Showing posts with label Short Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Films. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Short Film: 3x3

I love this wonderful little short film about an intrepid night janitor from Portuguese director Nona Rocha:




WINNER OF 14 AWARDS WORLDWIDE
Grande prémio ZON (portugal) | Cinema Jove Festival Internacional de Cine, Spain | Festival Internacional de Cine de Huesca, Espanha, Spain | Warsaw Film Festival, Polónia | Festival Internacional de Cinema do Algarve, Portugal | Odense International Film Festival, Dinamarca
Curtas Vila do Conde Festival Internacional de Cinema | Festival du Court Métrage de Bruxelles, Bélgica | Circuito Off Venice International Short Film Festival, Italy | Sapporo International Short Film Festival, Japan
Naoussa International Film Festival, Greece: 3rd Best Short Film, People's Choice Award
Festival Internacional de Cinema de Humor, Portugal: Menção Honrosa Curta Metragem de Ficção
Festival Iberico de Badajoz: Young audience award
Faial Filmes Fest Festival de Curtas das Ilhas, Portugal: Prémio RTP2 - Onda Curta
Golden Butterfly Prize for Best Direction at the 24th International Festival of Films for Children & Young Adults

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Short Film: Dark Side of the Lens

At the heart of "Dark Side of the Lens" is one man's struggle to capture the power and beauty of the ocean. After seeing some fairly big waves in person, I can't imagine going out there in that surf and trying to film it or photograph it. It must take some combination of adventurousness and insanity. But it seems he's doing what he loves:



Winner - Best Cinematography, Rhode Island International Film Festival, 2011 | Action Sports Category, Vimeo Awards 2012 | G-Raid Driven Creativity award - Professional Category | Best Cinematography, 5Point Film Festival 2011 | Grand Prize - Chamonix Film Festival 2011 | Best short - New York Surf Film Festival 2011 |  Digital short of the Year, Surfer Poll | Relentless Short Stories 2011 | Amstel Surf Film Festibal, Peoples Choice award | Best short, Sheffield Adventure Film Festival | Best International Short, Canadian Surf Film Festival | Best Short, Waimea Ocean Film Festival

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Short Film: Mine Kafon

Landmines are a huge problem around the world. Nearly invisible, buried in fields or along roads, landmine can kill for years after a conflict, rendering land unsuitable for farming or for habitation, and killing 15,000 to 20,000 people per year. The mines can be difficult, dangerous, and expensive to remove, making demining difficult in developing countries. However, Afghan designer Massoud Hassani has engineered a low cost, effective solution for demining in regions of Afghanistan. Check it out:



MINE KAFON is a 5th place Winner in the $200,000 GE/FOCUS FORWARD Filmmaker Competition. Watch the winners at http://www.focusforwardfilms.com/winners.
DIRECTOR: Callum Cooper
DOP: Michael Latham
CAMERA: Michael Latham, Mahmud Hassani, Callum Cooper
SLOW MOTION CAMERA: Ed Edwards
EDITOR: Anna Meller
COLOR GRADER: Chris Teeder
SOUND MIXER AND DESIGNER: Sandy Milne
TITLE DESIGNER: Ray O'Meara
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Bobby Kapur
PRODUCERS:Alicia Brown, Michael Latham, Callum Cooper
THANKS: Lucie Kalmar, Slowmo High Speed, Optimism Films
The RNLA explosive ordnance disposal service 
Copyright Ardent Film Trust 2012

Find out more about this project on Hassani's website: massoudhassani.com. You can also read more about the project on their (fully-funded) Kickstarter page.


Thursday, January 17, 2013

Short Film: Neighborhoods

The process of moving has sparked many thoughts about travel and home for me in the last few weeks. I've moved out of my college apartment (home for the last three years), travelled to my childhood home (just before Christmas), to Nate's childhood home (for the wedding), to a whole new place (Kauai), back to Nate's apartment (a temporary home), and finally, hopefully, on Friday we'll be moving into our new apartment, our first home together. All of this travelling has provided all sorts of contrasts in the last few weeks. And such contrasts are precisely why I love this little double-projection film, "Neighborhoods":


