Showing posts with label short. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Monika Forsberg's MUMMY NEEDS GIN


Since interviewing Monika Forsberg many years ago in the early days of SiouxWIRE, we have become great friends and my admiration for her work has only grown as years go by. Her latest animation Mummy Needs Gin is another sublime classic recently featured on Channel 4's Random Acts and at Bar Shorts Manchester. Based on the tweets of Lady Cook of @40elephantsmob, it tells the story of a single mother in London. And as today is Monika's birthday (Happy Birthday!), this is a particularly special post with contributions from Monika, @40elephantsmob, and Alex D. Hay.

First, watch the animation then read through to learn about how it was made and all the work that went into this gem. Enjoy.
"Bronchitis check, scarf check, blanket check, shitty little fan heater check, working boiler oh fuck. I blame the Tories. Then my ex."





How did Mummy Needs Gin first come about?

MONIKA: I thought it was time for me to make another film because it'd been quite a few years since my last one and I thought the Random Acts thing on channel 4 would be a good starting point. I came across @40elephantsmob by chance at around the same time as I was toying around with ideas for a short film

…and one day when I was talking to Lady Cook I said CAN WE MAKE A FILM OUT OF YOU(R TWEETS)?

…and she said yes without any hesitation!

She writes really well about personal highs and lows (without being self centred) and political things and life in general. Most of all, she is funny without seemingly need to try very hard. Very inspiring basically. I handed the proposal in and then we met in real life and that was scary (my son said "STRANGER DANGER! You can’t just go and meet up with people from the internet") but luckily she turned out to be a super sound girl in real life too. Very happy I met her.

Then Chris Shepherd phoned up and said to the answering machine on my phone "HEY c4 said yes to mummyneedsgin HOORAY" but since I seldom answer my phone and never listen to messages I didn’t hear that message and eventually Chris emailed me and told me the good news.

..and I went woohoo!

…and then I went OH SHIT! because that meant there was no going back. I had to make this film. Scary. It's easy to be ballsy and go "I can do this (or that or whatever)" but then when you actually get the opportunity there’s sometimes that parrot on your shoulder there going "that will be an impossible task". Luckily there’s a snake on the other shoulder going "I GONNA EAT YOU, YOU FUCKING STUPID PARROT!" Is this what’s called inner turmoil? I spend a lot of time arguing with myself.




LADYCOOK: Mummy Needs Gin came about from me Lady Cook of Forty Elephants Mob, and Monika Forsberg randomly making contact on Twitter. We instantly bounced jokes, rants and musings. I think there's a synergy between women who are not only mums, but slightly frustrated artists. It's all very well having a million wonderful creative ideas but as a mummy you literally do not have a spare moment to sit down and work them through. As a single mummy I barely have time to breathe let alone do art.

Monika asked if I'd be cool with her doing some art with the tweets and I said go for it. The twitter @40elephantsmob does have other contributors, but all the tweets for the film were written (ranted?) by Lady Cook. People had suggested before working with a visual artist for my poetry but I'd never clicked with anyone’s style, despite knowing truckloads of graf artists/painters/illustrators, then voila, the twitter universe introduced us.




How did the imagery develop from the words/tweets?

LADYCOOK: Monika developed all the images 100%, I wholeheartedly trusted her and said "surprise me". I knew I liked her hand styles and would like the end result.


MONIKA: I wanted to make a hand drawn animation with marker pens but as marker pens bleed and the scanner I got is shit and most of all; there wasn’t a very long production time at all, I was gonna do it on the computer. I met up with lady cook and showed her the tweets I liked and loved and she agreed on me using them. I studied illustration at college but I freeze like Howard Moon when I gotta illustrate things. And to put moving pictures to someone’s words is like illustrating so I froze.

But Howard Moon is cool and so am I (but I don’t play the trumpet) so i decided to bypass illustrating her words and just started to draw and doodle what I felt, my reaction to her text (maybe that’s what illustration is?) to see what would happen because the strength of her words is that I can really recognise myself in her even though I’ve not ever been in her shoes and... she just writes so you can feel as if you’ve been there.

