11
Hitchcock. 3by3.
Classic Hitchcock movie posters get redone by Lorelay Bove and each are only 3 inches by 3 inches big.

I am loving The Birds and Rear Window. What about you?
This post is part of the
series.
22
More LXD goodness
We’ve talked about them before here, but I woke up this morning, saw someone’s post on Facebook (oh the power of social media!) about them, started searching for more videos on YouTube about them, and here we are.
The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers (or LXD) is an online-only series that unfortunately is only available to viewers in the States on Hulu. Created by director Jon M. Chu (Step Up and Step Up 2 the Streets – bad movies but great dancing!), it’s about a group of ordinary dancers with extraordinary powers (of dancing, I reckon). The premise of the show sounds paper-thin, but I’m pretty sure the dancing will make up for it! (Yes, I’m not very deep. I like watching good dancing.)
Anyway, I just thought I’d share the amazing LXD’s dance routine on So You Think You Can Dance. It was so good, I watched it twice in a row:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJ3j_GW2LFY
I went on a spree thereafter, and I found this – Mad Chadd as Oscar the Academy Award Statue:
And then (I promise this is the last one here today), I found the trailer for the online series. Doesn’t it look like a really cheesy show?! Hurhur.
Are you inspired yet?!
This post is part of the
series.
1
Storytelling in the 21st Century
In ages past, storytelling was the domain of revered storytellers around campfires and taverns. The art changed dramatically with the advent of the printing press. With books, one didn’t need to be a master orator to be a good storyteller. And as towns and cities grew, travelling bands of performers gave rise to theatre which everyone knew overcame its transient form and became celluloid immortals with television and cinemas.
But what will happen in the 21st century? Sure, books and movies and the odd grandfather spinning tales over dinner will still be a fixture. I’m referring to the new boundaries that the art of storytelling will explore.
Avatar was a marriage of digital imagery with film making but it was still a film nonetheless. What if you went the other way? What if you placed film making, and with a stretch, storytelling, into all things digital (think interwebz connectivity where the user has control through clicking)?
What you’ll end up with is interactive storytelling. Now, that’s not terribly new. For decades dice rolling nerds have played out Dungeons and Dragons where they weave their own stories. And recently, companies are injecting trawled info from the viewer’s Facebook profile into ad campaigns. However, 21st century tech has enabled digital offerings on an entirely new level. One that is gorgeous to behold and gripping in its delivery, not staid and mimicking still life.
You can already see baby steps being taken by this new form of delivery in video games (yes, dead horse. *beat*). Companies such as Bioware, the creators of epic fantasy sagas Baldur’s Gate, Neverwinter Nights, Mass Effect and Dragon Age, offer a tantalising peek to a potential “what if?” The following is a trailer for Dragon Age, best described as an epic tale (takes you 50hrs+ to finish the game) worthy of D.Eddings.
It’s not just about looking good, though it definitely doesn’t hurt. The name of the game is storytelling and another title that carries that mantle fairly well is Mass Effect. It feels like you’re watching a movie, where you get to decide what the main protagonist get to do (and who to romance). In fact, the cast gathered to provide the voice overs for the characters hail from Hollywood themselves. Some are more familiar than the others, but none of them can be said to be Bolo Santosi.
So, storytelling via cinemas will not be extinct anytime soon no matter what anti-piracy advocates will have you believe. Not until a new method for absorbing media is invented (wifi enabled 3D virtual glasses anyone? or perhaps cornea implants by Apple called iEye?). Even then there’ll still be the television via iPad and the wrinkly grandfather. What may very well change is how stories will unfold depending on user input. No, you don’t have to write out each ending. We already have algorithms for that.
Who we are
Pick your poison
Read Posts By Authors
Series
Shoutout
- Oh no! Twitter's down! MONSTARRR PILE!











