CLOUDS INTERACTIVE DOCUMENTARY

The creative practitioners featured in the documentary represent a new breed of interdisciplinary artists who combine software engineering, audiovisual design, and cultural engagement. CLOUDS explores the themes of creativity, aesthetics, simulation, and sharing articulated by these luminaries in the computational arts community.

Counter to the widespread perception of code as exclusively utilitarian, this generation of hacker-artists struggles to develop new forms of visual expression, expanding the vocabulary of technology to resonate at a deeper human level. In an increasingly data-driven culture, our subjects act as intermediaries who can help us to navigate and make sense of our evolving digital universe.

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FALLEN ASTRONAUT

“Fallen Astronaut” is a 3 inch tall aluminum sculpture of a human figure was left on the moon in 1971 by Apollo 15 astronauts. Created by Belgian artist Paul Van Hoeydonck, the sculpture is a memorial for astronauts and cosmonauts who have died in the pursuit of space exploration.


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FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA

About ten years ago I read Michael Schumacher's biography, "Francis Ford Coppola: A Filmmaker's Life". I so enjoyed the book that I read it a second time right after I finished it.

For me, Coppola is the greatest American artist working in film. While I have great admiration for the likes of Kubrick and contemporary artists like Paul Thomas Anderson, there's something special and unique about Coppola. Some friends sent a link to this short video clip and it sums up some of what makes him so amazing.

Eleanor Coppola came to San Francisco State University (Francis' brother August Coppola was the Dean of the School of the Arts) and spoke to the cinema department back when I was a student there in 1990 and she showed parts of her documentary "Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse". This is still the single greatest documentary on the art of filmmaking. It rivals the actual film.

I set out to make a documentary myself following an artist who was working in cinematic forms, using Eleanor Coppola's film as a model and ispiration. But the artist I was following never showed the passion, sensitivity, humanity or vunerability you see in Coppola which is what makes him so relateable as a subject. When analyzing these differences, I realized that I could never make an honest film without alienating the subject and the project was shelved.  

About once a year I go back and watch "Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse" as a way to connect back to my passion for filmmaking. This little clip is a great synopsis of the film and its overarching message.

VFX SHOW #153 - TOTAL RECALL (2012)

Mike SeymourJason Diamond and Matt Wallin discuss the visual effects in the 2012 version of Total Recall.

Listen to Mike Seymour’s in-depth fxpodcast with Dneg’s Head of Lighting & Rendering Philippe Leprince about the studio’s adoption of a new physically plausible lighting setup for Total Recall.

You can also read Ian Failes article on fxguide, Keeping it real: Total Recall.

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© Matt Wallin. All rights reserved.