PressPausePlay
The digital revolution of the last decade has unleashed creativity and talent in an unprecedented way, with unlimited opportunities. But does democratized culture mean better art or is true talent instead drowned out? This is the question addressed by PressPausePlay, a documentary film containing interviews with some of the world’s most influential creators of the digital era.
Trailer
Movie
http://www.Presspauseplay.com/
Jeff Harris: 4,748 Self-Portraits and Counting
Taken from http://lightbox.time.com/2012/01/03/jeff-harris-self-portraits/
In an effort to record the year of his life leading up to the millennium, Jeff Harris began a project in which he used his trusty Olympic Stylus 35mm film camera (he’s since gone through six) to take a self-portrait each day and then posted the results on his website. The project, which began long before the widespread popularity of blogging, Facebook and Flickr, allowed viewers to follow one photographer along on his adventures. “I didn’t want 365 images of me sitting on the couch each day,” says Harris. “There could have been that tendency, especially during the cold dark winter months to stay inside all the time, but this project inspired me to get out there and seek out interesting things.” This year, Harris embarks on year fourteen of what has turned out to be an epic, inspired and ever-evolving art project that documents a life well lived.
The images range from completely solitary, auto-timed self-portraits to photographs inspired by a collaborative spirit with whomever Harris encounters on a given day. Regardless of the mood, location or activity at the center of any given image in the series, they all show a marvelously open and generous approach to both diaristically recording and sharing everything from intimate moments to athletic adventures with a wider audience. In fact, Harris evokes the full range of physical experiences a body can encounter: from mundane inactivity to joyful dives to his body being open on the operating table.
“I see no reason to not make a self-portrait each day,” the photographer says. “I’m always around and always free. It’s kind of like going to the gym—it flexes your muscles and keeps you in shape.”
Jeff Harris’s work was recently included in Auto Focus: The Self-Portrait in Contemporary Photography by Susan Bright published by Thames and Hudson.
Visit jeffharris.org to see the project in its entirety. Harris also has an interactive Journal that allows readers to submit writing about a day from their life. Their stories are juxtaposed with his self portrait from that same day.
Power Plant Christmas Light Show
I shot a video promo of Image Engineering‘s amazing Power Plant light show at the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland. 43 consecutive days, 149 shows, 550 lbs of pyrotechnics, 3 projection booths full of the latest laser and video gear, and over 40,000 inspired observers. Here are also some still images from the footage.
Chase Takes a Few Calls
One night, my son Chase decided to excuse himself from a family gathering to make a few “important business calls”. Bye.
Merry Christmas from MDFilms
Merry Christmas from MDfilms from MDfilms.net on Vimeo.
Merry Christmas, everyone!
Albert Uster Imports
Earlier this week I linked up with Talking Tree Creative and their new client Albert Uster Imports to shoot close up video of various baked goods and products for Uster’s new and delicious product line.
Above and below are screen captures of various shots from the shoot. I will not be editing the full piece, but I look forward to see how my footage will be used to the final project.
Anakin – Abort.Retry.Fail
Here is an editing project I did for Eudora, Kansas based band, Anakin, and their latest music video, Abort.Retry.Fail, a song off their debut album Random Accessed Memories.
“Inside the pod the sound is fading. Robot, you are. Your search is over. I touch, I speak, I think I’m human. Regain control. Begin erasing. You and I alone; we’ll speak the truth to no one. Realize you’re on your own. I swear to you it’s over. The sound is make believe. Complete the understanding. Your voice is very clear. Distort the words I’m saying. I need the truth. You can’t keep lying. Depart, retract, revise to see through. You were programmed to make me love you, but I’ve evolved and you’re outdated. You and I alone; we’ll speak the truth to no one. Realize you’re on your own. I swear to you it’s over. The sound is make believe. Complete the understanding. Your voice is very clear. Distort the words I’m saying. You will die alone. You and I alone.”
New Music Videos
Official visuals for Karen O, Trent Reznor, and Atticus Ross‘ cover of Led Zeppelin‘s “Immigrant Song,” from David Fincher’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.”
Flight Facilities second single Featuring vocals from Jess Higgs.
Available now on iTunes, Beatport and Juno Download.
flightfacilities.com
12/24/11: O Night Divine
Sometimes I need a reminder of what this time of the year is all about.
Los Angeles based director Eliot Rausch has done just that with his new and compelling short, O Night Divine, that follows a young pregnant couple rushing to find a place where the woman can have her baby, as three men continually gaze into the night’s sky to lead them to their destination.
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (Trailer)
Here is the trailer for Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock’s upcoming Oscar baiting film.
Based on the acclaimed novel of the same name, “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close” tells the story of one young boy’s journey from heartbreaking loss to the healing power of self-discovery, set against the backdrop of the tragicevents of September 11. Eleven-year-old Oskar Schell is an exceptional child: amateur inventor, Francophile, pacifist. And after finding a mysterious key that belonged to his father, who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11, he embarks on an exceptional journey–an urgent, secret search through the five boroughs of New York. As Oskar roams the city, he encounters a motley assortment of humanity, who are all survivors in their own ways. Ultimately, Oskar’s journey ends where it began, but with the solace of that most human experience: love.









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