Two contrary places that are connected by stylistic features. It is about the metropolis New York City (USA)
and the provincial Dessau (GER). Based on the topic "neighborhood", the films about the both cities are shown in a double projection. This short film was created in the framework of the cooperation between the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences,
Department of Design Dessau, and the NYU.
Supervised by Prof. Rochus Hartmann (Dessau)
Supported by Prof. Angela Zumpe (Dessau) and Prof. Mechthild Schmidt (NYC)
Idea/realization: Saskia Kretzschmann & Vera Danilina
Music: Johnny Ripper "In A Dream"

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Short Film: В лесу родилась ёлочка (The Forest Raised a Christmas Tree)

I have a delightful Soviet cartoon for you today. "В лесу родилась ёлочка" is probably my favorite Russian holiday song, and this little cartoon makes it even better. For the non-Russian speakers, I've included a translation of the song under the video. Basically, every night at midnight in the artist's studio, all of the pictures come to life, and on this night they decide to watch a movie together. It's quite a fun little holiday cartoon.

Fun Fact: Even though the song translates "ёлочка" as a "Christmas tree," it would be more accurate to call it a "New Year's tree." New Year's (Новый год) is a much more significant holiday in Russia than it is in the US, and most people decorate New Year's trees rather than Christmas trees. 


Made in 1972

English Lyrics:
The forest raised a Christmas tree, 
‘Twas silent and serene 
In winter and in summer 
It was slender and so green. 
The wind sang it a lullaby: 
Sleep Christmas tree, sleep tight! 
The snow was making clothes for it:
 It was a pretty sight! 
A trembling bunny put himself 
Beneath its arms so wide; 
The hungry wolf just passed him by - 
A lovely place to hide! 
Some sleigh bells rang throughout the woods,
 The snow was crisp and clean, 
A horsey brought a forester 
To hew that tree so green. 
And now it comes to visit us, 
With lights and garlands bright, 
While all the children dance and sing
 To greet it with delight!

(Translation by Arthur Durando and Irina Popov)

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Short Film: How to Sweep

One of three films in a trilogy on "Energies and Skills," "How to Sweep" provides a dramatic and artful take on the mundane:



Directed by Van Neistat, 2012. Watch the other two movies from the "Energies and Skills" trilogy:
Love Letter to Plywood: https://vimeo.com/44947985
Space Camp: https://vimeo.com/44954870

Produced on the occasion of Tom Sachs' Space Program: MARS
http://www.tomsachsmars.com

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Short Film: Champagne Capitalist

I love this cute short film about an intrepid and imaginative little girl and a splendid horse race. I too was a horse-crazy little girl with a very active imagination and fond memories of watching horse races with my grandfather. However, given the lack of champagne-filled dinner parties at our house, most of our childhood races took place on our big, sloping driveway with a handful of HotWheels cars. (My trusty all-metal miniature Mustang usually won.) What sorts of memories do you have from childhood?



Tiring of her parents' boring dinner parties, a young girl comes up with a surprising scheme to make this one work for her.
Film by Faye Planer and Tristan Martin; DOP - Guy Gotto; Composer and Sound Designer - Sami El-Enany
Sound Mastering - Joseph Munday; Piano - Sami El-Enany; Violin - Caragh Campbell ; Cello - Rosalind Asprey
Executive Producer - Marta Sala Font; Animation Assistants - Patrick Burley and Daniel Levin; Production Assistant - Jonathan Levin

Winning Girl - Eve Reekie; Losing Boy - Joshua Matengu; Losing Girl - Leila Biggs ; Host - Duncan Reekie; Hostess - Colette Reekie ; Guest 1 - Nina Planer ; Guest 2 - Adrian Matengu ; Guest 3 - Andy Parks ; Guest 4 - Anna Orford
Funded by the Ex-Animo Online Film Fund Scheme as part of the Roundhouse’s Creative Programme for 11-25’s.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Short Films: After the Storm

The election excitement has garnered most of the media attention as of lately, but much relief and recovery work is still to be done in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. These short films, shot by New Yorkers who rode out last week's storm, capture the impacts of Sandy on the city and lives of those in it.

To help with relief efforts, please consider donating to the American Red Cross or to Occupy Sandy, a branch of Occupy Wall Street that has been very effective in providing quick and effective relief. 



By Casey Neistat https://www.facebook.com/cneistat
do not try this.



