Sean Pecknold – Fleet Foxes ‘Mykonos’

Remember White Winter Hymnal? Sean Pecknold’s debut Fleet Foxes video with the killer hand-crank star trails shot?

Pecknold (aka Grandchildren) just completed a beautiful new video for the Fleet Foxes track ‘Mykonos‘. The two-triangled hero and his shape-shifting antagonist strike a nice visual balance between abstract imagery and recognizable characters.

The first time watching what caught my eye was the elegant polygonal shapes (jellyfish, birds, castles, rolling water). On repeated viewings it was the story-related details that kept me coming back – the moments where the triangles switch between walking and flying, the man in the castle sending spindly patrolling legs into the forest, the triangle offing the guard and his subsequent tumbling sequence/final battle (or at least that’s what I got out of it).

The video was completed in four weeks using glass plane animation technique, with only two days for post. Check out the behind the scenes for some down and dirty making-of action.


Fleet Foxes – Mykonos
Director/Animator – Sean Pecknold
Artist/Illustrator – Jesse Brown (papervspencil.com)
Animation Assistant – Toby Liebowitz (inbruno.com)
Animation Assistant – Chris Ando (myspace.com/talbottagora)
Art Director – Sean Pecknold
Produced by Grandchildren
Labels – Bella Union & Sub Pop
Special thanks – Ryan Rothermel, Matt Daniels, Miles Tillman, Thad Scott, Mike Ragen, That Go, Britta Johnson, Aja, Greg, Lisa, Smokey, Robin, Christian, Josh, Casey, Liz, Olivia, Joy, and Skye

Posted on Motionographer

Sean Pecknold – Fleet Foxes ‘Mykonos’

Aardman Animations: Change4Life

aardman-change

Aardman director Steve Harding-Hill mixed 3D and 2D animation with a great sense of comedic timing to nudge Britons off the couch and into the great outdoors—or at least to the nearest park.

Working with agency M&C Saatchi for UK’s Department of Health, “Change4Life” tells the story of makind’s epic journey to obesity with tongue lodged firmly in cheek, using laughter instead of lectures to educate and motivate viewers.

The hybrid animation style is as playful as the palette, and Harding-Hill did a great job casting the faceless stars of the spot as lovable little creations.

Like many “stop-motion” spots of late, “Change4Life” used CG to create the illusion of good ol’ analogue clay. It’s expertly done here, and I suspect we’ll only see more of it in the future.

Says Harding-Hill:

We wanted things to be stop motion like, not too slick and stylized. We ended up making photocopies of our drawings, sticking them to polyboard, and shooting them with still cameras. Our backgrounds were created like theater sets, flat and layered up.

The black lines were crucial to the overall graphic sensibility and also made it possible for us to do some 2D animation and mix things up a bit.

The companion website features the same characters and lists practical tips for living a healthier lifestyle.

Posted on Motionographer

Aardman Animations: Change4Life

Fleet Foxes – A Family Affair

L’immersione è una questione di affinità, di scambi. E’ lasciarsi permeare, per scaricare i nervi ed acquisire nuove energie. Con la musica, con le immagini, ci si immerge in universi alternativi, collocati altrove per pochi minuti.
Con i Fleet Foxes è così. Non li ascolti, ti ci immergi.

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Autori di uno dei migliori dischi che ci abbia lasciato l’anno appena trascorso, il quintetto di Seattle capitanato da Robin Pecknold sta, singolo dopo singolo, costruendo un universo visuale parallelo che traduce appieno il loro folk pop sognante in immagini. L’affinità tra musica ed immagine ha, in questo caso, origini genetiche: autore dei video della band è infatti il fratello di Robin, Sean Pecknold, attivo nell’animazione e nella motion graphics. Sotto il nome di Grandchildren (Milk nelle collaborazioni con Matt Daniels) ha già realizzato per la band di Seattle lo splendido video animato di “White Winter Hymnal“, stop motion di magica plastilina ancestrale, ed il bucolico video di “He Doesn’t Know Why“.