Also I had(and still do have) a two year old called Reginald on my heels and animation takes up a lot of time and doesn’t really mix well with parenthood but luckily Reggie’s dad took time off work so I could spend a month and a half getting lost in animation... We recorded a guide track with the tweets being read out loud (that’s how I visualised it) then I spent a month drawing and drawing and drawing and nothing made sense.

When there was 2 weeks before I had to hand over the film to the composer I had something that really didn’t work so I decided to scrap it and start anew. I got rid of the voice over and put down type. I am very scared of fonts and any graphic design. Whatever you’re scared of GO FOR IT! => It won’t be scary but it might be shit. Then I started drawing in black and white, and quickly realised that I would need to practise a lot harder and for a longer time if I was gonna pull off a stark line drawn animation (because it’d have to be beautiful) so I did quick cut out drawings instead and made the whole thing in a week. It sort of just fell into place. I just drew and fitted it into the story... I wanted to make something that sort of made you go zig-a-zig… ahhh!!! The imagery didn’t develop easily.

Also, I was worried I’d turn it into something Lady Cook might hate because I was illustrating her life. She said, “You do what you want. I see it a bit like a consequences game where you draw a bit and then fold the paper and the next person takes over and does the next bit.” Such a generous girl.




To me, Mummy Needs Gin feels like swimming in memory. How would you describe Mummy Needs Gin?

MONIKA: “Swimming in memory” is a lovely phrase. I thought I’d just do whatever I think right now and then that was it. It’s very direct. It’s not thought through. It was fast like a tweet; fleeting. I’d describe Mummy Needs Gin as in-the-moment, now. When Alex came on board it all fell into place. I wanted happy uplifting music because it’s easy to get a bitter and down beat mood into the film by having the wrong music and I really, really wanted it to reflect the words that come into my mind when I think of Lady Cook ie STRONG, GENEROUS, FUNNY and very, very likeable


LADYCOOK: I have described Mummy Needs Gin as a bit like inviting people to rake through my knickers drawer, with a soundtrack of excerpts from my diary! The last year has been challenging in a lot of ways. I used Twitter as a bit of a dump bucket for the emotional shite that’s passed - it gets to a point where you feel humiliated calling up friends crying about being skint/lonely/terrified of this mad new single parent future. I love writing and words so made up a game making jokes in 140 characters of these dire situations. I'm quite easily amused so I'd actually cheer myself up writing the jokes and be sitting there laughing all of a sudden  I remember typing the pancake one. I think my son and I ate pancakes for three days running and in truth, he was delighted whilst I was thinking OMG we're going to get scurvy soon! It brought back good memories too, the needing to wee in the cab one was coming back from an MF Doom gig, being desperate to wee but also literally buzzing of how inspired I was by his show.

I didn't view a rough cut at any point, I just wanted to see it in its finished glory. I LOVED IT. I honestly think it is friggin amazing and wouldn't change a thing. My second reaction was I want mooooore, I could watch it for hours!!! I think it is beautifully drawn and it blows my mind that a few lines of plain text became this gorgeous thing, Monika is a genius and has this amazing eye to pull it all together. She made a good call choosing Alex to do the soundtrack too as it is so apt, I love the kids voice, it was like my son got brought into it which meant a lot to me.



What was your reaction to completed animation and what were the reactions of others who've seen it?

MONIKA: Without the music, people saw the film and went “oh” (it didnt make sense). People saw the film with music and went “YES!” This film was not about perfection but about being who you are and being okay with it.

LADYCOOK: I know I'm totally biased in my "it's amazing, unique, everyone must see it" opinion... but that doesn't mean it's not true? We surfed Twitter on the night it was on and there was literally not one negative comment, bearing in mind that this was strangers talking about us not to us, that was a nice surprise. I was fearful of a bit of a 'she's a bitter baby mother' critique but it was so gently curated by Monika it didn't strike that chord. Was also a bit nervous about my family and close friends seeing it, as it is slightly laying out my pain for public consumption, but they all wholeheartedly love it. I think the comments of strangers on Twitter were interesting in that a few of them were a bit 'WTF was that?' which I read as they'd not seen anything on that vibe before, taking a humorous visual stance on that domestic situation. Someone said 'Ooooh i was glad she had a nice cuppa at the end'!



