Tag film

New York, I Love You

New York, I Love You

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Since the birth of movies, New York has long been cinema’s dream city – its teeming populace of one-of-a-kind characters, its stone-and-glass skyscrapers rocketing towards the heavens, its subterranean cultures and its rooftop love affairs all making for the perfect backdrop to all manner of action, comedy, drama and poetry. The city has been immortalised on screen in hundreds of different ways in thousands of movies. But now comes a fresh, diverse and unabashedly
romantic window into the city, this time seen entirely through the eyes of love — love in all its varieties, from first love, tough love and momentary love to love remembered, love denied, love yearned for and love that lasts forever – from a collaboration of young, impassioned filmmakers from around the world.

Directed by an eclectic group of some of today’s most imaginative filmmakers that includes Jiang Wen, Mira Nair, Shunji Iwai, Yvan Attal, Brett Ratner, Allen Hughes, Shekhar Kapur, Natalie Portman, Fatih Akin, Joshua Marston and Randy Balsmeyer, NEW YORK, I LOVE YOU invites the audience into the intimate lives of New Yorkers as they grapple with, delight in and search for love.
Bringing to life the film’s host of unforgettable New York characters is an all-star cast that includes Bradley Cooper, Justin Bartha, Andy Garcia, Hayden Christensen, Rachel Bilson, Natalie Portman, Irrfan Khan, Emilie Ohana, Orlando Bloom, Christina Ricci, Maggie Q, Ethan Hawke, Anton Yelchin, James Caan, Olivia Thirlby, Blake Lively, Drea de Matteo, Julie Christie, John Hurt, Shia LaBeouf, Ugur Yucel, Taylor Geare, Carlos Acosta, Jacinda Barrett, Shu Qi, Burt Young, Chris Cooper, Robin Wright Penn, Eva Amurri, Eli Wallach and Cloris Leachman.

Following on the heels of the acclaimed PARIS JE T’AIME, the project is the second episode of the “Cities of Love” series of collective feature films conceived by Emmanuel Benbihy, who produced this film with Marina Grasic (CRASH).

NEW YORK, I LOVE YOU – in Cinemas May 13
See the trailer and more over at Madman

Semi-Permanent, Sydney, 2010 – UPDATE

Semi-Permanent announces second raft of speakers for Sydney conference

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Semi-Permanent, Australia’s award winning design festival*, is pleased to announce additional speakers to its already awe-inspiring line up. Award winning filmmaker David Michôd, San Francisco based design community Fecal Face and Australia’s own frankie magazine, join this year’s event on the 19 and 20 March. Other speakers this year include the likes of award winning photographers Jill Greenberg and Ashley Gilbertson, graphic artists Jasper Goodall and Jessica Hische and the ABC’s celebrated broadcaster Craig Schuftan.

David Michôd – an Australian director who is currently building a solid reputation on the international film scene. His debut feature film, Animal Kingdom, was recently awarded the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. He was also the co-director of the critically acclaimed documentary, Solo, which documented the ill-fated journey of kayaker Andrew McAuley’s attempt to kayak between Australia and New Zealand. The powerful documentary won the 2009 AFI Award for Best Documentary Under One Hour. David is also well known to the Australian film community as past editor of Inside Film magazine.

Fecal Face – Making a welcome return in the web community space is San Francisco based Fecal Face – a leading online art based community site. Initially created to highlight and promote the art scene in San Francisco, Fecal Face has expanded to encompass work from artists and exhibitions world-wide. It’s an extensive directory of photos and interviews with artists, and the sites positive, down to earth and fun outlook on art makes it stand out from the crowd.

frankie magazine – one of Australia’s most popular magazines which combines interesting articles, beautiful photography and great artwork to make a cross between a fashion and art magazine that speaks to a wide audience. Founded by Louise Bannister and creative director Lara Burke, frankie is a creative voice amongst the multitude of magazines created for women that are basically catalogues for advertiser and to top it off, it’s a magazine that even your average male hipster is not ashamed to read!

Alongside the two day conference, Semi-Permanent also plays host to side shows which have seen the likes of Banksy, Shepard Fairey and 123Klan exhibit work for the Australian public. This year is no different kicking off with Mixed Business presented by We Are The Image Makers, the Opening Hours, Stupid Krap and Semi-Permanent. Taking place on the 18th March at the Ambush Gallery in Waterloo, the group show features work from leading artists including Numskull, Phibs, Beastman and James Jarat Patradoon alongside international talent, Mel Kadel and Travis Millard. The show will be open until 28th March 2010.

More information on the event, here.