Seeing lower Manhattan without power was a surreal experience. This is traditionally a city that never sleeps. One in which the lights are always on. One that is always bustling with people. When the lights went out it was wholly different. This piece is meant to capture and relay the feeling of what it was like to walk around the darkened streets of lower Manhattan.
See all of Jared's photos here: http://www.jaredlevy.me/gallery/hurricane-sandy-lower-manhattan/
Stills / Voice: Jared Levy http://jaredlevy.me
Timelapse / Music: Michael Marantz http://michaelmarantz.com
Creative Direction: Jason Oppliger http://jasonoppliger.com
Produced by Already Alive http://alreadyalive.com
Original Music by Michael Marantz: http://soundcloud.com/michaelmarantz/nyc-dark



Our friend Michelle lives in Rockaway Beach, New York. We didn't hear from her until 3 days after Hurricane Sandy, when she left us the following voicemail. The damage in the Rockaways is extensive and under-reported. The Rockaways need our help.
To Help:
http://interoccupy.net/occupysandy/rockaways/
rockawayhelp.com
http://www.redcross.org/hurricane-sandy
A Film by Alex Braverman and Poppy de Villeneuve
Produced By: everyone and company 
www.everyoneandcompany.com
Music: Soft Circle
Special Thanks: Heather D'Angelo, Michelle Cortez, Hisham Bharoocha, and the people of the Rockaways


PS: Shop for Hurricane Sandy! This registry is actually a list of needed supplies made by Occupy Sandy volunteers on Amazon- buy them and they can be shipped directly to Occupy Sandy's staging area for distribution to people who need them. 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Short Films: Pumpkin Carving

I know that Halloween has come and gone, but I couldn't resist sharing these two awesome pumpkin-carving films with you. The first tells the story of the "Maniac Pumpkin Carvers"- two crazy-talented artsy dudes who've actually made a business out of carving pumpkins. The second is a creative little stop-motion short filmed with actual pumpkins. Enjoy!



The year is 1992, and Marc Evan and Chris Soria are sitting next to each other in sixth-grade Spanish class. They don't know it yet, but these two twelve year olds are going to become best friends. They're going to construct epic haunted houses each year, petrifying parents more than peers. They're going to attend an artsy high school, study illustration at Parsons, grow up, and move to Brooklyn. They're going to freelance and bartend and, per their favorite holiday, casually carve some pumpkins for bosses and friends. And then the Yankees are going to put in a double-digit order, and Maniac Pumpkin Carvers will be born.



An animated carved Pumpkin Stop Motion I finished this week.
Animation - Auke de Vries
Music - Jelte de Vries
Pumpkins by - Taylor Vegetables Express

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Short Film: The Green Ruby Pumpkin

Since Halloween is right around the corner (next Wednesday!), I thought I'd share this enchanting CGI-animated short film about a particular wondrous pumpkin. What blew my mind is that this entire film was shot in a living room! I'm quite impressed:



The Green Ruby Pumpkin is a magical and fun short film that captures the enchantment of Halloween.
It was a passion project that was created by two Senior visual effects artists. Miguel Ortega and Tran Ma.
This entire project was shot in the living room. watch the making of here: https://vimeo.com/51538157
If you enjoyed the film, please take a moment to vote for us by clicking here:
http://shortoftheweek.uservoice.com/forums/134313-submit-a-film/suggestions/3266593-the-green-ruby-pumpkin
You can see our other visual effects work at: www.monstersculptor.com
You can watch this film as well as Other directors films at the Stage5 site: : http://www.youtube.com/stage5




Oh, and in case you're curious, here's the making-of video. 

This is a small selection of some of the assets, and VFX created by Miguel Ortega and Tran Ma
for the short film "The Green Ruby Pumpkin" watch here: https://vimeo.com/51358765
The entire project was rendered on 7 computers, Running Maya for 3D, Mudbox for sculpting,
Mari and Mudbox for Texture Painting, Vray for rendering, Nuke for compositing. A lot of shortcuts had to be used in order to manage our render times Including 3d projections in nuke, miniatures, and practical elements.
The majority of the vfx work was just us two, however we had great help from friends on the rigging and animation side of things. We wanted to make sure everything you see on screen was designed and or fabricated by our team.
We learned a lot and hope to keep improving as storytellers and visual artists. Thank you for watching.


