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‘Where the City Can’t See’: Creepy, dystopic movie shot entirely using laser scanner technology
11.03.2016
12:36 pm
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‘Where the City Can’t See’: Creepy, dystopic movie shot entirely using laser scanner technology


 
Director Liam Young has dropped the trailer for “the first narrative fiction film shot entirely with laser scanners.” The movie, which is not feature-length, is some kind of a dystopic vision of the near future.

When you see the word scanners you might think of your supermarket’s checkout line but that’s not the most helpful example. If you have seen a blockbuster film in the past several years, then you have seen a movie that used laser scanners to create the effects. The technology, which commonly goes by the acronym LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), is in many ways analogous to radar; it is a remote sensing method that uses a pulsed laser to measure ranges (variable distances). It is one of the building blocks of visual effects production.

Set in the Chinese-owned and -controlled “Detroit Economic Zone,” Where the City Can’t See is about an assembly-line worker who hacks a driverless taxi to find a place that’s not shown on its map. The evocative score for the clip comes from “Deep Breathing” by Shigeto.

Where the City Can’t See is set to premiere at Heart of Glass on November 12, where it will be played before a showing of Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window.
 

 
In 2008 the video for Radiohead’s “House of Cards,” directed by James Frost, used the same technology. See here:

 
via The Daily Dot
 

Previously on Dangerous Minds:
Soviet anti-war animation told entirely with wooden matches

Posted by Martin Schneider
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11.03.2016
12:36 pm
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