Quello che vi proponiamo è il nuovo video dei Fleet Foxes: Mykonos, brano tratto dal primo EP del gruppo e presente sulla riedizione deluxe dell’album.

Il curatissimo Making Of del video vi racconta la lucida follia cartacea della sua realizzazione.

Articolo redatto da Didier Falzone

Capitu Titles

capitu_1

So, due to popular demand, I’m pleased to re-present (as a full post) the title sequence to ‘Capitu’–a TV miniseries, based on a 19th century Brazilian literary masterpiece, Dom Casmurro, written by Machado de Assis. Told retrospectively from the point of view of the aging central character, it describes his obession with finding all kinds of evidence that his wife had been unfaithful, and his own best friend is actually the father of their only son.

What struck me is the amount of research, meaning, and integrity that goes behind this. Since the book is considered a ‘forerunner of Modernism (at least in Brazil)‘, the team’s initial inspiration is Dadaism, specifically the decollage technique (creating an image by cutting, tearing or otherwise removing pieces of a picture to reveal parts of other images lying beneath).

According to Lobo, ‘the chaotic and disjointed nature’ of Dada decollage pieces parallels the nonlinear, short-chaptered structure of the novel. Layering of images suggests the passage of time, memory, and accumulated life experience, and the tearing/ripping evokes the violence inherent in the central character’s tormenting doubts and desire for vengeance.

The animation was first created in After Effects, then each frame was printed on different paper stock. The printed frames were crumpled, restretched out and glued one on top of the other, and the entire stack was then placed under a stop-motion camera. Shots were taken at appropriate intervals as the layers were ripped and peeled. The photographs were taken back into after effects to create the final stop-motion sequence.

Lobo has been kind enough to provide us with the ‘making of’ video and a very eloquent write-up about the conceptual and aesthetic rationale behind it. Click on the link below to read it all…highly recommended.

In 2008, Lobo was commissioned to create the opening sequence and interstitials for Capitu, a TV mini-series adaptation of Dom Casmurro, the masterpiece by 19th-century Brazilian novelist Machado de Assis. The story is narrated by the title character, an aging man who decides to write his memoirs in an attempt to “tie the two ends of life together”. But the true purpose of his endeavor is to search for proof justifying his undying obsession: that his childhood sweetheart, Capitu, whom he finally succeeded in marrying, had betrayed him with his best friend, the real father of their only son. What makes Machado’s novel unconventional is that he treats the traditional themes of marriage and adultery as a mere backdrop for an exploration of surprisingly modern literary concerns: the unreliability of the first-person narrator; a skeptical awareness of the novel’s structure; the failure of memory in recapturing past facts objectively, functioning instead as a means for self-justification and self-deceit.

Lobo sought to encapsulate these issues in the opening sequence, not just through the choice of imagery but also in a way that involved the animation technique itself. The preliminary research started with the early 20th-century art movement Dada, following a suggestion by the series’ director Luiz Fernando Carvalho. Since Dom Casmurro is considered a forerunner of Modernism, at least in Brazil, we thought it made sense to start with some of the most radical pioneers of the avant-garde. We focused mainly on Dada artists who used collage and photomontage as their media of choice. The chaotic and disjointed nature of their work paralleled the fragmented structure of Machado’s novel, with its short chapters, nonlinearity and constant interruptions as well as remarks by the narrator himself. This research on the evolution of collage eventually led us to discover the works of post-Dada European artists like Wolf Vostell, Mimmo Rotella and Jacques Villeglé. They developed what became known as decollage: instead of building up an image by adding parts of other images, they worked by cutting, tearing or otherwise removing pieces of a picture to reveal parts of other images lying beneath.

