75” – wheelbase: 27.00”-30.00”. See the new shape here: arborcollective.com/skateboards/products/james-kelly-pro-model/

About Arbor: The Arbor Collective was founded in 1995 and remains a family rooted in the experience and fueled by collaboration with athletes and artists who share a vision for forward thinking design. For more information on the Arbor Collective visit: arborcollective.com

Film/Edit: Jack Boston

Music: "Jim" Swans

Cast:Arbor Collective and Jack Boston

Tags:Arbor, Arbor Skateboards, James Kelly, Pro Model, Skateboarding, Downhill Skating, Standup Slides, Wipeout, Big Fall, Bail and 50 MPH

OFFF Barcelona 2011 Main Titles

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Still shocked and excited from last night, it's an honor for us to show you this absolutely MINDBLOWING TITLES made for OFFF by PostPanic.

Thank you so much to PostPanic, and specially to Mischa Rozema, Ania Markham and Si Scott, simply epic!!!

Written by Mischa Rozema and British graphic designer, Si Scott, the opening titles reflect their dark thoughts on a possible future. Directed by Mischa and shot on location in Prague, the film guides the viewer through a grim scenario embedded with the names of artists appearing at this year’s OFFF festival. The live action was brought back to Amsterdam for post, primarily carried out by PostPanic’s in-house team of artists but also with the additional help of freelancers and partner companies that we have enjoyed strong creative relationships with over the years. It’s really fair to say that this was a labour of love by a passionate crew of people.

Says Ania Markham, Executive Producer at PostPanic:
“The images created by the crew of people working on the titles has been unbelievable, with nationalities represented including Dutch, Czech, English, American, Polish, German, Swedish and Belgian. It’s been a great opportunity for all of us to work together on a non-commercial project we’re passionate about and we’re so proud of the combined effort and final result.”

DIRECTORS NOTES (Mischa Rozema)

This project started out as a collaboration between myself and Si Scott. Right from the start, we decided that it should be the darkest thing we could make. I think it just felt natural to the both of us; if we had to nail the future, it would not be a nice place.

This idea evolved into a clash of times. Inspired by an idea from the late Arthur C. Clarke. He wrote about different historical civilizations meeting in a single point in time. So what happens when civilizations meet? The 'weaker' one gets eaten by the 'stronger'. You only have to look at history to see the destructive power of civilizations.

So the main underlying idea is: what would happen if the future lands on our doorstep today? Let's take mankind, add perhaps 100 years and then let them show up on our doorstep today. The future would pretty much devour the present. Probably in a matter of, let's say, 7 days… So that's what we're looking at. But every ending also means a new beginning, hence Year Zero.

There's all kinds of hidden messages in there. Like the virus eating away at reality, buildings and people, even at the viewers brain. It's behaving off course much like a computer virus. And the network of wires represents the future of social networking. I just made it physical and let it 'catch' the city and it's people like a net. All these ideas just serve as inspiration for us to create a future that worked for this concept. They're not meant to be deciphered by the audience. It's still meant to be just a title sequence and not an actual movie.

Now what makes a good title sequence? Personally, I think it's something that gets you in the mood, warms you up for what you're about to experience, be it a film, tv series or in our case, the OFFF festival. We decided to treat the OFFF festival as a feature film experience. So all we had to do was get the viewer into the right state of mind. Without, of course, being too narrative led. The best title sequences out there are nothing but a random collection of images/scenes that don't tell a lot if you watch them on their own. But edit them together and a new context is created. A context that matters, a feeling that gets the viewer ready for the main event, in our case, the festival.

To get started, the next thing we did was make a collection of ideas that would scare me and Si. So, anything drawn from our youth, right through to stuff that's inspired us over the years as well as seemingly random compositions that trigger the imagination of the viewer. For example, when we show you the aesthetics of a car explosion, it's carefully constructed. Why a car and not something else? Because an exploding car brings extra content to an otherwise simple aesthetic display of violence. A car doesn't explode by itself so instantly the brain tries to formulate the background behind it. It adds an either political or criminal edge to the violence. To me it felt appropriate because of the sense of protest and rebellion the shot has. And maybe the biggest question; was there someone in the car and if so, who was it? For me, every idea should provoke these kind of questions; from a girl in a prom dress holding a rocket launcher to a riot cop standing in the kitchen. All scenes have a pre and post story to them. In no time you're actually trying to connect these seemingly random scenes and boom; you've just created your own strange context. You now have a feeling, a taste and lots of questions probably. Questions that normally would be answered by watching the actual movie. But since there's no actual movie here we'll leave stranded with, hopefully, an uncomfortable feeling and lots of questions - some might feel unsatisfied and wondering why. Just like a nightmare.

