"INTO THE COSMOS" is ChopsyAnimations (chopsyanimation.com) first foray into the world of music videos, a tie-in with music maker Architeq from Tirk Records.
Originally it was conceived as a short film by Chopsy (director Darren Robbie), with a simple premise: "what happens to all the old vinyl people used to play? From out of attics, rubbish bins & forgotten shelving, the records are summoned to an old warehouse by a mysterious 'collector'."
Using a combination of stop-frame, pixellation, live-action & time lapse animation, it was shot in a variety of locations around Bristol & was created by shooting entirely in camera whenever possible (at other times multiple passes were combined). By shooting each frame within a specific timescale for the external shots, we see vinyl records interacting with the ever changing natural light & weather (dry or wet, sunny or cloudy) -- if you look closely you can even see puddles drying out in a couple of shots.
The short film was created on & off over a period of 7 months by a bunch of friends between paid work, a real labour of love (it had no budget to speak of). It was shot in late winter earlier this year with the spring & summer being used to do all the post (mainly rig removal). All the records you see were cut before shooting, with new centre labels stuck onto them to create the desired visual effect of them spinning & bouncing through the ground, they were then animated on location using weighted rigs.
Architeq added the music & sound effects after filming finished & the first edit was completed. Rigs were removed, different passes combined & shadows cleaned up in AfterEffects. Motion capture on location was achieved by using Dragon software on a laptop, which was in turn powered by a portable caravan battery. Cameras used were the Canon Eos 5 & 7.
Credit list:
Director: Chopsy
Producer: Kev Harwood
DOP: Toby Howell
Animators: Darren Robbie, Inez Woldman (additional help: Wendy Griffiths, Ed Patterson)
Compositing: Jim Lewis, Bram Thweam, Darren Robbie
Appearances/pixellation: Ian Whitlock, Bobby Proctor, Robin Crowther-Smith
Rigging: Craig Atkinson
Gaffer (warehouse shoot): Clive Scott
Editor: Nikk Fielden
nice vidya, i dig it.
1Anonymouse 6 months ago
especially as you had to delete rigs - most probably in a similar manner.In this day and digital age - I doubt very much that a client would be prepared to wait 7 months for a 2 1/2 minute video. If it was in 3D or totally 2d animated- thats a different story.
This is not a criticism just an observation- I appreciate your animation and the effect, but you could have saved yourselves so much time.
brookeriverscom 1 year ago
Why did'nt you just use After Effects to create this animation, and then break the frames to give a choppy motion. You would have saved so much time and labour. I do appreciate stop motion, but a lot of what you achieved could have been done so easily in this package. If it was imperative that you used photographs you could have taken a number of still photographs and applied the same technique either in After Effects or even Photoshop frame by frame... (continued in next post)
brookeriverscom 1 year ago
amazing.
aadambeker 1 year ago