Alex D. Hay of The Meow Meows wrote the soundtrack and shared his experiences working on the soundtrack to Mummy Needs Gin...


I was put in touch by a mutual mate - Danny, who sings in my band The Meow Meows. She said that her friend was needing a soundtrack really quickly for an animation that she'd done, and did I want to take a crack at it? I did.

She sent me the (silent) film right away, and told me a couple of songs that she had in mind. What was interesting was that they were completely different - one acoustic-guitar based, another an upbeat party anthem. I decided to take elements of both those tunes and mash them together, made a beat and put some chords over it, and then went from there.

I had most of the music done in a couple of days, and then we went back and forth about the sound effects, and I spent a while tweaking the mix to get something I was happy with.

I felt lucky to be involved for several reasons. The text and the animation speak for themselves; it was obvious I had to produce something to match the sort of anarchic, skewed joie-de-vivre they both suggest. I'm very happy to have contributed to such a warm, funny, humanistic project. Single mothers are demonised in certain elements of the press and it's great to see a positive portrayal which is at the same time real and not sugar-coated. Also Monika was a dream director to work with as she clearly articulated what she was looking for, but gave me the freedom to do pretty much whatever I wanted.



Links:


Tuesday, 1 March 2011

SubBlue

SubBlue describes himself as a "laser physicist turned web developer with an interest in generative graphics programming" and his works are fascinating.

Sunday, 27 February 2011

THE BACKWATER GOSPEL

"The Backwater Gospel is the bachelor projects of eight students at The Animation Workshop. It's an animated short about a small, isolated community in the Dust Bowl of the 1930's, a minister hell-bent on ruling his flock and an undertaker who always precedes death."



Links:
The Backwater Gospel Blog
The Animation Workshop
The Animation Workshop (Vimeo)

Thursday, 24 February 2011

SANDRO MILLER & GENTLEMEN SCHOLAR's "Butterflies"


This is an odd little short from Sandro Miller featuring John Malkovich.



"I have this idea in my mind for a painting about butterflies. Blue and green and yellow butterflies, tumbling out of my brain. I think it’s going to be good. I feel like I can almost touch them... like they’re right there for me to grab as they’re flying away... out of my skull and taking all those dark thoughts and little devils with them. Just fluttering away and leaving the good stuff behind. Butterflies. I’m going to get my canvas and my paints. I think I’m all better. I think I’m ready to leave."

Design/VFX - Gentleman Scholar
Creative Directors - Will Johnson & William Campbell
Producer - Tyler Locke
Executive Producer - Rob Sanborn

Editor - Josh Bodnar/The Whitehouse

Designers/Compositors - William Campbell, Will Johnson, Tommy Wooh, Daniel Blank, Paul Yeh, Heather Aquino, Claudia Yi Leon, Joseph Chan

Director - Sandro Miller

Music Composer - Matt Hutchinson

Links:
Sandro Miller
Sandro Miller Wiki
Gentlemen Scholar
Gentlemen Scholar (Vimeo)

Monday, 21 February 2011

THE LIGHTHOUSE KEEPER


Another graduation film from a talented team of students from Gobelins, l’école de l’image. This 3-minute short has a sumptuous visual style and the team involved have documented much of their work in their individual blogs. It won "Best Graduation Film" at Annecy 2010.





Links:
The Lighthouse Keeper (Vimeo)
Baptiste Rogron
Gaëlle Thierry
Rony Hotin
Maïlys Vallade
Jérémie moreau
David François
Romain Gauthier

Monday, 14 February 2011

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

SPIKE JONZE's "I'm Here"

If you have yet to see Spike Jonze's short, "I'm Here", do not hesitate to put aside a half hour for this charming love story. See it HERE.

"I’m Here is a 30-minute love story about the relationship between two robots living in L.A. Andrew Garfield and Sienna Guillory are in the lead roles, and the soundtrack includes original music by Sam Spiegel and original songs by L.A.-based art musician Aska Matsumiya and other emerging musicians."