This approach seemed perfect for the task at hand. The superposition of images provided a fitting metaphor for the passage of time and the accumulation of experiences throughout one’s life. Ripping through these levels mirrored the process of peeling the layers of memory carried out by the narrator, in search for the final truth buried in his past. The act of ripping also suggests violence, representative of his tormenting doubt and desire for vengeance.

Visually, the distressed result of this procedure was also appropriate, since it connected in many ways with the art direction of the mini-series. The show was predominantly shot inside a run-down mansion, using recycled materials for settings and props. The theater and the opera are recurring elements in the novel, so the production relied on classic theatrical techniques for the recreation of the environments. This inspired us to base our layouts on old letterpress show posters – the same material largely employed by the decollage artists.

We wanted the aesthetic and the animation technique to be fully integrated in these pieces, which meant that the ripped paper should be more than just a graphic style: it should be the very mechanism that drove the animation forward. We started by preparing simple animations in After Effects, primarily featuring typography and collage-like graphics representing key concepts of the story. These animations were edited together with short live-action clips from the series, and the entire sequence was then printed sequentially, frame by frame, on different kinds of paper. These sheets were glued on top of each other, resulting in a stack of paper that had the first frame of the opening at the top and the last frame at the bottom. We mounted the stack below a table-top digital camera and proceeded to rip and tear the paper sheets one by one, slowly revealing each layer underneath. This process was photographed at regular intervals, and the pictures were imported back into After Effects as a sequence, where it received some slight color and time adjustments.

The result was the same animation and live-action sequence we started with, only fractured and reassembled in such a way that never allows for a single intact frame. Every image that begins to take shape never achieves its complete form; every ripped bit of paper reveals something that belongs to another point in time. The spot resolves itself only at the end, unveiling the word Capitu: the only person who holds the key to the mystery of the story.

Posted on Motionographer

Capitu Titles

Paper Animation Pt. 4

I pop up books hanno sempre affascinato i bambini ma anche gli adulti, sono un fantastico modo per creare ambientazioni fantastiche e surreali.
Lo stesso effetto strabiliante viene aumentato quando ci sono le immagini in movimento o quando le pagine del libro servono come transizione per l’animazione.
Su MG ci sono stati già altri articoli che riguardano i pop up books, ma qui voglio mostrarvi il making of del film Enchanted (2007 Walt Disney).
Lo studio Reel Fx Entertainment spiega come hanno prodotto le transizioni per il film e di come sia stato difficile concepire la struttura delle animazioni.

Clicca sull’immagine per vedere il video

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Il secondo video è di Asif Mian per il videoclip “Fast Cars” di Aesop Rock.
In questo caso l’animazione è a passo uno, molto più grezza e scarna, ma tutti gli effetti pop up sono stati fatti a mano e molti frames sono stati stampati e incollati sul libro che viene sfogliato.

Clicca sull’immagine per vedere il video

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Director: Asif Mian
DP: Valentina Caniglia
Art Director: Asif Mian
Producer: Chesley Heymsfield
Post Production: Evaq Studio

Articolo redatto da Stefano Paron

Dadomani

Oggi vi presentiamo uno studio italiano veramente originale.  I ragazzi di Dadomani sono dei veri artigiani della comunicazione, è una delle pochissime realtà in Italia che realizza “pezzi unici” con tecniche molto tradizionali.

Dadomani nasce a Milano nell’ottobre 2007, dall’incontro tra Francesco De Meo, Fabio Cirilli, Donato Di Carlo e Leonardo Ponzano. Quattro persone, interessate a costruire un unico gruppo di lavoro che, tramite la miscela delle diverse competenze tecnico-artistiche, si pone l’obbiettivo di soddisfare qualsiasi esigenza di comunicazione nel campo dell’animazione. Dadomani realizza filmati HD per spot, serie tv e cortometraggi animati, in animazione tradizionale, stop-motion (con materiali eterogenei come plastilina resina e carta) e computer grafica.