Semi-Permanent, Sydney, 2010

Semi-Permanent, Sydney, 2010

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March 2010 sees Australia’s design community come together for the 8th year for Semi-Permanent in Sydney. With a week-long celebration of all things aesthetic, Semi-Permanent goes above and beyond, bringing together the design community across a number of conferences, workshops, exhibitions and after parties.
Not to be outdone by last year’s roll call, the boys at Semi-Permanent have secured a raft of talented speakers spanning the Art, Film, Illustration, Photography, Visual Effects and Motion Graphics worlds with everything from Sesame Street to Gucci and Victoria’s Secret. Set to inspire and educate, world renowned artists and specialists in their field will come together to share their knowledge, excitement and passion for their work and impart wisdom and insight on Sydney’s creative population.

Held on the 19 and 20 March at the Sydney Exhibition Centre, speakers for the 2010 Sydney event include:
Travis Millard and Mel Kadel – LA based couple whose work is admired and sought after by collectors and brands across the globe.
Jessica Hische – designer, illustrator and photographer who has worked with the likes of Victoria’s Secret, American Express, Wired Magazine and Penguin Books.
Jill Greenberg – photographer whose work has appeared in the likes of Harper’s, Wired, Time Weekly and The New Yorker and whose 2006 End Times series provoked much interest and criticism across the world.
Ashley Gilbertson – Australian born, New York based photo-journalist whose most recent book, ‘Whisky, Tango, Foxtrot’, details his experiences with the Iraq war.
Jasper Goodall – highly influential graphic artist who has worked with the likes of Gucci, Nike, Adidas and Dazed and Confused.
T World – the guys from T World, the Australian magazine focused on T-shirt culture, who have recently collaborated with Sesame Street on the program’s 40th anniversary.
Tin&Ed – Melbourne based design team whose work spans a host of disciplines including graphic design, illustration, collage, photography and motion graphics. They have worked with the likes of Nike, BMW, MTV-UK and The Australian Ballet.
Craig Schuftan – Author and broadcaster based in Sydney whose books include The Culture Club (2007) and Hey! Nietzsche! Leave Them Kids Alone (2009). Craig recently assisted with curating the popular ‘The 80’s Are Back’ exhibition at The Powerhouse Museum and has been presenting The Culture Club on triple j, a radio segment about the history of art and ideas in rock and roll, since 2002. Craig’s involvement marks a new style of Semi-Permanent speakers, coming from a historical and philosophical angle rather than a personal journey through an individual’s work.

More information on the event, here.

Semi-Permanent, Melbourne 2009

Semi-Permanent, Melbourne 2009

Semi-Permanent Melbourne 2009 Montage from Semi Permanent on Vimeo.

Missed Semi-Permanent this year? See the video montage from Melbourne above, and click here for Sydney.

Via Semi-Permanent

Ponyo

Ponyo

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Ponyo (c)  2008 Nibariki – GNDHDDT, 2009 Nibariki – GNDHDDT

Madman proudly present the highly anticipated DVD release of PONYO – the latest animated masterpiece from Academy Award®-winning filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, and the world-renowned, Studio Ghibli. In a small town by the sea, high on a cliff, lives 5-year-old Sosuke. One morning, while playing on the rocky beach below his house, he discovers a goldfish named Ponyo, her head stuck in a jam jar. Sosuke rescues Ponyo and keeps her in a green plastic bucket. Both Ponyo and Sosuke are fascinated by each other and promise to stay firm friends until Ponyo’s father, a sorcerer who lives deep under the sea, forces her to return with him to the ocean depths.
What follows is an amazing underwater adventure for all ages. The DVD release of PONYO includes both original Japanese language with English subtitles and the Disney Pixar produced English audio dub, featuring the voices of Cate Blanchette, Liam Neeson, Tina Fey, Matt Damon, Franki Jones and Noah Cyrus as Ponyo. PONYO is out on DVD, December 29th, 2009


See more/pre-order here

HP “Create Amazing”

HP “Create Amazing”

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Using the ’tilt-shift’ effect the new ‘Create Amazing’ campaign from HP displays Shanghai, New York, Santorini, London, Istanbul, and some sets built in L.A, as if it were all a small-scale moving model.

Client: HP
Agency: Mcgarrybowen
Production Company: Partizan Entertainment

9

9

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Academy Award®-nominated director Shane Acker teams up with two of the world’s most visionary filmmakers, Tim Burton (Alice In Wonderland, The Corpse Bride, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and Timur Bekmambetov (Wanted, Night Watch, Day Watch), to bring a totally unique and visually stunning animated fantasy epic to screen.

