remix

The Future of Cinema: A Swarm of Angels

OwlEyes
Reporting page:

Two scripts under development in an open source film project

Elina Shatkin interviews Matt Hanson director of A Swarm of Angels

Photo courtesy of Future PublishingPhoto courtesy of Future PublishingMatt Hanson is a noted British author, filmmaker and film futurist interested in expanding the boundaries of traditional filmmaking. His latest project is A Swarm of Angels, a crowdfunded, open source filmmaking venture that aims to create a £1 million movie with the help of 50,000 participants around the globe.

Anyone who wishes can join the "swarm of subscribers" for £25, and in exchange for their subscription, they will have input on the entire moviemaking process, from the development of two competing screenplays to final distribution. In fact, the movie that ultimately gets made will be given away for free to participants under a Creative Commons license so they can download, remix and create their own works from the media.

Here, Hanson discusses his concept of Cinema 2.0, the fallacy of the mass market approach, and his ambition to bring art back into the business of moviemaking.

Elina Shatkin: How and when did you conceive the idea for A Swarm of Angels?

Matt Hanson: I wanted to distill the ideas I'd been thinking and writing about. How could you really move an image forward into the digital age and make it feel natural? When I'd talk about these ideas to people, they would be like, “We're not seeing it.” I realized I needed to distill it into a simple idea that would capture people's imaginations, then use that as a Trojan Horse for other cool ideas and concepts.

5/21/07

What Comes After Remix?

jarrettmartineau's picture

Lev Manovich has an interesting piece on our 'remix era' posted at RemixTheory.net. He doesn't present a clear vision for what will come next, but he does address the way that remixes and mashups have extended, and been applied to, a broader set of cultural practices including: visual projects, software, and literary texts.


Wired Music Blog

jarrettmartineau's picture

Well, after re-posting two recent Wired entries on collaborative music sites Splice and YourSpins, I scrolled a bit further down the wired music blog page to discover that they've also done brief entries on many other sites that I think are worth covering for our AZ music feature, including: NINJAM, Mix2r, JamGlue, Indaba, and eJamming.

I think we should do some further investigation and into each of these sites for AZ. Let me know if you're interested in doing a profile piece on any of them.


Splice: Online Music Creation, Remixing, and Mashing

jarrettmartineau's picture

If you're looking for a music collaboration community that lets you get your hands dirty creating and remixing music without you having to know any audio editing software, Splice is a good way to go.

Splice

This one combines a Flash-based mixer, track library, and online social network that's similar to what JamGlue offers, although its mixer can take BPM into account, which gives you way more mixing and remixing options than JamGlue. As with that site, uploaded sounds can be embedded on pages and blogs a la YouTube, but all tracks and projects are visible to all other users and the audio quality is compressed, so pro users should try something else. To find out more, watch the site's helpful video demo.

Who it's for: Those with interest in making and mixing music in a MySpace-like environment.

Requirements: None.

Source: Wired


Syndicate content