I loro principali clienti sono: SKY, Mediaset, DLVBBDO, United 1861, TBWA, FilmMasterClip, e Bermudashorts, casa di produzione che li rappresenta anche in Inghilterra.

Clicca sull’immagine per vedere il video

dadomani

Paper Animation Pt. 3

La più famosa forma artistica legata alla carta è sicuramente l’origami.
Da secoli si producono fantastiche opere con semplici fogli di carta.
Le forme che si possono costruire sono infinite, ma l’abilità tecnica si acquisisce solo con il tempo.

Il sito origamitube.com presenta molti video tutorials per la creazione di forme di ogni genere, e spiega anche come animare in stop motion una cicogna-origami.
Nel mondo dell’animazione le cose si fanno molto più complicate e spesso le figure diventano molto più elaborate; come nel caso dello spot diretto da Olivier Gondry per Orange che da una semplice barchetta si arriva a costruire un razzo spaziale.

orange

Lo studio Version 2 nel 2006 produsse un fantastico video di presentazione degli sponsor dello AICP.
Questa sigla esplora diversi mondi creando sequenze fantastiche e transizioni incredibili.
Logicamente il tutto è stato creato con la computer grafica, ma l’effetto cartaceo risulta molto credibile.

Version 2

Articolo redatto da Stefano Paron

Bent Image Lab and Santo: Coke “Hidden Formula”

crabs

Bent Image Lab and agency Santo prove what fun can ensue when concept and visuals move in lock step with “Hidden Formula” for Coke.

The Powers of Ten zoom is always an entertaining visual trope, but Bent Image Lab directors David Daniels and Ray DiCarlo raised the bar with some excellent character animation and a seamless mix of stop-action and CG. Our only complaint was that it ended too soon.

Credits

PRODUCTION COMPANY
Production Company: Bent Image Lab
Director: David Daniels and Ray DiCarlo
Senior Producer: Tsui Ling Toomer
Producer: Kara Place
Coordinator: Ryan Shanholtzer
Director of Photography: Mark Eifert
3D Technical Director: Fred Ruff
Grip: Russ Caulkins
Stage: Jim Birkett
Art Director: Curt Enderle, Paul Harrod
Set Designer: Huy Vu, Curt Enderle
Art Department Lead: Solomon Burbridge
Art Department: Mary Blankenburg, Marty Easterday, Eric Van Kirk, Charlie Daniels, Chris Hearndon, Jayme Hansen
Character Design: Colin Batty, Huy Vu
3D Artists: Eric Durante, Steph Kaufman, AJ Deflaminis, Dave Manuel, Galen Beals, Devon Myron
Principal Animators: Jerold Howard, Melik Malkasian, Eric Urban
Additional Animators: Eric Schuer, Jen Prokopowitz
Storyboard Artist: Steve Hess

AGENCY
Advertising Agency: Santo
Creative directors: Sebastian Wilhelm, Maximiliano Anselmo, Pablo Minces
Producer: Ezequiel Ortiz
Account Director: Hilary Strong

POST
Editorial Company: Bent Image Lab
Editorial Supervisor: Jon Weigand
Colorist: Orland Nutt
Composite Artists (After Effects): Orland Nutt, Brian Kinkley, Tarn Fox, Evan Larimore

AUDIO
Sound Design Company/city/state: Downstream, Portland, Oregon
Sound Designer/Mixer: Lance Limbocker

Posted on Motionographer

Bent Image Lab and Santo: Coke “Hidden Formula”

Kris Moyes: Beck “Youthless”

Animator and live action director Kris Moyes never ceases to amaze me—and his latest music video for Beck’s “Youthless” is no exception.

“Youthless” is pure lo-fi, stop-action magic, packed full of details and wonderful “recycled” Beck characters. If I’m not mistaken, this is the first time Beck and Kris have worked together; I sure hope they do it again, Kris’ unique style and Beck’s music seem like a perfect match.

Posted on Motionographer

Kris Moyes: Beck “Youthless”