Director Dante Ariola of MJZ and VFX house Method Studios teamed on this spot which depicts the mayhem caused by a dog chasing a cat through a supermarket–at 500 frames per second, in reverse. The dog, cat and people were not able to be captured in one take so all the moving shots were obtained using repeated motion control set-ups.
Production Company: MJZ Dante Ariola, director. Visual Effects: Method Gabby Gourrier, VP of production; Stephanie Gilgar, EP; Pip Malone, VFX producer; Anastasia Von Rahl, VFX coordinator; Jason Schugardt, VFX supervisor; Dominik Bauch, lead compositor; Kama Moiha, Jim Kuroda, Marty Taylor, Tom Daws, compositors; Peter Claes, Stu Mintz, CG FX; Fabio Zapata; CG tracking supervisor; Tom Stanton, Juan Colon, Del Depierro, Rachan Chirarattanakornhul, CG tracking; Alex Whang, Sun-Churl Kim, CG modeling; Kenneth Lui, Huey Carroll, Midori Witsken, roto. Music: Elias Arts Dave Gold, creative director; Christopher “Kimo” Kemp, composer; Jay Nierenberg, sound designer; Ann Haugen, exec producer; Kiki Martinez, producer. Audio: Lime Studios Rohan Young, mixer.
Top Spot of the Week: DHSC, MullenLowe UK, Director Tom Tagholm Capture The Fulfillment Of Being An Adult Social Care Provider
Tom Tagholm of Various Films directed this moving piece for the U.K.โs Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) out of creative agency MullenLowe UK. Focused on adult social care, the public service film delves into the world of care providers and how they connect with those they help. We feel how gratifying it is to assist people in daily tasks, the value it brings to their lives--and to the lives of those who provide this special care. Itโs a special career for people who might not have previously considered the role. Itโs about a fulfilling job that fulfills lives. Thereโs a shared, reciprocal energy that emerges from working together in this way. Capturing this dynamic and doing justice to this human story grew out of the creatives and filmmaker spending an extended amount of time in this world--long before any scheduled lensing. At this juncture, there were no cameras, just getting to know those involved--sharing tea and chatting, driven by a curiosity about life. And this facilitated down the line the capturing of real human stories--trying not to get in the way of the natural rhythms of these special relationships as they unfolded. The mission was to recognize and capture all this--and in some cases uncover the significant moments and feelings inside of an apparently normal day. At the same time, the role of adult special care providers isnโt sugarcoated. There are challenges on both sides of the relationship. Yet there is a magic to the seemingly mundane, practical beats in a life--getting from point A to point B, answering emails, shopping, the daily tasks where the connection felt the most vivid and inspiring. One such task was seeing a man in a kitchen, cutting an onion for the first time, experiencing the joy of cooking. The... Read More