Links:
Imheremovie.com
I'm Here (Wiki)

Monday, 23 August 2010

1st AVENUE MACHINE's "Sixes Last"

"Sixes Last" for musician Alias' track from his album Muted was created by 1st Avenue Machine in 2005. Directed my Arvind Palep and produced by Serge Patzak, it's beautifully strange.


"It is about how artificiality is creeping into the modern day world," said director Arvind Palep. "We were looking at a merge between synthetic biology, nanotechnology, artificial intelligence and what could spawn from them."



Links:
Sixes Last (CG Society)
1st Avenue Machine

Monday, 9 August 2010

LES BONZOMS "Baby in the Sky" for BORNHIVFREE

This gem from French animators Jack, Kalkair, Pozla, Waterlili and Moke. crafted for the BornHIVFree project is a wonderous, hopeful beacon for a worthy project. The Les Bonzoms team have worked on a series of feature projects including Persepolis and earlier this year were offered the chance to pool their talents under the Bonzom name by Passion Paris (Passion Pictures' Paris based studio). Be sure to add your name in support.

“The purpose of the Born HIV Free campaign is to encourage millions of people to support The Global Fund so we can finally put an end to the tragedy of 430,000 babies being born HIV-positive every year, when we have the means and the expertise to prevent this.” says Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, Global Ambassador for the protection of mothers and children against AIDS. “Hopefully this beautiful film will reach a wide audience because of its creative ingenuity, and inspire millions of people to support The Global Fund so we can finally put an end to this terrible injustice.”

“Baby in the Sky” is a highly creative and imaginative animated film that conveys the beauty of life ahead for an unborn child. The film artistically portrays an imaginary journey in a world full of adventurous landscapes and fantastic creatures. It ends with a call from Carla Bruni-Sarkozy for an HIV-free generation in which she says “Life is a beautiful journey. Don’t let AIDS kill it.”

The film owes its powerful soundtrack to multi-award winning and singer/songwriter artist Amy Winehouse, who offered the pro-bono use of her “Back to Black” song for the film.

“It was a question of finding a true resonance with the images in the film created by Bonzoms”, says musician / producer Julien Civange, who conceived the Born HIV Free campaign, about the use of Winehouse’s music. “We wanted to find a piece that was modern but also well known, something that carried the same sensibility as the film. The magic came with the soundtrack by Amy Winehouse, an artist that Carla considers one of the greatest and most talented of her generation and who was generous enough to participate in the campaign.”




Credits :

Commissioners :
The Global Fund

Julien Civange manager of the campaign
for Carla Bruni-Sarkozy

Production Company :
Passion Paris Production
Director :
Jack-Antoine Charlot/Bonzom
Executive Producer :
Marc Bodin-Joyeux
Claire Potel

Animation Production :
Je suis bien content
Production manager :
Marc Jousset
Perrine Capron
Script & original idea :
Olivier Bardy & Jack Antoine Charlot
Storyboard :
Kalkair
Animation :
Guillaume Delaunay
Dimitri Lecoussis
Damien Barrau
Davy Durand

Compositing :
François Leroy
Jimmy Audoin

Sound Design Studio
Sound designer :
Michael Fakesch & Stéphane Papin

Voice-over : Carla Bruni Sarkozy

Music : Amy Winehouse/Universal “Back to black

Links:
BornHIVFree
BornHIVFree (YouTube)
BornHIVFree (Facebook)
Passion Paris
The Global Fund
BornHIVFree Wiki

Sunday, 8 August 2010

LITTLE SISTER FILM's Interactive Zombie Adventure for Hell Pizza


New Zealand's Hell Pizza have an interesting bit of promotion in the form of a tongue-in cheek interactive zombie film from Little Sister Films which is a lot of fun. The mission starts below.



