New Documentary ponders the “Prince of Peace”

A new documentary film Prince of Peace – God of War has just been released on Cruxy and announced on The Movie Blog:

Prince of Peace – God of War is a non-sensationalized visual record of Director John Campea’s (a former evangelical Christian and minister) journey across North America, speaking with historians, professors and religious leaders about these issues. The basic question is a simple one: “Should Christians kill people?”

How did this faith, known and identified for its non-violent beliefs, go on to conduct the crusades, the inquisitions, witch hunts, and today have 87% of white evangelical Christians support President George W. Bush’s decision to go to war with Iraq? How did this religion, founded by a Pacifist and known (even criticized) for non-violence, become a religion known for its aggression, war, political power and embracing of violence?

You can view a preview and download the film here on Cruxy

Artist Spotlight: Roland Reinke

My natural instinct in music is towards the dark, cinematic, vast soundscapes often created by artists such as Bjork, Funkstorung, and Future Sound of London. I’m also a big fan of Herbert, who creates amazing collages of sounds that he rips up, smashes, and then puts back together. It is the work of these artists who I was reminded of when I listened to the music of Roland Reinke.

A little about the artist from his profile:

Roland Reinke is a guitarist, bassist and producer. He studied with Vernon Reid, Tronzo, David Fiuczynski and David Gilmore.

Roland does a great job weaving melodies and tonal sounds in and out of the crunk, beats, blips and other industrial sound. You might call this Intelligent Dance Music (IDM), but I am not a big fan of genre labels, and think the dancing to this would be more like waltzing than breaking.

Have a listen below, then check out his page and links for more: http://cruxy.com/rolandreinke

Roland Reinke
Brought to you by cruxy.com

Turning a Short Film into a Webisodic Sensation

On November 11th, The Grand Inquisitor, a new web mini-series, launched on Newsdate2011.com. Based on a chapter from the classic novel “The Brothers Karamazov”, THE GRAND INQUISITOR is a five part film updating Dostoevsky’s mystical fable to a future, Fox network style reality. Cruxy is proud to be an Executive Producer of this work. The series, originally envisioned as a traditional short film, went through a re-imagination process that resulted in what I feel is groundbreaking in its approach to online distribution. It also doesn’t hurt that an amazing cast and crew are involved including Director/Actor Tony Torn, writer Ruth Margraff, multi-image designer Julie Talen, Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky, and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore.

I decided to write up a bit more on our approach to the online distribution strategy we helped create. I know there are many filmmakers out there sitting at that digital fork in the road, trying to figure out what’s possibly beyond “upload it to YouTube!”. This post will show what its like to go the road less travelled…

Episodes vs. Short

We all love film. We all want to sit in big dark theaters with all our friends, and see our masterpiece up on the screen. While many shorts may have success getting into festivals, and a few even might win Oscars, many don’t ever get seen by more than just a handful of people. With this piece, we decided that it could work with a more “net native” approach… edited into multiple short episodes (3-5 minutes), unfolding over a few weeks, distributed through multiple online video services. Without anything more than a few well timed email announcements and a twitter message here and there, we’ve already had thousands of people watch the trailer, viral ads, and first episode. It may not be physically communal, it may not be in a dark theater with popcorn, but its real – actual people watching, enjoying, experiencing this work. Our goal is to get to 100,000 viewers.

Hyperlinked Entertainment

Let’s be honest – this a very complex work. It’s based on freaking Dostoevsky. Even more, its a parody of contemporary politics and corporate media, and its set in the future. I love it, but I am a total geek, and I have the benefit of having read the script. For the wider audience, we wanted to balance the ambition of this work by creating a new kind of “hyperlinked entertainment” experience. You’ll see that on each episode, the complete cast of characters is represented below the main video stream as small thumbnails. As the characters appears on the screen, their thumbnail lights up. You can roll over the thumbnails to zoom in on them, and learn a bit more about their role in this tale.

Here’s an example of the “character dock” – a bit like the MacOS application dock:

Video Thumb Player

As the series progresses, we’ll also provide clickthrough links, subplots, and the ability to “friend” the different characters. The dream is to at some point to create a “down the rabbit hole” experience that allows you to experience the film and story in a non-linear way through media and plot lines scattered across many sites. Why shouldn’t a scene occur on MySpace? Perhaps you should be able to track the sightings of Jesus through Twitter and Google Maps? This is where entertainment is headed in the 21st century – mixed reality, hyperlinked entertainment….cyberspace inverted.

Here’s a full view of the entire episode one player:

Episode Video Player Fullscreen

Podcasting

By breaking up the film into a set of episodic releases, you can better distribute them through podcasting technology to iPods and other devices. Sites such as Blip.tv and Feedburner make it easy to setup your podcast feeds and get them submitted to the iTunes Podcast Directory and elsewhere.

