During the 1920s, cinematographer Claude Friese-Greene travelled across the UK with his new colour film camera. His trip ended in London, with some of his most stunning images, and these were recently revived and restored by the BFI, and shared across social media and video websites. Simon Smith has attempted to capture every one of his shots, standing in his footsteps, and using modern equivalents of his camera and lenses. The result as you can see is amazing
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MIRRORLAPSE
just phenomenal! Constructed from over 2000 photos and sing hyperlapse, timelapse and a simple horizontal mirror. Created by Rick Mereki
Ski Flying
https://vimeo.com/83783853
Ski Flying With GoPro & Anders Jacobsen
The Key Moment
The Key Moment is a micro shortfilm based on a true story and inspired by all those weird, miscommunication – lost in translation – wtf moments that emerge while pitching for a foreign client on a long distance conference call. All audio recordings used form part of a real telephone call conversation. Created by Ana Gale
Pulp Fiction in 8 Bit
CineFix presents Pulp Fiction retold via old-school 8-bit (and a little 16 bit 😉 game tech. My apologies for the youtube ads
Breakfast
A wonderful little film about eating breakfast by Bianca Giaever
Spaxels Lightpainting
The Ars Electronica Futurelab is experimenting with long-time-exposure shots to create 3d-Models and animations in the sky.