Starring DJ IWIKAU, BEN EDWARDS & EMILY TRENBERTH
Producer KATIE O'BRIEN
Writer, Director & Editor LOGAN McMILLAN

Art Direction BRYCE HOLTHOUSEN
Production Manager FLIP GRATER
Camera Op DAN WATSON
Grip / B Camera ANDREW DEAN
VFX DAN WATSON
Practical Effects CHESTER DEXTAR
Data Wrangler SIMON RYAN
Makeup LUCY HARVEY
SFX Makeup BRAE TOIA
Makeup Assistant JULIE CLARK
Pyrotechnics FIREWORKS PROFESSIONALS
Audio Post THE SITTING ROOM

Links:
Little Sister Films
Hell Pizza (YouTube)
Hell Pizza

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

ALEX ROMAN's "The Third & The Seventh"


This beautiful, unbelievably fully CG film from Alex Roman takes a sometimes surreal journey through the art of architecture. Wonderful. Check it out HERE to see it in its intended full-screen glory.





Credits:

CG
-Modelling - Texturing - Illumination - Rendering| Alex Roman

POST
-Postproduction & Editing| Alex Roman

MUSIC
Sequenced, Orchestrated & Mixed by Alex Roman (Sonar & EWQLSO Gold Pro XP)

Sound Design by Alex Roman

Based on original scores by:

-Michael Laurence Edward Nyman. (The Departure)
-Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns. (Le Carnaval des animaux)

Directed by Alex Roman

Done with 3dsmax, Vray, AfterEffects and Premiere.


Links
The Third & The Seventh (Vimeo)
Compositing Breakdown (Vimeo)
The Third & The Seventh (Motionographer)
Alex Roman - CG Portfolio (CG Society)

Wednesday, 21 July 2010

WANDERING EYE PRODUCTIONS' "Becoming"


This short-film from Wandering Eye Productions is a story of man v. nature masterfully combining stunning cinematography with sublime choreography. See it HERE.


Links:
Wandering Eye Productions
Becoming (Video)
Becoming (Homepage)
Ayelén Liberona(producer/director/choreography)
Joseph Johnson Cami(producer/director)
Guy Godfree(cinematography)
Colin Penman(makeup)
Ticklebooth (source)

Tuesday, 7 October 2008

HOOGERBRUGGE's New Book

The retrospective book of Han Hoogerbrugge's work not only displays his creations along with a handy DVD but also outlines his work process. I'm quite surprised that I haven't included his work earlier in the Wire, but for the unitiated, he is principally known for his animation works such as Modern Living, Flow, and Nails as well as his graphic/animated web series Prostress.


From Submarine Channel, publishers of the new book:
We're proud to present a coffee table book/DVD about the unparalleled work of one of the most original artists-slash-animators currently active on the web: Han Hoogerbrugge. The 200-page book covers all aspects of Hoogerbrugge's work and career: from the early beginnings of the Neurotica web series, up to Hotel, Nails and his commissioned works, such as illustrations, music videos and idents. Hoogerbrugge finally reveals how he makes his animations - comic strip style - in the chapter "How does he do it?"


Links:
Hoogerbrugge book
Hoogerbrugge.com
Modern Living
prostress 2.0
Skinover.biz
Interview (Submarine Channel)

Thursday, 25 September 2008

GLEN MARSHALL's Digital Poetry

Glen Marshall has some interesting short films in his portfolio making use of autonomous programs of his own creation that are navigated by his specifications and sound. His first independent film for the Irish Film Board, Butterfly garnered a lot of attention following its creation in 2002.

Glen went onto create a video for Peter Gabriel in 2003 for his track "The Drop" and recently completed Music is Math which he describes as follows:
This is the HD and finished version of my video ‘Music Is Math’. I just let the program run till the end of the music, I felt reluctant to interfere too much by trying to sculpt an ending, and just let the code run its own natural course.