The point here is less that a huge percentage of your viewers will subscribe to a podcast, but more that you can use this to get your work listed in iTunes directory. That way you can tell people to find and download the episodes using iTunes right to their iPod, iPhone or AppleTV.

High-Def Online

This work was originally shot on the Panasonic P2 HD cameras. Reducing it down to a DVD release wouldn’t do justice to the scale and depth of the original work. Web video has quickly moved from being terribly low-resolution and choppy, to a thing of beauty. In fact, the number one “HD” display that people are exposed to on a daily basis is their computer screen. New compression standards such as H264, Apple’s Quicktime, DivX and cheap bandwidth has put the distribution of HD video online within the reach of even the smallest budget indies.

We also have big plans for distributing the HD episodes through popular Bit Torrent tracking sites. Many of the sites are looking to go legit, and are excited to have quality, legal HD video to promote.

Flash Video

It’s the video technology we all hated, but have learned to love. Flash provides the most superior user experience, with seamless in page playback that just works. Adobe has continued to innovate, providing higher quality codec support in Flash 8 and 9 through their partnership with ON2. Customizable, open-source Flash video players from brilliant people like Jeroen Wijering have also made this possible.

Social promotion

Perhaps you saw our “Audition 2 Be Jesus” video? If not, you can view it on YouTube at http://youtube.com/newsdate2011. It was definitely controversial, with many people believing we were “making fun of Christians”. As they say, there is no such thing as bad publicity. While we were not intending to insult anyones religious beliefs, anytime you create a creative piece involving religion or politics, you have to expect there will be misinterpretations.

Domain Branding

Instead of choosing a domain such as thegrandinquisitor.com which is long and hard to spell, we picked out an intriguing aspect to the film – that its set in the near future, the year 2011. The fictional news program in the series opens with “Newsdate 11-11-2011″, and from that we selected Newsdate2011.com as the domain. Its memorable and short.

Online Everywhere

Facebook, MySpace, Blip, Stage6, Cruxy, YouTube, Veoh…. we would have done more if we had the time. The more sites you can have a presence on the better. Each of these services has their own unique value and audience, and its opportunity to create a presence on each that makes sense and represents your work well.

Just some of the possibilities…

These are just some of the avenues of online distribution and promotion that we explored. In the end, our goal was take the static, linear medium of a traditional “short film” and move it into an evoling, engaging online experience. We believe this will result in 1) more people seeing the work, 2) more people talking about and 3) the possible development of a new creative form that mixes film and hyperlinked online media.

In the end, no amount of clever code will save a bad film. With a good work, however, it can become much bigger than the sum of its parts.

Please visit Newsdate2011.com today to check out the series.

Artist Spotlight: Wreck and Salvage

After a long hiatus, I’m glad to return with this week’s artist spotlight, featuring the partially Brooklyn-based Wreck and Salvage. I can honestly say that W&S makes me laugh and scratch my head nearly simultaneously. Too bad I am not more coordinated. Here’s a little more about ‘em:

Wreck & Salvage LLC is a collective of three like-minded artists producing original video content for the internet. We share a love of rust and rotting wood, postcard landscapes and decaying industry.

W&S is definitely original, and a great progression/evolution/continuation from the talented folks who also created Bullemhead and ThePan.org. We are very glad to have you here on Cruxy.

Works by wreckandsalvage
Brought to you by cruxy.com

Cruxy presenting at Nov 2nd “Amateur Hour” Conference NYLS

Nathan will be speaking on November 2nd at the first “Amateur Hour” conference hosted by the New York Law School. Other speakers include NYU’s Clay Shirky, executives from ESPN, CBS, Forbes, Warner Brothers, and more, along with a whole host of lawyers and law professors. The cost to attend is only $50, and it seems well worth it. Here’s a little more detail:

From television (YouTube and Revver) to advertising (Craigslist and consumer-made TV ads), movies (Machinima), photography (Flickr and iStockPhoto), encyclopedias (Wikipedia and UrbanDictionary), and news (blogs and citizen journalism) technology is enabling amateurs to produce and distribute high-quality product that people want to
watch, read, consume, buy, and re-use. This type of media is sometimes labeled “user-generated”, “amateur”, or “peer-produced” content, and there has been a huge amount of discussion on why people produce it. Any number of commentators have suggested that this is a fundamental change in the way that media is produced, and have foretold a future full of people producing media for the love of it. For all the overblown rhetoric, it’s clear that many established assumptions in media are now being overturned.

What isn’t as clear is what happens to existing media businesses in the age of the amateur. What has been the response of these businesses in light of the rise of the amateur, and what should be their response? Media and entertainment businesses companies are faced with a range of business, legal and management issues that are both new and challenging. The time is ripe to ask what to do about this, and what happens next.

November 2 - Amateur Hour Conference

You can learn more about and register for the conference at http://www.nyls.edu/amhr