Tourism, Humpback Whales and LGBT Healthcare Are Topics
Three films, “Insider’s Guide to Riga,” “Whale Wisdom” and “What Goes Unsaid,” captured top awards in the 2019 US International Film & Video Festival. The winners were announced June 5.
“Insider’s Guide to Riga,” from the Riga Tourism Development Bureau, was Best of Festival — Corporate. It was created by DDB Latvia as part of a campaign to promote Riga, Latvia, as a city-break destination. The project included Facebook video content that would appeal to a younger crowd. The production uses eight fictional characters to show the different sides of the city such as creative, party and entertainment, and destination for kids. Site visitors can select their preferences of activities, foods, etc., and then are assigned a guide who takes them on a specialized tour.
Since the introduction in 2017, more than 10 million views have been recorded in target markets for client Live Riga. Janis Nords was production director; Jurgis Kmins, director of photography, and Vairis Strazdz was creative director. Production was by nonsense.tv with Augustinas Katilius as producer.
Humpback Whales outsmart humans
“Whale Wisdom,” Best of Festival – Documentary, was produced by Terra Mater Factual Studios GmbH, Vienna, Austria. It explores the environment and senses of humpback whales, the ocean giants. Marine biologist-filmmaker Rick Rosenthal uses science and his own observations and long-held beliefs to capture the hunting techniques of these ocean giants and even their songs.
In the film, a humpback whale outwits humans at a salmon hatchery repeatedly to get their fish. The whales have also learned to interpret orcas’ feeding calls and use them to their advantage. The humpbacks wait for the orcas to herd herring into tight schools and then swoop in to swallow the feast.
The film uses ultrasonography mapping to illustrate the scientists’ recording of one whale learning the song from another. Researchers believe the songs contain important information, possibly about their migrations, which is shared when the song is transferred – a cultural exchange among whales.
The work is a co-production with Doclights/NDR Naturfilm in association with ARTE France/Unité Découverte et Connaissance produced by Wild Logic.
LGBT Healthcare topic for IQ One World Award
“What Goes Unsaid,” from the National LGBT Cancer Network, New York City, was selected for the IQ One World Award. The production addresses disparities in healthcare for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons. This award is sponsored and selected by the International Quorum of Motion Picture Producers, where a group of international judges considered its message powerful and much needed for an issue that is worldwide. IQ is headquartered in Nashville, Tenn.
The film shows how lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people experience significant healthcare disparities that result directly and indirectly from discrimination, “including, sadly, discrimination and lack of cultural competence WITHIN the healthcare system,” according to the National LGBT Cancer Network. The film points out that 20 percent of trans and GNC (gender nonconformity) people have reported being turned away by a healthcare provider, simply for being trans or GNC.
The film is a result of experiences the Network had in developing an LGBT training curriculum offered to universities, large healthcare systems and social service organizations. Two federal agencies, the Institute of Medicine and the Joint Commission had recommended LGBT cultural competence training. In 2013, the Network was awarded a five-year grant from the New York State Department of Health to develop the curriculum.
During that training, the Network learned that providers needed more exposure to the real life experiences of trans and GNC people. The result was “What Goes Unsaid,” a 14- minute film that exposes the well-intentioned but misguided attempts at connection with trans and GNC patients, coupled with frank monologues. It was produced by the National LGBT Cancer Network and Films for Nonprofits with Liz Margolies as producer. Cinematographer/director was Ken Ross; editor was Phyllis Famiglietti, and sound was by Liz Ellis Victorini.
A full listing of winners is available at www.filmfestawards.com along with links to the winning videos.
Boris FX Brings Greater ML Power To Continuum’s Video Editing and Visual Effects Toolkit
Boris FX announces the release of Continuum 2025, which strengthens its machine-learning capabilities with a growing list of creative effects and innovative tools. The award-winning plugin collection now includes six internally developed, ethically trained ML-driven effects that streamline workflows and save artists valuable time. Continuum 2025 is available with subscription pricing starting at $195/year. “Continuum’s two new ML effects take tasks that are traditionally tricky, applying dynamic motion blur to live action shots and concealing license plate identifiers, and provides users with speedy and accurate one-click solutions,” says Boris Yamnitsky, President and Founder of Boris FX. “The addition of Motion Blur ML and License Plate ML highlights Continuum’s continuing push towards developing ML-driven post-production tools that take the guesswork out of laborious tasks while ensuring artists maintain their creative freedom.” “Continuum 2025’s standout effect is Motion Blur ML. Its machine-learning optical flow only blurs the moving section of a shot, isolating and leaving untouched sections with none or less motion,” states Ra-ey Saleh, offline & online editor (Discovery, TLC, HGTV). “It's perfect for any type of production, making it easy to add an extra layer of realism or more in-your-face stylization to video and text.” ML Technology BCC+ Motion Blur ML uses a sophisticated ML algorithm to instantly detect pixel movement and apply realistic motion blur to video and motion graphics. Users can adjust blur intensity and direction (forward, backward, or a combination) or... Read More