When the small rag doll 9 (voiced by The Lord of the Rings’ Elijah Wood) first comes to life, he finds himself in a post-apocalyptic world. All humans are gone, and it is only by chance that he discovers a small community of others like him taking refuge from fearsome machines that roam the landscape intent on doing them harm. Despite being the neophyte of the group, 9 convinces the others that hiding will do them no good. They must take the offensive if they are ever to survive, and they must discover why the machines want to destroy them in the first place. What follows is a sublime, heartwarming adventure where this most unlikely of heroes leads his troops into battle and, along the way, discovers that a band of miniature warriors may be the last hope for humanity.


See the trailer and more over at Madman

In Australian Cinemas: 09/12/2009

ACMI – Tim Burton: The art and imagination of the most fantastical filmmaker of our time

ACMI – Tim Burton: The art and imagination of the most fantastical filmmaker of our time

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Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride (2005), Directed by Tim Burton and Mike Johnson, Shown: Co-director Tim Burton on the set, Photo credit: Derek Frey

The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) joins Melbourne Winter Masterpieces 2010 with an Australian exclusive exhibition direct from The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. The largest exhibition to ever be presented in ACMI’s Gallery 1 has been curated in direct collaboration with Burton and features artworks and objects drawn from his personal archive, as well as studio archives and the private collections.

The exhibition follows the course of Burton’s career, with childhood ephemera, juvenilia, and amateur short films from his youth in Burbank, California; cartoons and drawings from his time at California Institute of the Arts; and examples of his first professional work at The Walt Disney Studios. Burton’s artistic output includes shorts Vincent (1982) and Frankenweenie (1984); and 15 feature films including Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure (1985), Beetlejuice (1988), Batman (1989), Edward Scissorhands (1990), Batman Returns (1992), Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), Ed Wood (1994), Mars Attacks! (1996), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Planet of the Apes (2001), Big Fish (2003), Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride (2005), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Sweeney Todd (2007) and Alice in Wonderland (2010); as well as writing and web projects such as Stainboy (2000).

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Tim Burton. (American, b. 1958), Untitled (The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy and Other Stories ), 1982–1984, Pen and ink, marker, and colored pencil on paper, 10 x 9″ (25.4 x 22.9cm), Private Collection, © 2009 Tim Burton

Tim Burton will open at ACMI on 24 June and run until 10 October 2010. Mr Burton will be at ACMI in Melbourne for the opening of the exhibition.
To accompany the exhibition ACMI will curate a film season and specialist public and education programs for all ages, which will be announced at a later date.
Tim Burton is the second Melbourne Winter Masterpiece exhibition at ACMI after Pixar: 20 years of Animation, which broke international attendance records in 2007. Tim Burton will directly follow Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood, another Australian exclusive exhibition at ACMI which premieres on 12 November 2009.

See more at ACMI here

The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents – Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood

Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) – Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood

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Thursday 12 November 2009 – Sunday 7 February 2010

Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood is “an expansive exhibition showcasing an extraordinary man’s life’s work, his collaborations and personal art collection, and an amazing insight into a formative era of Hollywood”.

Known for his exceptional work in films such as: Easy Rider (1968), Rebel Without a Cause (1955), Blue Velvet (1986), Apocalypse Now (1968) and the Australian production Mad Dog Morgan (1976), this exhibition is to show a comprehensive look at his creative virtuosity.

ACMI Director, Tony Sweeney, “ACMI is excited to present this Australian-exclusive exhibition celebrating the work and life of a truly extraordinary filmmaker and artist. The exhibition allows us to engage in great depth and detail the catalogue of work by a courageous artist, reflecting on a bygone era which radically influenced the film industry that exists today.”

Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood was originally produced by the Cinémathèque Française, in association with Dennis Hopper, Easy Rider Productions, and curated by Matthieu Orlean.

For its Melbourne presentation, the exhibition will feature a film season and a series of public programs, talks and workshops.

Dennis Hopper and the New Hollywood opens at ACMI on Thursday 12 November 2009 and exhibits until Sunday 7 February 2010. Dennis Hopper will be in Melbourne for the official opening of the exhibition.

Art & Copy

Art & Copy

Art & Copy, the new documentary directed by Doug Pray (Surfwise, Scratch, HYPE!), gives ‘behind the scenes’ access to the advertising industry, and interviews with some of its key players, including: George Lois, Mary Wells, Dan Wieden, Lee Clow, Hal Riney.