Is anyone looking forward to Halloween?

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Short Film: The Worst Football Team in Britain

This short documentary, filmed for Britain's Channel Four, provides a glimpse of the Madron Football Club-- a team unceremoniously deemed "Britain's Worst." Though their record may be poor, the team's commitment and hope is quite charming, and this film beautifully captures the heart and passion of these footballers for their team and the game. 



A short documentary about Madron FC, one of the worst football teams in Britain- a title given to them after they suffered the biggest league defeat in history.

Part of a series of films made for Channel 4 by Somethin Else - http://www.somethinelse.com

Directed, filmed & edited by www.armourylondon.com

To view other films in the series please visit... http://www.playsuperme.com



Thursday, October 11, 2012

Short Film: The Goat Herder and His Lots and Lots and Lots of Goats

This animated film is simple but wonderfully whimsical. I love the lots and lots of goats and (of course) the sleepy goat herder.



Winner of the Independent Animation Award 2012 at The Blue Plum Animation festival Tennessee and chosen by Vimeo for their 'Staff Picks'.
Inspired by my two year old niece who having seen a goat herder in Spain kept chanting 'lots and lots and lots of goats!'. The story follows a day in the life of a goat herder and his flock of goats as they travel up and down the mountains of Spain. 

Andy Cabic, lead singer of the band Vetiver http://vetiverse.com/ kindly gave me permission to use his track for the film which was fantastic.
There is no dialogue. The story is told using sound and movement.
I created this film during a break between animating on 'Peppa Pig' and 'Ben and Holly's Little Kingdom'.
I would love to make this in to an app for the iPAD as an interactive animated storybook for kids.
DESIGN/ANIMATION: Will Rose
MUSIC: ‘Soft Glass’ written by Andrew Cabic, licensed courtesy of Domino Publishing Company Ltd. and Bella Union Records http://vetiverse.com/
'Goat Herder' composed and performed by Tom Gisby
SOUND: JM Finch at Fonic Studios
See my interview with @inkygoodness here http://inkygoodness.com/blog/interviews/interview-will-rose/
See more work at http://wilbojonson.tumblr.com/



Now, if you'll excuse me, I think I'm going to go find some goat cheese.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Short Film: Luminarias

Luminarias documents the annual "Luminarias” festival in San Bartolome de Pinares, Spain. The visual composition and the use of audio in this film is absolutely beautiful-- Haines masterfully captures the sound and feel of this event.



Director: Tom Haines
Producer: Ilduara Lamas & Tom Haines
Exec Producer: Tamasin Glasson & James Studholme
Original Soundtrack: UNKLE
DOP: Steve Annis
Sound Recordist: Andy Paddon
Editor: Julian Eguiguren
Sound Design: Sven Taits
Colourist: Ben Rogers
Camera Assistant: Alvaro Gonzalez
Runner: Miguel Costa

Luminarias is a short visual documentary that mixes powerful images captured during the two day “Luminarias” fiesta in San Bartolome de Pinares, Spain, with a rich soundtrack comprised of an original UNKLE score, location sounds and a reading of the Rafael Alberti poem “Galope”.

Using grainy 16mm film, Luminarias portrays the drama, confusion and traditions of the event in a painterly way, while the multi-layered collage of sound design and music and text render the drama of the fiesta. The festival takes place every January and involves “cleansing” horses and their riders as they pass through burning pine brush. Horsemen and women of all ages from infants to octogenarians take part in the purification and despite the dramatic, sometimes scary images Haines has captured here, accentuated by slow-motion photography, there is an overwhelming sense of pride, respect and care that the villagers have towards their animals, as one rider said “Luminarias is something from another world, for me a horse is a King, I understand and love horses”.

Galope by Rafael Alberti  (poem and translation provided by Tom Haines)

Las tierras, las tierras, las tierras de España,
las grandes, las solas, desiertas llanuras.
Galopa, caballo cuatralbo,
jinete del pueblo,
al sol y a la luna.
¡A galopar, a galopar, hasta enterrarlos en el mar!
A corazón suenan, resuenan, resuenan
las tierras de España, en las herraduras.
Galopa, jinete del pueblo,
caballo cuatralbo,
caballo de espuma.
¡A galopar, a galopar, hasta enterrarlos en el mar!
Nadie, nadie, nadie, que enfrente no hay nadie;
que es nadie la muerte si va en tu montura.
Galopa, caballo cuatralbo,
jinete del pueblo,
que la tierra es tuya.
¡A galopar, a galopar, hasta enterrarlos en el mar!