Links:
Butterfly: Glen Marshall Computer Art
Glen Marshall Vimeo
Glen Marshall MySpace
Music is Math. Cartoon Brew (Source)

Saturday, 20 September 2008

JOHN MALKOVICH's "Snow Angel"

From Sony VAIO's Online Script Project, "Snow Angel" is a short animation based on a script started by John Malkovich and animated by Laurie J. Proud of Sherbet. Watch it below or visit our friend Dek at NoFatClips! for further download options.
"The project started with a scene from John Malkovich. He invited visitors to continue the story and chose three winning entries. Our script was complete – you can read it here. Then we moved on to a new stage, working with an animator to make the transition from words into visions. Now you can see how the script lives on in his dramatic creation. Watch as, with a few bold strokes, the characters come to life. And see how the story unfolds... We hope you enjoy the show."


Links:
Sony VAIO Online Script Project
Snow Angel - No Fat Clips! (source)
Laurie J. Proud
Sherbet
John Malkovich Wiki

Friday, 12 September 2008

OLIVIER CHABALIER's video for KID LOCO's "Pretty Boy Floyd"

I spotted this video over at Antville and while digging around for the credits, I found our friend Dek at No fat clips!!! had (as usual) beat me to the scoop. The video itself is a little rough around the edges and isn't particularly revolutionary but I like it. Director Olivier Chabalier and producers Sacrebleu have more work to view on their sites.

You can see it in high resolution Quicktime, MPEG-4, or OGG video as well as low resolution Flash below.




Credits:
DIRECTOR Olivier Chabalier

PRODUCER Jean Yves Prieur (F.L.O.R 2008) / Sacrebleu

COMPOSITING Zaven Najjar, Nicolas Fuminier, Annaëlle Moreau, Olivier Chabalier 2D ANIMATION Payam Mofidi, Zaven Najjar, Annaëlle Moreau, François Lebras 3D ANIMATION François Lebras SPECIAL FX Nicolas Fuminier MATTE PAINTING Zaven Najjar, François Lebras ILLUSTRATION Milla Gajin SET MODELING Olivier Chabalier DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY ON THE SHOOT Boubkar Benzabat ANIMATION SUPERVISOR Sébastien Dabadie AFTER FX SUPERVISOR Claude Weiss

Links:
Olivier Chabalier
Kid Loco
Sacrebleu
No Fat Clips!!! (source)
Antville (source)

Thursday, 28 August 2008

DEVOID OF YESTERDAY

Motion Director Rob Chiu of The Ronin, Motion Director Chris James Hewitt of Distrukt, and audio designer Ben Lukas Boysen of Hecq make up the creative collective Devoid of Yesterday. Their work on the titles for OFFF Lisbon 2008 recently caught my attention.

On their site, Devoid of Yesterday is described as follows:
"Devoid is an arts based collective specializing in the creation of personal short film projects and not for profit commissions. Although consisting of motion directors Chiu and Hewitt, Devoid's work is about as far removed from the world of commercial motion design as you can possibly get. Together with Boysen the trio are plotting out new territory that is constantly changing with the emotions and experiences gained from the friendship that binds the three together. Devoid of Yesterday creates dark twisted narratives with flickers of hope that reflect the human nature of the artists."




Links:
Devoid of Yesterday
The Ronin
Christopher Hewitt
Hecq
Motionographer (source)

Thursday, 17 July 2008

REYKA

Much like the earlier surreal visitation from Tarako, this advert for Iceland's Reyka vodka is similarly off-kilter and amiable.







Credits:
Agency: Dead As We Know It, New York
CD/Art Director: Mikal Reich
Copywriter: Ella Wilson
Art Director: John Painter
Agency Producer: Oscar Thomas
Production Company: HSI Productions
Director: Barney Clay
Director of Photography: Tom Townend
Producer: Jeremy Goold
Editor: Tom Lindsay
VFX: Clear Ltd. — London
Animation: HSI Productions
Animation Producer: Sam Hope
Illustration: Caroline Church

Links:
Reyka
Tarako (SiouxWIRE)
Barney Clay
Caroline Church

Thursday, 15 May 2008

Cannes 2008 - Short film online competition

Having been selected by Danny Lennon from more than 650 submissions from around the world, the nine entries selected for the 2008 NFB online competition can be viewed below. Voting ends on May 19, 2008.

EDIT: Voting has ended and the videos have been removed. The winner will be announced on May 21, 2008.

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