“When I began making ART & COPY back in 2005, it seemed like a significant departure from my previous documentaries. Instead of dark clubs, back alleys and truck stops, I was now filming in light-filled, architecturally breathtaking West Coast ad agencies and pristine New York City penthouses. Instead of underground artists and angry independents, I was interviewing people who were worth millions and were pioneers of an industry that literally defines mainstream culture. Now that the movie is finished, I see more similarities than differences. My subjects in ART & COPY, though dressed in finer clothes and a few decades older, have actually exhibited a rebellious voice not unlike the graffiti writers or screaming rock singers I’ve shot in the past, even though they’re working from deep within the system. They still regard themselves as underdogs. They think they are misunderstood by society. They’re all fiercely independent mavericks. But mostly, they too have a personal message—one that transcends the commercial messages they create—that seemingly has to get out. Like my other films, this ad film is about the innate human urge to express oneself creatively” – Doug Pray

For more information on Art & Copy, click here.

ACMI: Marc Jacobs on Film

ACMI: Marc Jacobs on Film

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Marc Jacobs on Film

“Celebrating 25 years in the fashion industry, the designer who brought grunge to the catwalk continues to surprise and inspire with his unique take on downtown chic. Presented as part of the Melbourne Spring Fashion Week. Curated by James Nolen” – ACMI

Saturday 29 August – Sunday 6 September 2009
Full $13 Concession $10
3 Session Package: Full $30 Concession $24
NB > 3 Session Packages can only be purchased by phone (03 8663 2583) or in person at the ACMI Box Office. All sessions must be selected at time of booking.

Book online here.

Civilization by Marco Brambilla

Civilization by Marco Brambilla


Civilization by Marco Brambilla from CRUSH on Vimeo.

This video installation was created by artist/director Marco Brambilla with production team Crush for the elevators at the Standard Hotel in New York. The work displays scenes of heaven to hell when the passengers go down, and scenes that lead from hell to heaven when the elevator goes up. Look out for the small Michael Jackson.

You can find pictures of the installation plus an interview with Brambilla and Crush at: glossyinc.com/civilization.html

via

WATCHMEN – the Journey from Print to Screen

© DC Comics

Absolute Watchmen © DC Comics

Kate McCurdy

Absolute Watchmen is just that: complete, definitive, absolute.
The oversized hardcover edition of this ground-breaking graphic novel is considered to be a prized item to any collector of comics and graphic novels, as well as those of good literature.
The 1986 comic, Watchmen, was classed by Time magazine among its ’100 best English-language novels from 1923 to present’. It also won the Hugo Award as well as other prestigious titles. Absolute Watchmen is a collection which features digitally remastered line art and brand new colouring – overseen by original artist Dave Gibbons and colourist John Higgins – as well as 48 pages of supplemental material that has been out of print for nearly two decades. These incorporated pages include a sampling of Alan Moore’s script pages and the original series proposal, as well as a multitude of Gibbons’ initial character designs, cover sketches and promotional pieces.

The timeless aspect of this piece of landmark literature has been recently rediscovered with the release of the film adaptation Watchmen, over 20 years after the series began. Directed by Zack Snyder (300), the film’s crew includes Director of Photography Larry Fong (300), Production Designer Alex McDowell (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Fight Club, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), Editor William Hoy (I, Robot, Fantastic Four, 300), Costume Designer Michael Wilkinson (Babel, 300) and Visual Effects Supervisor John ‘DJ’ DesJardin (Fantastic Four, X-Men: The Last Stand, The Kingdom).
The crew applied themselves to the seemingly overwhelming task of adapting Watchmen – previously deemed to be ‘virtually unfilmable’ by those in the industry – for the screen.

The appeal of ‘the unfilmable’
Watchmen is an intricately complex, postmodern mystery adventure in which the narrative is conveyed in many layers. The tale follows a number of costumed superheroes embedded within the fabric of everyday society, albeit an alternate 1985 society in which the Cold War escalates under the presidency of Richard M Nixon. The narrative drives towards armageddon, charted by the Doomsday Clock which measures the tension between the US and the Soviet Union, upon which midnight signals nuclear war. The events unfold as the hands of the clock move closer to midnight.
The postmodern aspect of Watchmen lies in the subversion and deconstruction of the concept of superheroes. Under their masks and costumes these characters are shown to be more human than perhaps any characters who belong to this genre.
Watchmen is more complex in that it doesn’t just create an archetypal character; it goes through all the variations of why you would put a costume on, why you would want to fight crime,’ artist Dave Gibbons states. ‘Are you slightly mad? Are you altruistic? And what would happen if you did get super powers and you couldn’t care less?’