Translation

Land, Land, Land of Spain,
The large, the lonely, the bleak plains,
Galloping, white-footed horse,
Cavalier of the people,
under the sun and the moon.
Galloping! Galloping until they are buried in the sea
As a heart it sounds, resounds, resounds
the land of Spain, in its horseshoes.
Galloping, cavalier of the people
white-footed horse,
Horse of the surf.
Galloping! galloping until they are buried in the the sea
Nobody, nobody, nobody, there is nobody ahead;
death is nobody if it rides on your saddle
Galloping, white-footed horse,
Cavalier of the people
the land is yours.
Galloping! galloping until they are buried in the the sea!


Thursday, September 27, 2012

Short Film: High Speed Reel

This isn't really a traditional short film but rather a collection of high speed shots from the work of Charles Bergquist. Bergquist is a director, designer, and photographer based out of San Diego. I was quite impressed with his editing of this piece; though it includes segments from a number of different projects, the flow and pacing of the film is excellent and the composition is stunning.


www.work.charlesbergquist.com

High speed reel for 2011 shot with the Olympus iSpeed 3 from www.Jordy.com.
Project Title : High Speed Reel 2011
Project Type : Experimental / Commercial
Film Location : San Diego, CA / Los Angeles, CA / Big Sur, CA


Director : Charles Bergquist
Production Assistant : Katrina Adair / Andy Martin
Toolset : Olympus iSpeed 3 ( www.olympus-ims.com/en/ispeed-3/) from www.Jordy.com
Music : (Main) Mux Mool "The Butterfly Technique" - www.ghostly.com/releases/planet-high-school
             (Intro) Acoqui "Somewhere Else" www.acoqui.bandcamp.com/album/demos

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Short Film: A Hand-Lettering Experience

So much lovely hand-lettering in two minutes. Leandro Senna created 66 hand-lettered cards over the course of a month, with just a pencil, pens, brushes. I'm impressed by both the patience and the skill involved in this project.



Bob Dylan Subterranean Homesick Blues - A HAND LETTERING EXPERIENCE from Leandro Senna on Vimeo.

"I´ve been thinking for a lot of time on doing a personal project where I could get out of the computer for a little bit, and have pleasure doing something handmade. Getting back to the basics.
Inspired by Bob Dylan´s Subterranean Homesick Blues video, where he flips cards with the lyrics as the song plays, I decided to recreate those cards with handmade type. I ended up doing all the lyrics, and not just some of the words, as Dylan did.
There are 66 cards done in one month during my spare time using only pencil, black tint pens and brushes. The challenge was not to use the computer, no retouching was allowed. Getting a letter wrong meant starting the page over.
I had a lot of fun doing this project, researching, practicing and getting deeper on typography.
There are some intentional misspellings and puns on the original song video, so I tried to keep that in a certain way.
You can watch the original movie here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKfrjk6suAQ
Get in touch with some of my work visiting www.leandrosenna.com"


Check out all of the cards and the process of making them on Senna's website



Thursday, September 13, 2012

Improv Everywhere

Improv Everywhere is a NYC-based "prank collective" that aims to induce chaos and joy around New York City (and beyond). And they usually do a pretty great job. These are a few of my favorite missions:



For our latest mission, we turned a mini-golf course into a major golf championship. We surprised random mini-golfers with caddies, commentators, an ESPN camera crew, and a huge crowd. The "winner" was presented with the actual Claret Jug from The Open Championship. We surprised several groups throughout the day, appearing out of nowhere each time.
Full story at Improv Everywhere
http://improveverywhere.com/2012/07/16/the-mini-golf-open/





For our latest mission we turned a carousel into a horse race. A single jockey was joined by two announcers, a roaring crowd, and a trumpeter. The children on the carousel had no idea what was going on. The mission took place at Le Carrousel in New York's Bryant Park.
Produced by Improv Everywhere
http://improveverywhere.com/




