MacMusic  |  PcMusic  |  440 Software  |  440 Forums  |  440TV  |  Zicos
kim
Search

When a Movie is More Than a Movie: MYSTERY OF SIMBI_XOMBIES

Tuesday January 15, 2019. 12:37 AM , from Digital Pro Sound
A Concept To Return Authenticity
to Music Using Über Reality® Theater

MYSTERY OF SIMBI_XOMBIES
is a lot of things. Just another indie film it is not. A zombie horror film it
definitely is not. What it is is a concept for showing how one band making
their videos in VR can set off a global chain reaction. It is an underground
music comedy. And it is a digital entertainment experiment. To help author all
of this, David Kim used Blackmagic Design cameras and its DaVinci Resolve
Studio software.

Created over
a number of years by David H. Kim, cinema author and originator of the Über
Reality® (ÜR) Theater, MYSTERY OF SIMBI_XOMBIES has gained worldwide attention.
It can be seen on number of sites globally, on Viddsee (Asia’s largest indie
film platform) and in ÜR Theater, with some of its 360º footage featured on
VeeR. And since its introduction in early 2018, more than eight chapters, each
featuring a soundtrack song, have been filmed and put on the web.

Über Reality® Theater Enables Fan Fiction
& More

Kim grew up
in Long Island, NY and is among the youngest from generation X. Inspired by his
childhood idol Kurt Cobain, he has come to view power and pretention as boring.
With that spirit, he founded a production company out of Williamsburg, Brooklyn
called Hoffstot Sound & Pictures, offering a new way for people to
participate in cinema called Über Reality®.

When you buy
a DVD from Warner Brothers or subscribe to Netflix, you merely get a restricted
license to watch privately as a passive audience… However, when you buy a limited
edition movie from ÜR Theater for about the same price, you get extreme
privileges: You can author your own non-exclusive version of the script or
characters and make money with no further royalty or subscription, aside from
giving attribution credit. Your version may be officially selected to play in
ÜR Theater. You’ll also have access to unique fan merchandise, including custom
t-shirts and even real sheep fleece. “The idea is to change the audience from
sheep to shepherds,” said Kim.

MYSTERY OF SIMBI_XOMBIES: The Concept

One media
source described the project as: “As altered foods nudge human devolution
towards global corporate apocalypse, a grunge frontman reluctantly joins forces
with a mysterious fallen K-pop bassist to generate buzz in Brooklyn, but when a
cougar producer brainwashes them to spawn a reggae pop sound, they catalyze a
movement on the Web which will resurrect The Grand Xombi.”

Kim sees it
as that, but a great deal more. His focus was on showing how the
corporatization of music, following the deaths of grassroots legends like Kurt
Cobain, Tupac, Notorious B.I.G., has led to the “sheepification” of
Americans and perhaps the world. Kim says, “When we say zombie, we are
referring to our corporatized zombie state. But, we when we say xombi, we
reference the origins in Haitian religion, created for souls to escape the
experience of forced servitude in the New World.”

“Whereas
before everyone liked a band like Nirvana irrespective of their beliefs, now
everyone seems more compartmentalized, divided by musical genres, told appealingly
we are rugged individuals, when we are merely sheep living in a media bubble on
re-feed, having forgotten the adrenaline rush of a truly universal pop music. This
is not a cynical view but the reality of what seems like an alternative
universe now. That’s why we bring a progressive view of reggae music into
the mix, a quintessential hybrid transnational genre, which appeals to a broad
global audience, bridges all ages, and even makes us dance,” said Kim.

“We parody
this struggle in the film through the Korean diaspora characters Ricco, a
devoutly grunge “Generation X Man” seeking purity, and the mysterious
J.B., a fallen “K-pop Millennial” reinventing herself for new views, who vie
against each other to be the band’s lead vocalist.”

Blackmagic Shooting and Post

The project
is huge in scope, but when Kim was planning how he would shoot and handle post
on a budget that was raised by Kickstarter as a Staff Pick and the New York
State Film Tax Credit (Kim received officially the lowest budget on record for
the credit and all crew were paid, along with it being a SAG-AFTRA production),
he had to keep a tight budget in mind. To shoot, Kim used the Blackmagic Cinema
Camera MFT along with a number of other cameras and formats. This included a Ricoh
Theta S to add a 360ºVR layer onto the film.  

“As a
producer, director, writer, cinematographer, actor, editor, colorist of various
film projects, I’ve used Blackmagic cameras in the past and I’ve become
accustomed to the look of them. For this, we are using the Blackmagic Cinema
Camera MFT. The skin tones are refined, there’s excellent latitude and I think
it looks a bit more color-balanced, which appeals to me. We had a wide range of
casting and everyone looked good and natural,” said Kim. “Honestly, the sensor
may be one of the best kept secrets for the image quality out of it. Simply, it
delivers very matter-of-factly in a compact, intuitive package, built-in
touchscreen, with unmatched value at the price point which I think adheres to
the spirit of MYSTERY OF SIMBI_XOMBIES.

“Blending many
image formats required working in tandem with the story. However, because the film
critiques technology, it did afford some creative leeway regarding cameras and
looks. I think the Blackmagic image has the most natural look that also feels
warm and filmic, so it laid a good visual foundation for the movie.”

The Blackmagic
camera also helped keep Kim’s crew small, and allowed him to stage small
intimate sets, with more than acceptable bokeh choosing the right lenses on the
MFT sensor. The form factor also allowed the crew, which shot both handheld and
rigged, to cover scenes swiftly and set up for next shots.

The
Blackmagic camera’s ability to use standard SSD drives and shoot in ProRes HQ
also helped Kim get the look he wanted while keeping to a tight budget.

“SSDs are a
good format considering value, recording times and reliability. You can shoot
narrative all day in ProRes HQ with a 240GB card, which kept focus on directing
actors. We never had an issue filling up cards during shooting. The 90-minute
internal battery also makes it very useful in b-roll and run-and-gun
situations, and the built-in touchscreen can be a time-saver too,” he said.

Once principal
photography wraps, Kim uses DaVinci Resolve for grading. One of the big
benefits he saw with using a Blackmagic camera with DaVinci Resolve was getting
rid of the need to transcode and being able to shoot in ProRes.

“Being able to
edit without transcoding was pure joy. Post-production was facilitated greatly
by the Prores HQ edit-ready recording, which could record 3-4hrs on a 240GB
SSD, and the format allowed a generous amount of play for color correction,”
Kim said.

“When
Blackmagic says its cameras are digital film cameras, I think their technology is
going beyond the competition for narrative storytelling and it suits new media
like a glove. It’s not a question of price, but a commitment to enabling creative
precision within a workflow. Not to mention, minimal menus can be a blessing
too, especially when sometimes if you are shooting, but then also acting!

“In that
sense of balance, I think Blackmagic fits our philosophical re-imagination of
the colonized Zombie consumer into a revolutionary Xombi author.”

About
Hoffstot Sound & Pictures

Hoffstot
Sound & Pictures (HS&P) is a grassroots Brooklyn studio producing
futuristic movies and music, leveraging its Über Reality® Theater platform to share
story rights with the global public.

Released October 31st, 2018 at www.URtheater.com: 360ºVR Feature Director’s Cut + Official Soundtrack includes ÜR extras…
digitalmedianet.com/when-a-movie-is-more-than-a-movie-mystery-of-simbi_xombies/
News copyright owned by their original publishers | Copyright © 2004 - 2024 Zicos / 440Network
115 sources
Current Date
Apr, Tue 30 - 13:26 CEST