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May 6, 2018

The best VR apps for gaming and more

Virtual reality isn’t all about gaming. Swim with turtles, paint in 3D, and immerse yourself in some of the most unique experiences the platform has to offer, with our curated list of the best VR apps.

The post The best VR apps for gaming and more appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

May 6, 2018

7 ways we’ll interact with computers in the future

Put down your mouse! Here are seven of the ways we’ll interact with computers in the decades to come. From voice control to brain interfaces, get ready to meet the future of interfaces.

The post 7 ways we’ll interact with computers in the future appeared first on Digital Trends.

Source: Digital Trends VR

May 6, 2018

Pierre Rissient, Warrior of Cinema and Advocate of Major Filmmakers Worldwide, Dies at 81

Pierre Rissient called me on Thursday, welcoming me to Paris and hoping I would see “Burning,” Korean director Lee Chang-dong’s latest film set to premiere in a week at the Cannes Film Festival. He was organizing local screenings and advising the filmmaker, much like this indefatigable warrior of cinema had done for over 50 years. Two days later, he died in a Paris hospital after suffering complications from a blood clot. He was 81.

Rissient had struggled from health problems for years, but continued advising on the movies he loved until the day of his death. That should come as no surprise to those who fell into his orbit, and there were many.

Rissient was dubbed “Mr. Everywhere” by longtime pal Clint Eastwood for good reason: The multi-tasker was a critic in the ’50s, then an assistant director on the set of Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” and joined forces with future filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier to handle international publicity on a range of films before making a few of them himself over the next decade. (His second feature, “Five and Skin,” played at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard sidebar, and the festival will screen a restored version of it at the 2018 edition.)

After that, Rissient entered a new stage of his career as an advocate. He was the first European figure to discover the work of Jane Campion and introduce it to Cannes, where she would eventually become the first (and so far only) woman to win the Palme d’Or. Rissient was beloved by many American filmmakers, including Alexander Payne, Quentin Tarantino, and Oliver Stone, though he was especially influential in championing Asian cinema. He was a major supporter of Hou Hsiao Hsien, widely considered the greatest living Taiwanese filmmaker, and also helped raise the awareness for directors such as Zhang Yimou and Hong Sang-soo. Though Rissient was reportedly disliked by some members of the Asian film industry for meddling in its affairs, he continued to be a treasured consultant for the Asian directors he supported.

Anyone with even a passing relationship to cinema felt the impact of Rissient’s work. Over the years, despite his work as a publicist, distributor, festival consultant and film producer, he lived as his own distinct brand, a fierce advocate of filmmakers who can take credit for putting many of them on the map.

Critic Todd McCarthy and Pierre Rissient at the Telluride Film Festival

In addition to serving as an artistic advisor to Cannes, Rissient was a fixture on the international festival circuit, often introducing restorations of classic films. He was treasured figure at the Telluride Film Festival, which named a theater after him — The Pierre — where an outline of his bald, bulky frame adorns the walls. Rissient lived as much for celebrating classic cinema as contemporary filmmakers, and often positioned his favorite new discoveries in the context of a broader historical timeline.

Rissient was a charming raconteur who exuded stories at every waking moment, so it came as no surprise when he became the subject of documentaries about his life. Critic Todd McCarthy’s 2007 “Pierre Rissient: Man of Cinema” gathers many of the major filmmakers Rissient celebrated together to talk about his impact, while the 2016 documentary “Pierre Rissient: Gentleman Critic,” co-directed by Benoit Jacquot, Pascal Merigeau, and Guy Seligmann takes a simpler approach: a static camera in a Paris apartment, as he shares countless stories about films and filmmakers. Both movies played at Cannes, and in them he shares his ethos. “We must champion the smaller films,” he says in “Gentleman Critic,” while in McCarthy’s film, he elaborates: “It’s not enough to like a film,” he says, “You must like it for the right reasons.”

