Pink Floyd
@pink-floyd
@pink-floyd
Pink Floyd - One Of These Days (1971)
Категория: Неофициальный клип
Продолжительность: 00:05:33
Описание:
Продолжительность: 00:05:33
Описание:
Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii [DVD-Audio 24bit/96khz Discrete Quad]
Animação obscura, impressionante. 78 prêmios em vários festivais de cinema. Excelente 2D! : "Dinner for Few" by Nassos Vakalis (https://vimeo.com/288759859).
“Dinner For Few” is a ten minute CG-animated film depicting a sociopolitical allegory of our society. During dinner, "the system" works like a well-oiled machine. It solely feeds the select few who eventually, foolishly consume all the resources while the rest survive on scraps from the table. Inevitably, when the supply is depleted, the struggle for what remains leads to catastrophic change. Sadly, the offspring of this profound transition turn out not to be a sign of hope, but the spitting image of the parents.
EMMY award winning animation artist Nassos Vakalis directed and wrote the film and the animation was produced in the United States of America and Greece with the technical and artistic collaboration of Eva Vomhoff from Germany. “Dinner For Few” is produced and funded by Nassos Vakalis and his wife Katerina Stergiopoulou. The original music is composed by Kostas Christides and performed by the Bratislava Symphonic Orchestra.
“Dinner For Few” was inspired by the economic recession affecting South European countries like Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal. Nassos Vakalis grew up in Greece, where his family and most of his friends still live. “Dinner For Few” not only reflects his deep concern of the social and economic developments during the crisis but also highlights the inevitable and cyclical nature of the human affairs throughout history.
Through its festival run “Dinner for few” screened at over 250 international film festivals and won 78 awards. It was one of the 60 Animated Shorts that Qualified for the Academy Awards in 2015.
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The performances of "Echoes", "A Saucerful of Secrets", and "One of These Days" were filmed from 4 to 7 October 1971 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Floyd:_Live_at_Pompeii)
As performances de "Echoes", "A Saucerful of Secrets" e "One of These Days" foram filmadas entre 4 e 7 de outubro de 1971 (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Floyd:_Live_at_Pompeii)
Source Notes
The audio was taken from a 35mm Cinemascope 4-track magnetic striped print of Live at Pompeii featuring the quadraphonic mix (L, R, Ls, Rs; "4 corners"). This format used the same 4 channel magnetic audio tracks but not in the intended standard L, C, R, S configuration. This "4 corners" quad format was briefly used in the early/mid 1970's for more music focused films. The only theaters equipped for the non-standard audio for- mat were in New York and Los Angeles. The video was taken from the “Original Concert Film” featured on the Director’s Cut DVD release, as well as the Vestron LaserDisc release. The DVD is of decent quality, as it displays some occasional compression artifacts (including macro-blocking and mos- quito noise). The LaserDisc, on the other hand, shows signs of laser rot in the form of the multi-colored specs that appear in the video. Color correction was applied to the LaserDisc footage to make it look as good as possible. [NOTE: This release does not contain video. The DVD-Video release can be found on my blog.]
Historical Background
In 1974, associate producer Phil Borack (whose company April Fools Films handled dis- tribution of the film in the United States) and director Adrian Maben visited Los Angeles for the purpose of finding someone to produce a quadraphonic mix for the film from the original multi-tracks. Dan Wallin, who received an Oscar nomination four years earlier for his work on Woodstock, was appointed for this task. The mix was done in discrete quad, the multi-tracks were mixed to mag at A&M record studios, then the mags were taken over to Todd-AO where the final mix was done. The quad mix was featured in select screenings of the film, but has never seen the light of day since then. Pink Floyd was never involved with the quad mix, and it’s possible that they’re completely unaware of its existence.
Animação obscura, impressionante. 78 prêmios em vários festivais de cinema. Excelente 2D! : "Dinner for Few" by Nassos Vakalis (https://vimeo.com/288759859).
“Dinner For Few” is a ten minute CG-animated film depicting a sociopolitical allegory of our society. During dinner, "the system" works like a well-oiled machine. It solely feeds the select few who eventually, foolishly consume all the resources while the rest survive on scraps from the table. Inevitably, when the supply is depleted, the struggle for what remains leads to catastrophic change. Sadly, the offspring of this profound transition turn out not to be a sign of hope, but the spitting image of the parents.
EMMY award winning animation artist Nassos Vakalis directed and wrote the film and the animation was produced in the United States of America and Greece with the technical and artistic collaboration of Eva Vomhoff from Germany. “Dinner For Few” is produced and funded by Nassos Vakalis and his wife Katerina Stergiopoulou. The original music is composed by Kostas Christides and performed by the Bratislava Symphonic Orchestra.
“Dinner For Few” was inspired by the economic recession affecting South European countries like Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal. Nassos Vakalis grew up in Greece, where his family and most of his friends still live. “Dinner For Few” not only reflects his deep concern of the social and economic developments during the crisis but also highlights the inevitable and cyclical nature of the human affairs throughout history.
Through its festival run “Dinner for few” screened at over 250 international film festivals and won 78 awards. It was one of the 60 Animated Shorts that Qualified for the Academy Awards in 2015.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The performances of "Echoes", "A Saucerful of Secrets", and "One of These Days" were filmed from 4 to 7 October 1971 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Floyd:_Live_at_Pompeii)
As performances de "Echoes", "A Saucerful of Secrets" e "One of These Days" foram filmadas entre 4 e 7 de outubro de 1971 (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Floyd:_Live_at_Pompeii)
Source Notes
The audio was taken from a 35mm Cinemascope 4-track magnetic striped print of Live at Pompeii featuring the quadraphonic mix (L, R, Ls, Rs; "4 corners"). This format used the same 4 channel magnetic audio tracks but not in the intended standard L, C, R, S configuration. This "4 corners" quad format was briefly used in the early/mid 1970's for more music focused films. The only theaters equipped for the non-standard audio for- mat were in New York and Los Angeles. The video was taken from the “Original Concert Film” featured on the Director’s Cut DVD release, as well as the Vestron LaserDisc release. The DVD is of decent quality, as it displays some occasional compression artifacts (including macro-blocking and mos- quito noise). The LaserDisc, on the other hand, shows signs of laser rot in the form of the multi-colored specs that appear in the video. Color correction was applied to the LaserDisc footage to make it look as good as possible. [NOTE: This release does not contain video. The DVD-Video release can be found on my blog.]
Historical Background
In 1974, associate producer Phil Borack (whose company April Fools Films handled dis- tribution of the film in the United States) and director Adrian Maben visited Los Angeles for the purpose of finding someone to produce a quadraphonic mix for the film from the original multi-tracks. Dan Wallin, who received an Oscar nomination four years earlier for his work on Woodstock, was appointed for this task. The mix was done in discrete quad, the multi-tracks were mixed to mag at A&M record studios, then the mags were taken over to Todd-AO where the final mix was done. The quad mix was featured in select screenings of the film, but has never seen the light of day since then. Pink Floyd was never involved with the quad mix, and it’s possible that they’re completely unaware of its existence.