Archive for February, 2008

Jesse Metcalfe Punched Outside L.A. Club

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Jesse MetcalfeMore details are streaming in after Desperate Housewives actor Jesse Metcalfe was punched outside a Los Angeles club Thursday night.

The video, posted on TMZ.com, shows Metcalfe getting into an argument with a man outside Boulevard3. The situation quickly escalated, with the man punching Metcalfe in the face, knocking him to the ground.

A source says the puncher in the video is Mams Taylor, the boyfriend of actress Taryn Manning. According to another source, Metcalfe told friends that he was jumped because he had been talking to Manning that night. (No immediate word from Manning’s boyfriend on the scuffle.)

All told, it was a busy night of clubbing for Metcalfe, who also was spotted at nearby hot spots Villa (hanging with a few friends and drinking cocktails) and GOA (where an eyewitness saw him flirting with a waitress).

Metcalfe checked into rehab for “alcohol issues” last March.


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Adidas: Adi Dassler

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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This microsite tells the story of Adi Dassler, the man behind Adidas. It’s a tenderly crafted project full of texture and warmth that builds a kind of branding mythology around Adidas. Works for me.

HINT: After the intro, click Watch the Film in the lower-left to…well… to watch the film.

The animation was directed by Stink’s Martin Krejci, and the site was built by 180 Amsterdam Digital.

Thanks to Lyall Coburn for the tip!

   Post from: Motionographer

Open call for SOS 4.8 International Event On Sustainability Art

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Open call for SOS 4.8 International Event On Sustainability Art

   Post from: Motionographer

IKEA Catalogue 2.0

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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This new interactive video/catalogue for IKEA is simply brilliant. From a purely cinematographic perspective, the quick-cut intro sequences followed by ultra slow-motion shots convey the message of relaxation and escape. The added element of interactivity makes the experience novel and, to use a horrible web marketing term, “sticky.”

The voyeuristic thrill of switching angles on the lives of ordinary people is a clever seduction into what essentially amounts to a product catalogue. But now the catalogue is given context and meaning—there’s even the suggestion of a narrative arc. Brilliant.

I believe the site was built by Forsman & Bodenfors.

Tip: DeK. Source: Movingweb.

   Post from: Motionographer

Christian Cenizal: Code + Motion

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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Codelovers will enjoy spinning through Christian Cenizal’s site. In addition to weaving binary threads for Motion Theory, Christian has some very nice tutorials for pulling off sophisticated tricks in Flash with ActionScript 3. And like a good netizen, he includes source files whenever he can.

   Post from: Motionographer

Trembled Blossoms

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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Starring a denuded Eve-like figure, Trembled Blossoms is another attempt for a high-end fashion company to capture the power of moving pixels. I’m not sure how I feel about this one, though.

James Jean did a nice job with the design, and Jared Purrington’s watercolors are beautiful. But something about the finished product is a little… eerie? I don’t know. Maybe that’s what Prada is using to sell handbags these days.

The hummingbird sequence is strongly reminiscent of Psyop’s “Motley Bird” spot. After that, we’re taken into a land that’s one part Matthew Barney and one part Alice in Wonderland.

Complete credits can be found at the end of the film, but I’ll point out here that is was directed by James Lima with animation from Sight Effects.

Thanks to Louis-Étienne Vallée for the tip, who spotted it over at James Jean’s blog. Thanks also to Cintia Miura.

   Post from: Motionographer

Strike, days 94 and 95; Production, day 3

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Our final day of shooting consisted mostly of chasing actors with cameras, my brief homage to Point Break. We also had our first and only company move — just two blocks, to a tiny medical clinic in Eagle Rock. One by one, we wrapped our actors, until we were left with just one regular and one guest star.1

At lunch, I gave my sincere thanks to a crew I really enjoyed working with. I’d long taken it as a given that production is stressful, but this honestly wasn’t. Yes, we had a bit of padding in the schedule, but we weren’t dawdling. It felt most like shooting Part Two of The Nines: a small, nimble crew and the freedom of constrained expectations.

Now we move on to editing. We’re cutting on Avid, but I’ve been using Final Cut Pro to check out footage as well. So far, I’m a fan of the P2. If we were shooting multiple episodes, we would need to find a slicker workflow, but our dumping-to-MacBook worked fine for this.

I’d hoped to make it to the picketing at NBC yesterday, but the cold I’d been medicating for the past few days took over. In the age of the internet, being sick doesn’t keep you from working, but it makes it hard to muster enthusiasm for much. I’m alternating DayQuil and Diet Coke in hopes of attending the WGA meeting tomorrow night, but that’s on the bubble.

Talking with writers last night, there was widespread belief that the end of the strike is approaching. And yet it doesn’t feel like the end — or more specifically, it doesn’t feel like what an end is supposed to feel like. There’s a profound lack of closure. Bob Fisher will shave his strike beard. I’ll have beer with my Van Ness crew. But you can’t throw a parade when there’s so much work to be done.

It’s going to be brutal trying to get the town started up, figuring out which movies are still happening, which TV shows are going to try to finish their seasons. You know when there’s a big evacuation — fire, hurricane — and the residents are finally allowed back to their houses? It will be like that. The first few days will be just about finding out what’s still standing.

I have six features in various stages of production and development, all of which will need tending in the first few days after we get back to work. Three months is a long break. I haven’t read a word in these scripts, or jotted a single note. I’ve forgotten half the phone numbers I used to be able to blind-dial. So going from stand-still to sprint is likely be rough.


  1. I realize how weird it sounds to call an actor in a short a “guest star.” The point is that if this were a series, he wouldn’t likely be in future episodes.

RTN to Launch in Champaign/Springfield/Decatur, IL

Friday, February 8th, 2008
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Feb. 8, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- Retro Television Network (RTN), which is nationally owned and distributed by Equity Media Holdings Corporation (Nasdaq:EMDA), announced today that it will partner with GOCOM Media of Illinois to bring RTN programming to Champaign/Springfield/Decatur, IL. The network will launch early next year on one of the digital streams of WRSP/WBUI.

Interesting way to include a shot list concurrently with a reel… maybe this idea has legs?

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Interesting way to include a shot list concurrently with a reel… maybe this idea has legs?

   Post from: Motionographer

Charles Dutton Performs At Ensemble's 'Heart of the Theatre' Celebration At Wortham Center

Friday, February 8th, 2008
HOUSTON, Feb. 8, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- The Ensemble Theatre recently held its "8th Annual Heart of the Theatre" celebration at the Wortham Center for their loyal subscribers. The Board of Directors and staff of The Ensemble hosted subscribers, along with students from Kashmere, Smiley and Forest Brook High Schools, to a wonderful evening with veteran actor, director and Emmy award winner Charles Dutton's performance of "From Jail to Yale". Dutton performed his energetic one-man show, a personal narrative combined with excerpts from prolific playwright August Wilson who impacted his life.