This sort of dogged commitment to his sensibilities was especially resonant in an age of aggregation and open-ended questions about the future of the movies. As a young moviegoer exploring the frontlines of film culture on the festival circuit, Rissient was one of the few figures from an earlier era of cinephilia to welcome me into his orbit, as he did for countless others across the decades. (The image at the top of this article is from a meeting that I took with Rissient and IndieWire co-founder Eugene Hernandez in Paris in 2017.) He became a regular visitor to the Critics Academy, the workshop for aspiring writers I ran for several years in Locarno and New York with the Film Society of Lincoln Center, extolling the virtues of French magazine Cahiers du Cinema in the ‘50s and ‘60s as well as the many filmmakers he discovered over the years. He was always committed to sharing honest perspectives with filmmakers on their new films even when it upset them.

“What makes cinema is the eye of the director, beyond the script, beyond the acting,” Rissient said at the Locarno Critics Academy in 2013. “Like Mozart was born a musician, there are people who are born directors.” He said that seeing Akiro Kurosawa’s narrative-shifting “Rashomon” at the age of 15 first made him excited about the possibilities of the medium. “Cinema, of course,” he said, “is an art by itself.”

He mounted startling intellectual arguments for the works of Howard Hawks, Fritz Lang, and Otto Preminger, though he was less a fan of Alfred Hitchcock. “He is not a pure director,” Rissient said at the Critics Academy. “He was a great showman.”

Amazon Studios’ Scott Foundas, IndieWire’s Eric Kohn, and Pierre Rissient at the Lumiere Festival in 2017

Though he had trouble walking in recent years, Rissient would often hobble or wheel his way around festival parties over the past decade to ensure that audiences were seeing some of the classic films on display. At last fall’s Telluride, he was adamant that festival crowds see “Kean, or the Disorder of Genius,” a 1924 silent film adapted from the Alexander Dumas play.

“It’s such a shock,” Cannes artistic director Thierry Fremaux, who also runs the Lumiere Festival in Lyon where Rissient was a regular, wrote me. “Pierre was such a friend for so many people he helped. He loved talented directors and his taste was perfect. (‘Almost perfect!’, he would have said.) He has been helpful for a lot of people, not only from cinema, as he was interested in youth. He has been so important for me when I started, for the Lumiere Festival when we created it.” With Tavernier, Fremaux added, Rissient “invented the job of the auteur film press agent in the sixties,” noting that their clients included John Ford and Howard Hawks.

“Burning”

Fremaux acknowledged that Rissient had been advising Cannes on the decision to screen Lee Chang-dong’s Haruki Murakami adaptation “Burning” in competition, and had also pushed for the inclusion of Chinese director Bi Gan’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” which is set to become one of this year’s big discoveries — a technologically-complex production partly shot with 3D cameras and drones in a unique context, it premieres in Un Certain Regard, where Rissient’s own film once screened. As for that production, Fremaux said that the Cannes Classics screening of “Five and Skin” will be “the best memorial we could expect for him. All his friends will be around, the world of cinema he loved so much.”

Rissient is survived by his wife, Yung Hee, as well as a sister and her son, though many filmmakers and cinephiles considered him extended family. He had been attempting to hire an American publicist for “Burning” up until the moment he went to the hospital on Friday — when, according to his assistant Benjamin Illos, “He was the usual Pierre until the last moment,” answering requests about Cannes films and hoping to make sure “Burning” received the support he believed it deserved at the festival.

Above all else, Rissient’s support of current cinema goes beyond the narrow confines of movie-worship; he was a cultural activist who forced an industry to accommodate his standards for the art form, and cinema will forever owe him a debt.

A week before his death, Rissient circulated an email sharing his thoughts on “Burning,” with a typical blend of analysis and historical context. It is published below.

Destinies of “Burning,” by Pierre Rissient

How time flies.

It was more than 20 years ago when, in Kuala Lumpur, almost by accident, I saw U-Wei bin Haji Saari’s “Kaki Bakar.” An adaptation of William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning,” rooted in Malaysian culture, entirely unexpected. The film was screened with success in Un Certain Regard, and then went on to Telluride, New Directors/New Films, Busan and quite a few other festivals.

The film ends very emotively with a long, backwards tracking shot which shows the child moving forward. We, the viewers, rediscover our innocence.  Innocence itself.

