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The 40 minutes Documentary I Believe I can Fly will be free for viewing for a limited period on video blog sebmontaz.com this friday 11.11.11.

Director/Editor: Sébastien Montaz-Rosset
Sound design: by talented Michael Denny michaeldennymusic.com/​

Song used: The Rural Alberta Advantage. Frank, AB
Download the album/track here: amazon.com/​Frank-AB/​dp/​B002A60FN4

 

Graduation Short Film, directed at l’Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs of Paris in 2010 – 2011, in the animation section. FRICTIONS mixes live action and stop motion animation and has been shot with a Canon Camera 5D Mark II and a 24-70 L lens, in a blue screen studio located in Ensad’s building.

directed by: Steven Briand
with: Julien Jourdain de Muizon
choreographer: Clara Henry
cinematographer and cameraman: Pierre Yves Dougnac
music and sound design: Moritz Reich & Agathe Courtin
visual effects: Francis Cutter & Benoit masson
costume: 2WS – world wild souls
first assistant: Romain Daudet Jahan
animation assistants: Natalianne Boucher, Camille Chabert & Luca Fiore
visual effects assitant: Sarah Escamilla

We like our stuff. Do you like your stuff? Protect your stuff.
Here’s our latest for Norton via Leo Burnett Chicago.

Information on Norton “Stuff Anthem” from Psyop’s Fletcher Moules, who was creative director on the spot along with Laurent Ledru.

Stuff. Stuff. Stuff.

No, not just “stuff” with a small “s,” but Stuff. Your Stuff. The Stuff that lives on your hard drive, your devices, and on the web. Your Stuff is more than just data. It’s your life. The Stuff that connects you with the people you love. The Stuff that puts you on the grid as a contributing member of society. It’s who you are Stuff, where you’ve been and where you’re going Stuff.

For “Stuff Anthem” we took this idea of Stuff and embodied it in a character and follow him through the world as he grows up, adding more stuff to his life and trying to hold onto and keep track of all the stuff he has.

Visually, we gave the character a cute likeable look and personality and the world around him a handmade ink and watercolor feel. We didn’t want anything to feel overly slick or techy. It’s all imbued with a bit of whimsy and fun. As the spot moves along, the visuals build and get more complex as our main character gets more stuff and tries harder and harder not to lose it. The color palette we used was also very important in the narrative journey. We developed a base palette from the Norton’s brand and this set the tone for beginning and end. However, we wanted the viewer to feel like they went on the journey with Mr. Stuff. When things got tough for him, so did the palette.

We really wanted the animation and the story to unfold as simplistic as possible. The aim was to create a handcrafted world for a software company. Though the characters are all 3D, our intention for the campaign was to have a traditional 2D feel. In order to achieve this, in the timeline we were given, we relied heavily on new techniques in digital production – all the characters are 3D, the backgrounds are projected in Nuke and AE, and much of the character lighting is done with Nuke’s Relighting tools using Normals passes. At the same time, we used some pretty old school animation techniques, like when the taxi takes off and heads to the town.

Advertising Agency: Leo Burnett, Chicago
Global Creative Director: Mark Tutssel
Executive Creative Director: Susan Credle
Creative Directors: Dave Loew, Jon Wyville
Art Director: Rainer Schmidt
Copywriter: Tohru Oyasu
Executive Producer: David Moore
Producers: Christopher Cochrane, Stephen Clark

Production Company: Psyop/Smuggler
Director: Psyop
Psyop Creative Directors: Fletch Moules, Laurent Ledru
Psyop Executive Producer: Neysa Horsburgh
Psyop Producer: Amanda Miller
Psyop Associate Producer: Hillary Thomas
Smuggler Executive Producer/Partner: Patrick Milling Smith
Smuggler Executive Producer/Partner: Brian Carmody
Smuggler Executive Producer/COO: Lisa Rich
Smuggler Executive Producers: Allison Kunzman, Laura Thoel

Models and Textures: Rie Ito, Brianne Meyers, George Longo, Matt Berenty
Riggers: Sean Kealey, Alon Gibli
Animation Lead: Dan Vislocky
Animators: Sam Ortiz, Minor Gaytan, Blake Guest, Kevin Koch, Jacob Frey, Chris Meek
Designer: Kenesha Sneed
Lighters: Hao Cui, Sarah Bockett, Stephen Delalla
2D animators: Taik Lee, Regis Carmago, Shervin Etaat, Jooyong Kim
Compositing: Fletch Moules, Michael Garrett, Miguel Bautista,
Flame: Kim Stevenson

Credits:

German Boy – Trevor Teichmann
Jewish Girl – Fiona Perry
Older Man – Bruce Schroffel
Older Woman – Rita Zohar

Producer – Anselm Clinard
Director/Writer/Editor – Keegan Wilcox
DOP – Adam Biddle
Gaffer – Phil Badger
Production Designer – Alexa Roland & Ryan Berg
Sound Mixer – Carrie Sheldon
Hair & Make-up – Georgia Jacobs
Sound Designer – Jeffrey Alan Jones
Composer – Greg Nicolett
Coloring – Sebastian Perez-Burchard
VFX – Damian Drago / Tunnel Post

On July 24, 2010, thousands of people around the world uploaded videos of their lives to YouTube to take part in Life in a Day, a historic cinematic experiment to create a documentary film about a single day on earth.

Now, it’s time to watch their story unfold on the big screen.

Directed by Oscar winner Kevin Macdonald, Life in a Day wowed audiences at the Sundance, Berlin and SXSW film festivals and during its YouTube world premiere in January.

Directed by: Geoff + Darren Donovan (Blame Your Brother)

Animation: Darren Donovan + Amy Tepperman
FX Animation: Darren Donovan
Art Direction / Background Design: Geoff Donovan
Character Design: Darren Donovan
Music: Colin Kelday
Sound Design + Mix: Sebastien Breton
Picture Edit: Miles Davren