Gibbons, co-creator and artist of the original graphic novel, recalls the impact of the novel’s themes at the time, and how they still resonate today with the film’s release.
‘In the ’80s, there was a lot of paranoia about the Cold War – was it going to escalate and what would happen if it did – and how fragile our society was, how very little would have to be done to completely wipe out everything that we had,’ he says. ‘That was very real to me. And though it has receded a bit, there are new fears of mass destruction, so I think that paranoia is always going to be  there.’
‘People always said Watchmen was the unfilmable graphic novel,’ adds Zack Snyder, director of the film.  ‘The story itself is a pretty straightforward mystery, but inside of that, there’s this huge plot that has international intrigue and a super-villain and everything you want from a superhero story. There is a tonal quality to every bit of it, from the interaction of the characters to the design structure, whether it be a flashback or a flash forward, or a parallel story being told. It’s at once very traditional and also unusual in the way that it’s structured. It doesn’t owe anything to any specific genre; it’s just its own, true to itself and all of its characters.’

Recreating the Watchmen world
Filmmaker Zack Snyder was intent on keeping Watchmen as close to the original source as possible, when recreating it for the big screen.
‘Changing the time period, or emphasising any of the characters over the others, would never serve the story that’s told in the graphic novel, which has always been more than the sum of its parts,’ says his producing partner, Deborah Snyder. ‘For Zack, the key for doing this massive project was to always stay true to the graphic novel.’
Zack Snyder storyboarded the entire film, using the graphic novel, which became an important reference for the team, especially Production Designer Alex McDowell.
Unlike 300, Snyder’s previous big-budget feature where the visual landscape was created almost entirely on a computer, for Watchmen the filmmaker wanted the characters to exist in a more textured, ‘real’ world.
‘With Watchmen, the sets are so intimate,’ he notes. ‘As we started to build New York City, we realised these characters are going to be walking down these streets. You might as well build the whole thing. So, we ended up having something like 200 sets in the movie.’
Not limited to urban settings such as New York City, there is a large amount of action that takes place in less familiar environments, such as Antarctica and even another planet.
Watchmen is this gritty, real story, but yet a quarter of the film takes place on Mars,’ Snyder continues. ‘And other scenes take place in Antarctica, at a retreat built by a millionaire ex-superhero. So there are operatic aspects to it as well. I’m naturally interested in those big thematic visions of reality. That’s not to say Rorschach doesn’t walk down a seedy 42nd Street world, but at the same time, there is this giant glass palace that’s built on Mars. There are flying machines, huge blimps hanging over the New York skyline, and other things that we were able to layer in. I think that that’s part of the strength of this visual approach.’

Dr Manhattan’s glass palace on Mars would prove almost impossible to build and became one of the film’s all-digital sets. Alex McDowell explains that the design of the palace taps into the clock symbolism of the novel and film.
‘The design is a combination of quantum physics and a clock,’ comments McDowell. ‘There are layers and layers of references to clocks and watches in Watchmen – the ticking clock of the nuclear countdown, the watch Osterman wears and then leaves behind, setting off the chain of events that leads to the creation of Dr Manhattan. So, there’s some idea that the Glass Palace is an elaborate clock mechanism that he creates in reference to his father.’
In planning to build the many sets required to recreate the world of Watchmen, McDowell created a large schematic that incorporated images from the graphic novel, set designs, and other references to keep track of the multiple sets and characters and the timelines that define them. This schematic became a valuable tool for every member of the crew.
‘As we developed the language of the production, we used this as a way of feeding all the necessary beats back to all the departments, from set dressing, construction and costumes to the actors,’ he explains. ‘It was really a vital part of how we planned the film.’

Watchmen © DC Comics

Watchmen © DC Comics

Production and Set Design: building an alternate New York City
The filming took place in several locations around Vancouver, Canada and a number of sets were constructed on four stages at CMPP Studios (Canadian Motion Picture Park). Additionally, a new backlot was built from the ground up, in what was once a vast lumber yard outside the town, to accommodate for the construction of New York City. These included such Watchmen landmarks as the Gunga Diner, Rorschach’s alley, and The Comedian’s high-rise apartment.
‘In Watchmen, there are many subplots and threads layered within the imagery,’ observes McDowell. ‘It’s very very dense. As a production designer, one of the tasks it to set up an environment that the audience can enter and become completely immersed in, and then your work becomes part of the storytelling process.’
Each member of the production crew was given a binder of source materials which included extensive clippings and interviews with the creators, and the graphic novel itself, which was  referenced on a daily basis.