For the Third Annual Black Tie Beach, hundreds of participants spent a day at the beach in black tie attire. We covered Coney Island and Brighton Beach with a diverse group of people of all ages laying out, playing games, and swimming in the ocean in formal wear. Agents were instructed to find cheap tuxedos and ball gowns at thrift stores for the occasion.
Full story at Improv Everywhere
http://improveverywhere.com/2012/09/10/black-tie-beach-2012/



For our latest mission, we staged a reenactment of the first Princess Leia / Darth Vader scene from Star Wars on a New York City subway car.
Produced and Created by Charlie Todd
http://improveverywhere.com/charlie_todd/

I hope this brought joy to you as well.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Short Film: The Ballerina Stunt

This is technically a commercial, but this stunt was breathtaking. Nate and I calculated it out, and the trucks were driving at approximately 50 mph. I can't imagine trying to slackline at that speed. Check it out:



World record-holding highliner Faith Dickey battles to cross the line between two speeding trucks. Will she make it?

The stunt was set up to show the precise handling of the new Volvo FH. Filmed on an unopened highway in Croatia in cooperation with Hollywood stunt director Peter Pedrero (James Bond, Harry Potter, Pirates of the Caribbean.) Directed by Academy Award nominee Henry Alex Rubin. Music by J. Ralph / The Rumor Mill.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Short Film: Springtime with Obaachan

This is lovely. Enjoy:


Springtime with Obaachan - Japan from Andy Ellis on Vimeo.

A slow moving piece documenting the subtleties / importance of family and home life on returning back to Japan last March/April 2011.
Camera: Nikon D7000
Lenses: Nikkor 50mm 1.4G & Nikkor 18-200mm VR
Audio: Røde VideoMic Pro
Music: Ryuichi Sakamoto // Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence
www.theartofandyellis.com


Thursday, August 23, 2012

Short Film: Fox Hat

I apologize for the sporadic posting this week- it's the first week of school and things got crazy much more quickly than I expected them to.
Anyways, this film, Fox Hat, is absolutely beautiful. I love the artwork and the animation. This version has been translated from Korean (click to watch the original). My partiality to foxes might have also influenced this pick. It's a lovely piece for a quick break in the day.



fox hat (english ver.) from earth design works on Vimeo.
Director : Kim, Young-jun (Earth Design Works)
Animation : Kim, Young-jun / Kim, Ji-su
Original : Kim, Seung-youn
Music : Ko, Jin-young / Park, Hyun-woo
Progression : Chun, Sang-hyun (Picturebook SangSang)

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Short Films: The Valtari Mystery Film Experiment

Over the summer, Sigur Ros has begun to release a series of twelve films by twelve different filmmakers inspired by the songs on their album, Valtari, calling the series the Valtari Mystery Film Experiment. According to their website,
"The idea [of the Valtari Mystery Film Experiment] is to bypass the usual artistic approval process and allow people utmost creative freedom...'We never meant our music to come with a pre-programmed emotional response. We don’t want to tell anyone how to feel and what to take from it. With the films, we have literally no idea what the directors are going to come back with. None of them know what the others are doing, so hopefully it could be interesting.'"
Here are a few of my favorite films so far:



Sigur Rós - Ég anda from Sigur Rós Valtari Mystery Films on Vimeo.

"First useful pop video in history. File under: Educational." - Ragnar Kjartansson, Director


Sigur Rós - Varúð from Sigur Rós Valtari Mystery Films on Vimeo.
"For a little while now I have been experimenting with doing videos that are more like moving images or paintings. They have no beginning, middle or end so the video doesn´t expect anything from you. you don´t have to watch it all, you can glance at it or watch for an hour, it´s just your experience.
"I have also been doing music videos which are almost the total opposite. They have to be fast, lot of things happening in a short period of time otherwise you just turn it off.
I was curious to try to combine the two...
"Varúð means caution or warning so this image instantly came to my mind. someone making warning signs with a flashlight. I wanted the Varúð video to have a slow build up like the song and leave something for the viewers to imagine for themselves. We have no idea who they are or what they are warning us about. I made the video by animating a postcard (see attached) and filmed myself over and over again climbing on top of a woodenbox in front of some blue paper." - Inga Birgisdóttir, Director



Sigur Rós - Ég anda from Sigur Rós Valtari Mystery Films on Vimeo.

Director: Ramin Bahrani

Check out their website to see the rest!