A while back, Lee Chang Dong mentioned to me that he’d like to adapt a short story by Murakami Haruki, itself based on “Barn Burning.”  I reacted with skepticism.

But from the opening shot, a sinuous reverse track, and from the opening sounds, we are plunged into the teeming life of a busy working-class district, at once close and distanced. Every moment will reveal something unexpected.

The beautifully titled “Bend of the River” is for sure more an intimate epic than a simple western. It works in much the same way as Burning. Is there anything more cherishable in a film than the moment when it breaks away from what its author seems to have intended and begins to have a life of its own, with its own impulses?

Lee Chang-dong belongs to the rare breed of humanist directors, although his work is never burdened with “messages.” Also, to my surprise, I find myself dreaming that “Burning” prefigures the reunification of Korea, restoring at long last its ancestral culture. Maybe this was the hidden ambition of directors Shin Sang-ok and Im Kwon-taek yesterday, as it might be of Lee Chang-Dong today.

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Source: IndieWire film

May 6, 2018

This Is What Happens When You Put a 140-Year-Old Lens on a 5K RED Scarlet-W


The stunning beauty of combining high-tech imaging with vintage optics…


Every time the Weird Lens Maestro, Mathieu Stern, tinkers around with weird lenses, we’re always impressed by the beautiful images he manages to capture. This time, though, he has taken his experimentation and our eyebrows to another level with his latest test. In this video, Stern takes a 140-year-old lens, which is 10 years older than the Eiffel Tower, and mounts it onto a RED Scarlet-W with a DRAGON 5K brain. What resulted were some test shots that totally knocked our socks off, and we’re fairly certain that, after watching it, you’re going to be sockless, too. Check out the video below:





Beautiful! Stern tested a few different aspects of the lens/camera combo, including the lens’ macro ability, it’s stunning, soft bokeh, and its low-light capabilities, as well. Here’s what Stern had to say about the test:

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Source: NoFilmSchool

May 6, 2018

Lav Like a Pro: Here Are a Few Basic Tips for Using a Lavalier Mic


Lav mics are a great tool for recording decent dialogue. Here’s how to use them.


Lavalier microphones, or “lavs” as the cool kids call them, are an essential piece of sound equipment in filmmaking. When booms would be distracting or visible in the shot, lavs not only let you get a mic nice and close to your subject’s mouth but they also allow your subject to go pretty much anywhere they want without requiring a boom operator to follow closely behind.



So, how do you use these things? This video from Creative North shares a handful of helpful tips on how to mount and hide lavs, as well as how to cut down on noise when your subject moves around. Check it out below.





There are several obstacles that can make mic-ing your subject with a lav a little tricky, but here are some tips that might help you out:

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Source: NoFilmSchool

May 5, 2018

Diablo Cody Has One ‘Juno’ Regret: ‘I Wasn’t Clear Enough Why She Chose to Not Have an Abortion’

This year marks the 10 year anniversary of Diablo Cody winning the best original screenplay for “Juno,” but there is one thing she would change about her breakout script if she had the chance. Speaking to The Guardian in promotion of her latest project “Tully,” which reunites Cody with “Juno” director Jason Reitman, the screenwriter admitted she could’ve been more overt and specific about the titular character’s stance on abortion.

“[I wouldn’t have changed anything] in terms of the pregnancy, no,” Cody said. “But I don’t feel I was clear enough in terms of why Juno chose to not have an abortion. It was simply because she did not want to. It was not about any type of feeling that abortion was wrong – I’m pro-choice. So for it to be interpreted as an anti-choice movie, that’s upsetting to me.”

“Juno” received critical and commercial success, plus four Oscar nominations, but it did find itself in the middle of the abortion debate between pro-life and pro-choice advocates. Cody said the anti-choice backlash to “Juno” became so loud and unavoidable that it somewhat affected her career and led to her decision to become “more private.”

“It hasn’t affected my writing,” she said. “But it’s certainly affected the way that I talk to people about the projects. I’ve become very boring because I want to protect myself and my children. I would like to just keep a low profile and continue to work, and I’ve had to really stay under the radar in order to accomplish that.”