The task of building an entire city was made manageable due to the construction of three intersecting streets. The relatively-upscale Brownstone Street incorporated Dan Dreiberg’s apartment and also that of the first Nite Owl, Hollis Mason, while Blake Street housed The Comedian’s high-rise apartment building. Blake Street was eventually converted to Riot Street, where the Owl Ship lands during a scene depicting the Keene Riots. The central hub street, intersecting both Riot and Brownstone and representing the seedier part of town, was called Porno Street. An off-shoot, called Fight Alley, became the site of a major fight sequence between Dan and Laurie and the Knot Top gang.
Also built at an intersection on the backlot was the Newsstand, a key element from the graphic novel containing the overlapping stories presented in the Tales of the Black Freighter novel-within-a-novel chapters. Snyder shot those sequences specifically for a planned feature on the future DVD.
‘One of the things that was great about working with Zack,’ says McDowell, ‘is that he was as fanatically interested in finding the Easter eggs in the graphic novel and pulling them into the film. On some films, you make a decision that you’ve gone deep enough; let’s just shoot the thing. But Zack shares my same obsessive interest in the fine detail, so it was great fun to do.’
Other significant sets constructed for the film include President Nixon’s bunker at NORAD, which was inspired by the famous War Room featured in Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 film Dr Strangelove; the Gila Flats nuclear testing facility where Jon Osterman becomes Dr. Manhattan (actually Vancouver’s former Riverview Hospital); the Owl Chamber was created on a soundstage at CMPP, while the Saigon bar was situated within the New York environments.
The largest set on the soundstage was Adrian Veidt’s Antarctic retreat, Karnak, where the film’s climax unfolds. This set had multiple requirements, and the way it was constructed allowed it to be Veidt’s interior office if shot from one angle, and his exterior office if shot from another.

The Owl Ship
Nite Owl’s Owl Ship, also known as Archimedes or ‘Archie’ is a significant element of the graphic novel, and to recreate it lifesize Alex McDowell employed a team of artisans including sculptor and boat builder Jack Gavreaum.
‘Everyone, from sculptors and painters to set dressing and props, worked in this tiny little space,’ McDowell recalls. ‘But is proved to be one of the most satisfying sets in the movie for us. The idea with the Owl Ship is that form follows function, and everything is there because it has a purpose. In the Owl Chamber, we also incorporated dents and damage where we assumed he crashed while flight testing. It was very important for the audience to believe that this was a real craft, so it’s covered in scratches and scrapes.’

At the height of shooting, Dave Gibbons visited the set, an experience he found overwhelming.
‘I was just bowled over by the level of attention to detail,’ he attests. ‘Careful thought had been given to every little corner, even things I had stuck in the artwork that I hadn’t given a second thought to. When you draw something from your imagination, you have this misty impression of a picture that you then try to interpret. This was like seeing that misty picture crystallised into reality.’
Gibbons, who had previously seen only his Owl Ship on paper, had the rare experience of physically exploring his creation.
‘I looked at the model of the full-size Owl Ship, knocked on it, stood inside it, moved some of the controls,’ he marvels. ‘It was so fantastic for somebody who lives in their imagination a lot of the time to see these things actually become solid in the real world. It was one of the most exciting experiences I’ve had connected with comics.’

Worlds within worlds: on paper and screen
The cast was equally inspired by the world within a world they inhabited for a few months over a Vancouver winter. Jeffrey Dean Morgan who portrayed The Comedian asserts, ‘The details of it were just astonishing in their quality, right down to the smallest detail. I’ve never been a part of anything like this in my life. Every day I came onto the set and I was blown away by the scale of it, the work that so many people put into this thing. The novel literally came to life.’

One of the most subversive elements of the novel, which Alex McDowell sought to incorporate into the film, was ‘the twisting of the conventional primary palette of comic books into the secondary colours. It immediately made the Watchmen series into an incredibly striking package. People had not seen those colours in this medium before. Watchmen had fantastic graphic decisions throughout, from the smiley face cover onward, so that was the key for us.’
What would not work on film were the clean lines of a graphic novel.
‘To embed these characters in the real world, clean lines don’t translate,’ the production designer says. ‘But we found that it we took a grittier, more textured style, then added the strong secondary palette of the graphic novel to it, it became a way to find a common language of stylisation.’

Costumes for superheroes
The colour choices were also restricted by the graphic novel’s colour palette with regards to the costume design.
‘We used a lot of greens, purples, oranges and browns,’ recalls Costume Designer Michael Wilkinson, ‘the murky secondary colours that darken as the story progresses.’
The costumes for the key cast, like their environments, would need to be intimately designed, particularly their crime-fighting outfits. Wilkinson worked with the specialty costume company Quantum FX to create full body casts of all the major characters, upon which they then sculpted the details of each costume in clay.
‘We could then take these moulds and render them in foam latex so you get a stylised physique – wrinkle-free and with beautiful, sculpted details, while being flexible and breathable for the actors,’ he says.