We also wanted the actual titles to be different this time. Most of the time festival titles are driven by the idea on how to show titles. A mechanism that displays titles in a creative way. We actually thought to bring the festival theme to the foreground and have the titles play a part in it. Incorporate them so they become the actual fiber/texture of the piece itself. Practically I still think it's nice that the viewer has to actively look for the names and not get too comfortable. Even if it means to see it a couple of times which surely is the best we can aim for as a free project ; )

How about the shoot? Well, prior to Prague we created more than 50 ideas I could play with. This was always the intention. Go out shooting with a tiny crew, acting like we're still in art school and be open for anything that might happen. That's why we shot everything on 2 Canon 5D's (that and having no budget off course). This was a really nice change for me. Normally I prepare commercial shoots to the very last detail and there's a lot more people involved. Savage helped us out big time in Prague. We also had some bad news. Due to his back problems Si Scott had to abandon the project and couldn't join the shoot.

When we came back from Prague I started editing straight away and soon came to the conclusion we had about 60 vfx shots to work on and no budget and increasingly less time. Remember that this project was a side dish for PostPanic, we had to work on commissioned jobs also. But everybody involved soon fell in love with the project, including STORM Postproduction who are our neighbors (luckily for us).

In the mean time we received the title list. It had about 70 names on it! That's when I found out that the dynamics I wanted to use would probably not work. Just too many names that would make the piece too long to just show random images. So in the plane towards Prague I thought of bringing in a tiny bit of narrative. Which turned out to be the beginning of the sequence (1st act). I wrote in a lead character that would relate to the viewer.

The idea was to trick the audience into thinking they're watching some kind of documentary. We basically follow a guy going home. Bit by bit his environment gets stranger and more uncomfortable to watch. Is he living in a war zone? Slowly the background takes over and the piece changes into an urban nightmare. And like a nightmare, the story/edit doesn't always make sense but makes you feel really uncomfortable. I also wanted the viewer to experience the nightmare. That's where the dark matter comes in. Dark matter is what I call the macro shot bits. Flashes that derail your train of thought like there's something eating away at your brain as you try to make sense of the nightmare. I wanted the viewer to go nuts, alongside with the cast. Erase the line between nightmare and reality. The end result is something you won't come across easily on your tv. And is also just another fun way to do titles.

The sound design and music made by Hecq added a lot to the feel and scale of the film. It clearly divides the 3 acts (1st act: up to execution, 2nd from execution, 3rd final shot) and makes completely different ideas and scenes feel coherent. It also emphasizes the dynamics of the film and brings the much needed pace at the end. It's been great working with Ben. We've been surfing the same wave length throughout the project.

Finally I want to thank everyone involved for making these titles possible. For creating something out of nothing. For showing so much love for something as dark as this.

CREDITS

Directed by Mischa Rozema
Story by Mischa Rozema & Si Scott
Production Company: PostPanic
Executive Producers: Jules Tervoort, Ania Markham
DoP: Jiri Malek, Mischa Rozema
Music & Sound Design: Hecq
Senior Producer: Annejes van Liempd
Production Assistant: Jacinta Ramaker
Production Designer: Roland Mylanus
Editor: Mischa Rozema

Prague Cast:
Main Hero: Vladan Bláha
Grafitti Guy: Tom Malar
Main Hero Sister: Katerina Galova

