For the launch of the new psychological drama THE FOLLOWING, which marks Golden Globe winner and Emmy Award-nominated actor Kevin Bacon’s primetime series debut, Fox Broadcasting Company (FOX) again turned to the creative production/post studio hybrid IKA Collective to produce one of the multi-spot promo campaigns that led to the series’ highly-rated premiere. IKA had previously worked on successful series launch promo campaigns for several other FOX series, including NEW GIRL, RAISING HOPE and THE MINDY PROJECT. They also produced the extravagant promo for last season’s SO YOU THINK YOU CAN DANCE premiere.nn”We’re proud that FOX again entrusted us with this crucial series launch,” Ian Karr, Founder/Director at IKA Collective and Executive Producer on this project, says. “Launches are a huge deal — for the networks and for IKA. Whether it’s assembling an A-list team, or coming up with creative solutions to logistical and production challenges, we thrive in that high-stakes environment.”nn
nClick here to watch THE FOLLOWING promo online.nnDirected by Kerry Shaw Brown and lensed by Anthony Arendt, production on the two promos (entitled “Footsteps” and “The Raven”) proved especially challenging because it called for multiple, visually unique promos to be shot in just one day. That meant finding a location that not only captured the sense of urban dystopia that drives the creative, but one that also provided enough space to build a jail cell and an FBI office set.nnKarr and his production team used an abandoned grain elevator in Brooklyn as the primary location for the sequence in which series co-star James Purefoy and his many followers walk through a graffiti-filled, decaying building, leaving behind bloody footprints as they walk toward a stone-faced Bacon. The other sets were built in an adjacent structure, creating a “pop-up” production studio on the Brooklyn waterfront.nn”The FOX team came to us with epic creative concepts and everyone performed at their very highest level,” Karr adds. “The spots turned out great and more than 20 million viewers tuned in for the premiere. It doesn’t get much better than that.”nnCreative Credits:nClient: FOX TelevisionnProject: THE FOLLOWING promo campaign — “Footsteps” and “The Raven” (both :45s)nnAgency: FOX Television, Hollywood, CAnVP On-Air Creative: Julio Cabral nVP of Production – Special Ops: Golareh Safarian nnProduction: IKA Collective, New York, NYnExecutive Producer: Ian KarrnDirector: Kerry Shaw BrownnProducer: Gary KoutnDirector of Photography: Anthony ArendtnnAbout THE FOLLOWINGnAiring Mondays (9:00-10:00 PM ET/PT), THE FOLLOWING is a fast-paced psychological thriller that follows a former FBI agent who is called out of retirement to track down a devious and diabolical serial killer, the mastermind behind an ever-growing web of murderers.nnTHE FOLLOWING<
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Liz Charky Directs a Playful and Reflective Video For Henry Hall’s “Tiny Door”
Directed by Liz Charky, the music video for Henry Hall’s ‘Tiny Door’ is a playful and profound exploration of the song’s intriguing perspective on love. Silly moments and serious heartbreak are skillfully weaved together in a series of cheeky, dreamy, profound, and sometimes psychedelic scenes. “I am a huge fan of love songs that have an unusual, hyper-specific perspective on love,” says Hall. “That’s what I wanted to do with ‘Tiny Door.’ It’s about loving someone unconditionally while recognizing that love is something that isn’t always straightforward — I think that’s something we all attempt to come to terms with in our lives. I thought it was a unique yet universal detail about love and therefore an intriguing subject matter for a song. Even though the song is a ballad at its core, it still has a lighthearted sense of humor to it — that’s really portrayed well by Liz, and Ellin Aldana, our cinematographer.” Charky explains, “When I first listened to the song, I felt it was a love song full of longing with a kind of wishful melancholy. As I spoke with Henry about his intention behind the lyrics and sound, I was assured that I'd need to explore heartbreak in a nuanced way – with a degree of levity and playfulness. For me, falling in and out of love runs the full course of human expression. Love and heartbreak can be so emotionally intense and sometimes lonely, other times quite goofy or liberating. In developing the concept, I focused on both the literal and figurative ways that falling in and out of love might look like. So, you see Henry and co-star Franny Arnautou falling, flying, dancing, raging, winking, smiling, and... Read More