Rorschach’s ‘face’
One of the more complicated characters, Rorschach, played by Jackie Earle Haley, conveys his emotion via a mark of shifting mirror image patterns of black and white, similar to the inkblot test from which the character gets his name.
Wilkinson, describes the evolution of Rorschach’s mask – or his ‘face’ as the character insists – as long and complex.
‘We developed a printing process onto a fantastic four-way Lycra that enabled us to create a rough, canvas-like texture but also had a stretchy quality, so we could achieve that smooth, egg-like silhouette. And then the digital effects team created these beautiful moving inkblots on top of the fabric. It was a great collaboration between costumes and visual effects.’
To achieve the effect of perpetually morphing images, the Lycra of the mask was embedded with motion capture markers. These markers covered all of the material, except for Haley’s eyes, and allowed the patterns to reflect the actor’s performance. The visual effects team under the supervision of John ‘DJ’ DesJardin, animated the transitions between the inkblot patterns at different speeds, according to what Snyder wanted for the given scene.
‘We tried to model his expressions after the ones Dave Gibbons drew for the graphic novel,’ DesJardin reveals. ‘The inkblots are not just black and white; the edges are grey and animated in a way that makes it look like the ink is coming out of the cloth and sinking back in again.’

Watchmen © DC Comics

Watchmen © DC Comics

The impossibility of Dr Manhattan
The embodiment of Dr Manhattan hinged primarly on the actor playing him, as this character is the only one in Watchmen to have physical superpowers. Manhattan also has an effect on his environment: a blue glow that emanates from his body, illuminating his surroundings.
‘When I read the graphic novel, Manhattan was the only element that made me think, “How do we do this?”‘ recalls Director of Photography Larry Fong. Together, DesJardin and Fong found a creative solution.
‘We ultimately made a suit that had all the tracking markers we needed for motion capture but also thousands of LEDs that put out this nice, diffuse, blue light,’ DesJardin explains. ‘Zack’s idea was that when Jon Osterman pulled himself back together, he made this ideal male form for him to embody. So, while keeping Billy’s face and remaining accurate to his performance, we created a CG character with a powerful, ultra-ripped, perfected body.’

Deborah Snyder states that everyone involved brought unparalleled passion and commitment to their work in bringing Watchmen to the screen.
Watchmen is not only significant to the comic book community; it has so much significance as a piece of literature. Our hope is that whoever sees the film discovers or rediscovers the graphic novel because there’s so much more than we can possibly get on the screen.’

For more information about Watchmen, the film, visit the
Paramount Pictures Australia website

ABSOLUTE WATCHMEN
Writer: Alan Moore
Artist: Dave Gibbons
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Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia – Gallery

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The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents an exciting new exhibition, Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Until mid April, this exhibition examines the great achievements in film design in a fascinating display of what goes on behind the scenes. The work of film production designers, art directors, set designers and film architects are displayed in detail, as the exhibition pays tribute to the artists behind seminal works of film from around the world.

Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia

The Trial (Orson Welles, 1962). Production design by Jean Mandaroux. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen.

The Trial (Orson Welles, 1962). Production designer Jean Mandaroux. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen.

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A behind the scenes look at international cinema is put on show in this fascinating exhibition celebrating production design, some of which is exclusive to Australian audiences. Kate McCurdy reports.

The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents an exciting new exhibition, Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Until mid April, this exhibition examines the great achievements in film design in a fascinating display of what goes on behind the scenes. The work of film production designers, art directors, set designers and film architects are displayed in detail, as the exhibition pays tribute to the artists behind seminal works of film from around the world.

A sense of place and space
Setting the Scene is focused on the sense of place and atmosphere of a film, and particularly the artists role in creating these spaces. ACMI’s Screen Gallery features more than 300 original sketches, storyboards and models from iconic films from international cinema, and is displayed in seven parts. These parts represent the different kinds of spaces in which the film’s world exists, namely Spaces of Power, Private Spaces, Labyrinth Spaces, Transit Spaces, Stage Spaces, Virtual Spaces and Location Spaces.

Dante Ferretti. The Name of the Rose (Jean-Jacques Annaud, 1986). Courtesy of Dante Ferretti

Dante Ferretti. The Name of the Rose (Jean-Jacques Annaud, 1986). Courtesy of Dante Ferretti

Setting the Scene is based on the German exhibition Moving Spaces: Production Design + Film originally produced by the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen, Berlin. ACMI has significantly expanded Moving Spaces with two new sections to represent the work of some of Australia’s internationally acclaimed production designers. The Virtual Spaces and Location Spaces sections of the exhibition have been added and include exhibits from Baz Luhrmann’s Australia (2008) and are exclusive to Australian audiences.

Over 80 films are represented across the exhibition featuring the work of more than 30 internationally acclaimed production designers, including Ken Adam, Anna Asp, Dante Ferretti, Frank Schroedter, Robert Heath and Alex McDowell. German production designer Erich Kettelhut is the most heavily represented in the exhibition, with work from nine of his films on display, including work from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927).

