Man vs Magnet – The Girl Effect
Posted in: Animation
Directed by Man Vs Magnet
Man vs Magnet team up again to create an emotive film for The Girl Effect. ‘Smart Economics’ tells the story of 5 girls in Ethiopia, the challenges they face and their potential to contribute to society. The Girl Effect is about leveraging the unique potential of adolescent girls to end poverty for themselves, their families, their communities, their countries and the world. Matt crafted a unique technique for the film cleverly using collage and real photographs from Ethiopia. #smarteconomics Credits: Crew: Production Company: Nottoscale EP- Dan O’Rourke Producers: Sarah Butterworth, Kelly Ford Directed by Matt Smithson Design: Matt Smithson, Jimmy Simpson Animation: Matt Smithson, Jimmy Simpson Character Animation: Arthur Metcalf Additional Animation: Katie Smithson Script Development: Tom McConville Music: Josh Smoak – Eastward / Sunday Ent. sundayent.com/
Director : Pascal Lemoine http://www.pascallemoineprojet.com Artists : Compagny Soukha http://www.compagnie-soukha.com
Direction, camera, postproduction – BDSM Sound designer – Alexey Vorobyov Lighting engineer – Ivan Kruglov Thanks and love: Sergey Anishenko Dmitriy Gogin Stanislav Andreev Alexander Sokolov Kascheev Anton Kascheeva Irina Isaev Valera Nesterova Valentina
All scenes were filmed by using a Canon 5D and a 100mm macro lens. Visit me on facebook and if you like…give me a like 🙂 facebook.com/page.sie www.susisie.de Title: Silk Directed & Produced: Susi Sie Music & Sound Design: David Kamp http://archive.davidkamp.de/
Mulberry, the UK luxury bag company, is running #WinChristmas, an integrated Christmas advertising campaign presenting a lighthearted approach to gift giving. A 90 second online film shows a young woman opening presents from her nearest and dearest, each new present trumping the one that preceded it. A portrait painted by her sister is immediately bettered by a (waving) puppy from her parents, only to in turn be trumped by a unicorn from her boyfriend. Just when it seems the bar can’t be raised any higher, grandma delivers the present to eclipse all presents – a Mulberry Bayswater bag (in Hibiscus pink, of course). The #WinChristmas campaign includes press, Facebook creatives, in-store window displays, visual merchandising, social competitions and a website app featuring a Christmas gift finder.
A spokesperson from Mulberry commented: “Finding the perfect Christmas gift for the ones you love is always a difficult task; we wanted to find a light-hearted way of reminding people that you can never go far wrong with Mulberry. Our new gift collection of bags and leather goods means there is a perfect gift for every taste and budget.”
The Mulberry Win Christmas campaign was developed at Adam&EveDDB by executive creative directors Ben Priest, Ben Tollet & Emer Stamp, creative directors Richard Brim & Daniel Fisher, copywriter Miles Carter, art director Sophie Knox, business director Paul Billingsley and account manager Olivia Chittenden.
Filming was shot by director Andy McLeod via Rattling Stick with producer Simon Sanderson. Editor was Jonnie Scarlett at The Quarry. Illustrations are by Harry Malt. Post production was by Big Buoy. Audio post production was by Wave Studios.
Music is “When It’s Christmas Time 5″ (1792/41) David Tobin (PRS/BMI)/ Jeff Meegan (BMI) Charley Harrison (ASCAP), via Audio Network.
GE’s The Boy Who Beeps commercial has been awarded with the Grand Prix for Film at the Epica Awards. The commercial tells the story of a boy who is born with the ability to talk to machines. His conversation with technology evolves from moving his toys around and changing the television channel to communicating with the electrical grid, traffic light, aviation and medical systems. Launched in early September 2014, the cinema and television advertising campaign promotes GE’s commitment to industrial internet.
“Lots of companies have been trying to tell their Industrial Internet story and we had to take a different approach to make it stand out,” says Peter McCallum, senior director at BBDO, the creative agency that made the ad. “We wanted to tell an industrial-scale story at a human level to elicit emotion and ensure that it resonated with far-reaching audiences.”
Unlike the boy, the Industrial Internet is real. It could soon link billions of machines and devices ranging from smartphones and thermostats to jet engines and medical scanners. GE believes the network could add $10 and $15 trillion – the size of today’s U.S. economy – to global GDP over the next 20 years. The company’s software arm has developed a software platform called Predix that allows railroads, oil drilling companies, wind farms, hospitals and other customers to perform prognostics on machines, reduce downtime and increase efficiency.
The “Boy Who Beeps” was the first in GE’s Industrial Internet Stories series, with an #IndustrialInternet conversation on Twitter. Films include “Thrillingly Predictable: The Chase”.
The Boy Who Beeps campaign was developed at BBDO New York by chief creative officers David Lubars and Greg Hahn, executive creative director Michael Aimette, creative director/copywriter Tim Roan, art director Lance Vining, director of integrated production David Rolfe, executive producer Diane Hill, agency producer George Sholley, junior producer Sasha White, head of music production Rani Vaz, executive music producer John Melillo, account team Brandon Fowler, Peter McCallum and Tessa Cosenza, head of planning Jeff Kenyon.
Filming was shot by director Lance Acord via Park Pictures with producers Jackie Kelman Bisbee, MaryAnn Marino and Caroline Kousidonis.
Editor was Kirk Baxter at Exile with assistant editor Nate Gross and producer CL Weaver.
Visual effects were produced at A52 by VFX supervisor Patrick Murphy, CG supervisor Andy Wilkoff and producer Scott Boyajan.
Sound was designed at Barking Owl and mixed at Lime Studios by Zac Fisher.
Music is “Cycle” and “Morning” performed by Beck from the album “Morning Phase”.
A music video for COH’s BECHA-KPACHA, from the 2014 album “To Beat”. http://editionsmego.com/release/EMEGO-197 “To Beat or Not To Beat”, a special double LP – featuring the original “To Beat” plus remixes – will be released this month on Editions Mego. http://editionsmego.com/release/EMEGO-197X BECHA-KPACHA (pronounced Vesna Kransna) is an old Russian rhyme. Its title roughly translates as “spring the beautiful” or “spring the red.”