Posts Tagged industry events

Zoic’s Loni Peristere to Present “The Future is Now: Immersive Advertising as Gameplay” at SXSW Conference

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Zoic Studios’ Loni Peristere will present “The Future is Now: Immersive Advertising as Gameplay” at SXSW Interactive 2010 in Austin, Texas on March 16th.

Peristere, the director of the first ever “4-D” interactive commercial (for Killzone 2), examines the future of advertising with a look at game-changing moments in various disciplines.

It’s a new age in which viewers are participants, and brand connectivity – even loyalty – can be won by placing the consumer in a starring role, literally or figuratively. Using key examples from various industries, Peristere will examine paradigm-shifting developments past and current to posit what is coming on the horizon.

It’s a bold future where opportunity, and enjoyment, abound.

Location: SXSW Interactive
Date: Tuesday, March 16
Time: 3:30 PM

Loni Peristere co-founded Culver City, California’s award-winning Zoic Studios. He is an Executive Creative Director for the commercial, episodic, video game and feature film divisions of the company, overseeing and guiding productions with a vast scope and reach.

As a director, he has helmed numerous advertising projects for Killzone, PlayStation, Budweiser, ESPN/Nascar, Adidas and Mini Cooper. Peristere  won an Emmy for Special Visual Effects in a Television Series for Zoic’s contribution to Joss Whedon’s Firefly. His collaboration with Joss Whedon has spanned more than a decade, including work on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly, Serenity, and Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog.

The 17th annual SXSW Interactive festival will take place March 12-16, 2010 in Austin, Texas.

An incubator of cutting-edge technologies, the event features five days of compelling presentations from the brightest minds in emerging technology, scores of exciting networking events hosted by industry leaders and an unbeatable line up of special programs showcasing the best new websites, video games and startup ideas the community has to offer. From hands-on training to big-picture analysis of the future, SXSW Interactive has become the place to experience a preview of what is unfolding in the world of technology.

More info: Read about the Killzone 2 spot; the SXSW web site.

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Zoic Studios Blows Up ‘The Crazies’ Fan Premiere

eisnerolyphantmitchell_630x354From left: director Breck Eisner and stars Timothy Olyphant and Radha Mitchell take the coming nuclear onslaught quite seriously.

On Wednesday evening, Overture Films held a special fan premier event for its new horror film, The Crazies, which opens today. The movie is a remake of the 1973 George A. Romero classic, and stars Timothy Olyphant (Deadwood, Live Free or Die Hard), Radha Mitchell (Surrogates) and Joe Anderson (Amelia). It tells the story of a small Iowa town devastated by an unknown toxin that causes insanity and death.

Invited guests, who included fandom journalists and horror bloggers, were treated to an immersive experience from the moment they pulled up in their cars. The KCET public television studios in Hollywood were transformed for the evening into beleaguered Ogden Marsh, Iowa. As guests arrived, they were pulled from their cars by military personnel, and marched past army vehicles and through metal detectors to a medical examination area. Nearby, citizens were assaulted, cuffed and herded into pens by soldiers, while moaning bodies lay on gurneys or were stacked in body bags. After guests were checked for contamination, they were issued wristbands indicating whether they were infected or clear, and then herded onto school buses with blackened windows. Military instructions were blared over loudspeakers while the sound of helicopters was heard overhead.

zoic_crazies_3950The after-party on KCET studios’ Stage B.

After being driven around for a while, the guests were released in front of a movie theater, issued rations (popcorn), and taken inside to watch the film.

Afterward, guests were invited back to the KCET lot (despite the bus ride, it was just across the street) to enjoy dinner, music and an open bar, and to hobnob with director Breck Eisner and stars Olyphant and Mitchell. There were also demonstrations from various companies that worked on the film. Guests could watch a stunt show and see a stunt performer set on fire; be turned into Crazies by professional makeup artists; or be strapped into a harness and “hanged” by the neck.

zoic_crazies_3942Eisner, Olyphant and Mitchell pose at the Zoic booth.

Culver City, California’s Zoic Studios, which provided visual effects for the film, offered a VFX “before-and-after” reel; and Zoic co-founder Loni Peristere was on hand to answer fans’ questions, along with compositing supervisor Aaron Brown, who flew down from Zoic’s Vancouver, British Columbia studio just for the occasion. Also, guests were invited to pose in front of a greenscreen and get professionally composited into a still shot of a nuclear explosion from the film. A team of Zoic compositors created over 100 images over the course of the evening, which were emailed to fans.