Australian production design
Seven of the Australian production designers and art directors, including Owen Patterson (Matrix trilogy and Speed Racer), Roger Ford (Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian), Chris Kennedy (The Proposition and forthcoming release The Road), Stephen Curtis (beDevil and Night Cries: A Rural Tragedy), Catherine Martin (Australia), Karen Murphy (Australia), George Liddle (Dark City) and Steven Jones-Evans (Ned Kelly).

Dir Andrew Adamson (right) and PD Roger Ford on set. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (Andrew Adamson, 2008). Production designer Roger Ford. © DISNEY/WALDEN. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA, NARNIA, and all book titles, characters and locales original thereto are trademarks and are used with permission.

Dir Andrew Adamson and PD Roger Ford on set. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (Andrew Adamson, 2008). Production designer Roger Ford. © DISNEY/WALDEN. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA, NARNIA, and all book titles, characters and locales original thereto are trademarks and are used with permission.

On set: Baz Luhrmann’s Australia
One of the major attractions of the exhibition is the exclusive display of the work from Baz Lurhmann’s Australia, by double Academy Award winning Australian production designer, Catherine Martin, and her team including Art Director Karen Murphy. This section has been curated by ACMI with Murphy, and features design concepts, sketches, models and research material as well as the living room set of the Faraway Downs homestead from the film.

Catherine Martin with the Australia Faraway Downs Homestead. Australia (Baz Luhrmann, 2008). Production designer Catherine Martin. Image credit: Douglas Kirkland.

Catherine Martin with the Australia Faraway Downs Homestead. Australia (Baz Luhrmann, 2008). Production designer Catherine Martin. Image credit: Douglas Kirkland.

Speaking at the opening of Setting the Scene, Murphy reflected on her experience working on Australia: ‘It’s incredibly rewarding working as an art director on a Baz Luhrmann film, because the art department is unique. The production designer, Catherine Martin, is responsible for the images that inform and amplify the story from the research stage through to the final days of post production. The truth is in the strength and layering of the early images you see here in the gallery, and they end up on the screen,’ she said.
‘I’ve loved being involved in this exhibition,’ she adds. ‘It’s a wonderful celebration of the contribution of the talented pool of artists, from set designers, model-makers, set dressers, digital 3D modelers and craftspeople brought together by the production designer to help create those final, rich and memorable worlds we experience in Australia and in all of the films featured here at ACMI.’

A number of interviews with selected Australian production designers have been produced in conjunction with the Australian Film, Television Radio School (AFTRS) in which the designers speak about their work. These interviews are screened in the Screen gallery as part of the exhibition.

From Moving Spaces to Setting the Scene
The original exhibition, Moving Spaces: Production Design + Film was first exhibited in Berlin in 2005 and has travelled to significant venues such as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles (2006) and the Hong Kong Film Archive (2007). Apart from the Australia section, the works in Setting the Scene are from the collection of the Deutsche Kinemathek, supplementing international loans from Cinémathèque Française, the Bibliotheque du Film and the Svenska Filminstitute archives among others, as well as material from the private collections of production designers.

The range of films displayed in the exhibition is signified by the title of ACMI’s exhibition: Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Some of the oldest films in the exhibition are significant examples of German cinema such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Robert Wiene, 1920) and Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927), while the most recent film is Australia (Luhrmann, 2008) and the forthcoming release of John Hillcoat’s The Road (2009).

Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927). Production designers Otto Hunte, Karl Vollbrecht, Erich Kettelhut. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen

Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927). Production designers Otto Hunte, Karl Vollbrecht, Erich Kettelhut. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen

International highlights
A highlight of the exhibition is the large-scale model of the ultra-modern house from Jacques Tati’s Mon Oncle (1958). This comedy won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1959, and one can experience the detail of the film’s set close up with this beautiful model, complete with the dachshund in the driveway.
Other films featured in the exhibition include three Stanley Kubrick films, Dr. Strangelove (1964), A Clockwork Orange (1971) and The Shining (1980); as well as The Apartment (1960), Cabaret (1972), Alien (1979), The Cat in the Hat (2003), Dogville (2003), The Bourne Supremacy (2004) and The Terminal (2004).

Dogville (Lars Von Trier, 2003). Production designer Peter Grant. Courtesy of Zentropa Entertainments3 ApS

Dogville (Lars Von Trier, 2003). Production designer Peter Grant. Courtesy of Zentropa Entertainments3 ApS

For more information about the exhibition, including the Setting the Scene poster competition, visit the ACMI website.

Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia
4 December 2008 – 19 April 2009
ACMI Screen Gallery
Australian Centre for the Moving Image
Federation Square, Melbourne
Admission fees apply

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