Post-Production: PostPanic
CG Supervisor: Ivor Goldberg
VFX Supervisor: Chris Staves
3D Artists: Jeroen Aerts, Matthijs Joor, Jurriën Boogert, Marnix Reckman, Adam Janeczek
2D Artist: Erwin van den IJssel
3D Interns: Cara To, Xander Clerckx
2D Interns: Mathijs Luijten, Per Westholm
Compositing: Chris Staves, Ivor Goldberg, Adam Janeczek, Matthijs Joor
Graphic Designs: Si Scott
Additional Graffiti Elements: Florian Stumpe
Matte Painting: Wieger Poutsma
Additional 3D and Compositing: Storm PostProduction

Production (Prague) by Savage:
Executive Producer: Klara Kralickova, Pavla Burgetova Callegari
Producer: Michaela Berkova
Production Assistant: Vojta Ruzicka
Prop master: Jan Fiala
Location Scout & Management: Petr Bastar, Adam Fuchs
Location: CREVISTON, a.s.
Tattoos made by: Wowa tattoo prague

Cast:OFFF, let's feed the future and PostPanic

Tags:OFFF, 2011, Titles, Postpanic, Si Scott and Mischa Rozema

I've fallen, and I can't get up!

A Tale of Momentum & Inertia

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Special CG short from animation studio HouseSpecial - More of our work: housespecial.com/all/
Portland, Oregon
Follow us - twitter.com/housespecialpdx&instagram.com/housespecialpdx

Kirk Kelley, Creative Director
Kameron Gates, Director
From an Original Story by Allan Turner and Kameron Gates

2014 Awards:
• Best Minute Movie at Animation Block Party in Brooklyn
• Short Film Silver at The Australian Effects and Animation Festival
• Audience Favorite Award at the California International Animation Festival in the category 3D Animation
• Ottawa International Animation Festival: Nominated Best Short Animation
• Screened at SPARK Animation Festival

Upcoming Screenings:
• 41st Northwest Filmmakers’ Festival
• Oregon Underground Film Festival
• Couch Fest Films

Credits:
Executive Producer: Lourri Hammack

Producer: Zilpha Yost

Production Coordinator: Jamie Pulliam, Julie Ragland, Evan Smith

Animator: Wendy Fuller, Kameron Gates, Greg Kyle, Chris Ohlgren, Allan Steele

Matte Painter: Don Flores, Kameron Gates, Saira Matthews

Character Designer: Kameron Gates

Environment Designer: Ian Abando, Pascal Campion, Don Flores, Joshua Harvey

Storyboard Artist: Kameron Gates

Technical Director: Chris Immroth, Terence Jacobson, Patrick Van Pelt

Modeling: Michael Berger, Chris Ohlgren, Allan Steele, Josh Tonnesen

Texture Artist: Jeff Gipson, Saira Mathew, Sari Rodrig, Josh Tonnesen

Character Set-up: Terence Jacobson

Lighting Artist: Thane Hawkins, Matt Reslier

Rigger: Terence Jacobson

FX: Rogerio Mendes, Karl Richter, Patrick Van Pelt

Opening Titles: Jose Diaz

Editor: Steve Miller

Flame Artist: Rex Carter

Flint Artist: Leif Peterson

Post Production Manager: Cam Williams

Tape Op: Travis Ezell

Scheduler: Melissa Tvetan

Sound Design and Mix: Lance Limbocker

Cast:HouseSpecial

Tags:cg, animation, rock, momentum, kirk kelley, ottawa, spark, short, film and humor

One Summer Swell with Pat Towersey

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‘One Summer Swell' is a surf and bodysurf short film produced by Zangs Films, narrated by surf legend Ron Romanosky and featuring waterman Pat Towersey during the unique summer swell of 2014 in Newport Beach, CA.

Featuring: Pat Towersey and Dougie Mann
Cinematography/DP/Editing/Color Grading/Graphics: Octave Zangs
Voice Over: Ron Romanosky
Original Soundtrack: One Summer Swell by Octave Zangs

Shot on RED Epic.

Check out our website for more info: zangsfilms.com

Cast:Zangs Films

Tags:surf, bodysurf, surfing, red camera, r3d, red epic, raw, davinci resolve, punkerpat, pat towersey, california, newport beach, summer, swell, underwater and the wedge

LOOKBOOK COMPLOT // SEASON SS#13


Torment

Jessica Rix

ALEXIS REN

Kelsey

EROTICISM featuring Kanye West

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