The Cody-scripted “Tully” is now playing theaters courtesy of Focus Features. Head over to The Guardian to read Cody’s profile in its entirety.

Source: IndieWire film

May 5, 2018

Bill Murray Channeled His Inner ‘Caddyshack’ to Help Couple Reveal the Gender of the Their Baby — Watch

Expecting parents are coming up with inventive ways to reveal the gender of their baby, but no baby gender reveal can top one that involves Bill Murray. The comedian helped Florida couple Jacqueline and Michael Davis reveal the gender of their child  during the Murray Bros. Caddyshack Golf Tournament in St. Augustine on April 26. Video of the gender reveal has debuted online and is going viral.

Murray had the main role in the Davis’ reveal. The actor hit a golfball that exploded into blue or pink glitter depending on the baby’s gender. Murray drove the ball and it exploded into blue power. Friends and family watching the reveal quickly shouted, “It’s a boy!” The couple did not know Murray would be involved in the gender reveal until they saw him standing with the golf club.

“He said it was his first gender reveal,” Jacqueline said about Murray. “I was very happy, very excited. We’re going to frame the driver.”

Watch Murray participate in the gender reveal below.



Source: IndieWire film

May 5, 2018

3 Ways to Capture Audio in a Long Shot Without Your Boom Making a Cameo


I don’t care whose kid that boom mic is! They’re not getting in the picture.


Despite having a cool name like Fonzie, boom mics are not as cool and confident as the ol’ greaser. They’re shy and timid and don’t like to be on camera (at least not in a way that is detectable before you’re in post). Luckily, booms are pretty easy to hide just beyond the frame most of the time, but what if you want to record dialogue during a wide shot? What the hell do you do then? Unless you’re prepared to dress your boom operator up as a human-shaped bush, you’ll want to learn some clever tricks for getting that boom mic out of the shot, and the team over at The Film Look has a few really good ones on deck in the video below:





When it comes to mic-ing your subject for dialogue, the name of the game is “get as close as possible without being in the frame.” That’s pretty easy most of the time if you’re shooting tight shots, but if you’re shooting a wide, that’s when it gets a little hairy.

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Source: NoFilmSchool

May 5, 2018

Watch: How to Gussy Up Grainy Footage in Adobe After Effects


Is your footage grainy and not in a cool 1960s vintage hipster kind of way? There’s a way to reduce it in post.


So, you’ve got some grainy footage on your hands, huh? We’ve all been there. Whether we didn’t (or couldn’t) use enough lighting during our shoot or cranked our ISO a little too high, the fact of the matter is once it’s shot, it’s shot. Unless you’re lucky enough to score a reshoot, you’re going to have to figure out a way to reduce the noise in your footage, otherwise, you’ve got a big, muddy bowl of slop on your hands.



In this tutorial, Shutterstock’s Robbie Janney shows you how to significantly improve your grainy footage in seconds using Adobe’s video tools in After Effects. Check it out below:





If you’re familiar with working with grainy footage in After Effects, chances are you’ve used the Remove Grain tool before. It’s super fast and relatively easy. It works by sampling and then analyzing the grain to effectively remove it from the rest of the footage.

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Source: NoFilmSchool

May 4, 2018

Watch: BTS with the Skeleton Crew of David Lowery’s ‘A Ghost Story’


A new video shows intimate moments from the set of David Lowery’s ‘A Ghost Story.’


When we spoke to David Lowery about his transcendent A Ghost Story last summer, the director told us that he almost quit halfway through. “There was a point in production where I lost all my confidence,” he said, “and I thought it was too high-concept to succeed.”



Lowery’s primary concern was the viability of the ghost costume on camera. “To make [the ghost] costume work in three dimensions was a feat of mechanical engineering,” he said. “I was consistently sick to my stomach thinking that it would not work. In my mind, it worked beautifully, but on set and in all practical senses, it was very much a work in progress for the first week or two of shooting. We were constantly refining the costume and the way in which we had to photograph the costume, and the way in which Casey [Affleck] had to act while wearing it.”



But the crew convinced Lowery to stick with it. They were a particularly supportive bunch—after all, the skeleton crew was comprised of Lowery’s friends.

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Source: NoFilmSchool