The evening was an incredible success, and fans had to be kicked out when the bar shut down at 12:30am. For more information about The Crazies, visit the official web site.

View all the images from the event below; or follow this link to the Flickr page.

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‘The Making of V’ This Thursday at Gnomon

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This Thursday, three Zoic pros will discuss the VFX of ABC’s V at the Gnomon School of Visual Effects in Hollywood.

Zoic Studios’ creative director Andrew Orloff will head up the presentation, which also includes pipeline supervisor Mike Romey discussion the ZEUS Shotgun pipeline, and senior compositor Johnathan R. Banta on compositing.

The event, “The Making of: Heroes and V,” will also feature talks by Stargate Studios’ Mark Spatny and Eric Grenaudier. It takes place this Thursday, February 25th, at Gnomon’s Cahuenga Blvd. campus, from 6 to 9pm.

More info: Gnomon School web site; “Zoic Brings Visitors to Earth for ABC’s ‘V’” and “Zoic Studios’ ZEUS: A VFX Pipeline for the 21st Century” on IDYE

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Zoic Studios Hosts VES Holiday Party 2009

The VES Holiday Party 2009 at Zoic Studios.

Yesterday evening, Zoic Studios hosted the Visual Effects Society 2009 Holiday Party from 7:00 – 10:00 PM. About 200 VES members showed up at Zoic’s Culver City studio to schmooze over booze and enjoy delicious catered hors d’œuvre.

From the VES web site:

The Visual Effects Society (VES) is the entertainment industry’s only organization representing the full breadth of visual effects practitioners including artists, technologists, model makers, educators, studio leaders, supervisors, PR/marketing specialists and producers in all areas of entertainment from film, television and commercials to music videos and games. Comprised of a diverse group of more than 2,000 members in 20 countries, the VES strives to enrich and educate its own members and members of the entertainment community at large through a multitude of domestic and international events, screenings and programs.

The 8th Annual VES Awards Show will be held on February 28, 2010 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel in Beverly Hills.

More info: The new VES web site; the photoset on Flickr.

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Zoic Hosts 3D Industry Salon

Closeup of "Medusa," an interactive stereo display sculpture from franklinlondin.com.

Yesterday evening, Culver City, California’s Zoic Studios hosted an exclusive salon event, featuring an open discussion of the history of, and trends in 3D entertainment;  plus an exhibition of stereoscopic (3D) art.

Leslie Ekker, Zoic’s commercial creative director, hosted the informal, free-of-charge event, which attracted about 60 entertainment industry professionals.

Electronic stereoscopy pioneer Lenny Lipton discussed the history of stereoscopy in film. Lipton is recognized as the father of the electronic stereoscopic display industry, having invented many of the current state-of-the-art 3D technologies.

Johnathan Banta, Digital Supervisor at Sassoon Film Design, discussed the conversion of 2D moving images to 3D. His most recent work includes the films The Brothers Bloom, Quarantine, Milk and Public Enemies.

Digital effects animator Franklin Londin spoke about new autostereoscopic displays, which do not require the polarized or anaglyph (red and blue) glasses formerly necessary for 3D. Londin brought to the event his brand new digital stereo camera from Fuji, soon-to-be-available om the US, accompanied by a stereo picture frame.

Londin also brought a collection of his amazing sculptures, integrating 3D photographs displayed through illuminated viewers.

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer

A number of 3D books and stereoscopes were on hand, for attendees to attempt to ruin their vision trying out.

Ray Zone, film historian, author, artist and stereoscopy pioneer (the “3D King of Hollywood”), explained the functioning of a 1950s-era 3D slide projector. Franklin Londin used the projector to show stereo slides from his collection.

Zoic provided food and wine for the participants. Based on the success of this first attempt, the VFX and digital production firm intends to host future salons, although no specific plans have been announced.

Learn more: Zoic Studios; stereoscopy and anaglyph images on Wikipedia; a biography of Lenny Lipton (he invented Puff the Magic Dragon!); Johnathan R. Banta on IMDB; Franklin Londin’s 3D display art; Ray Zone’s web site (wear your red & blue glasses); UPDATE: read this story on Computer Graphics World.

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