Spoiler
Alert Radio - December 17, 2008
Interview
with Michael Langan on "Doxology" and "Dahlia,"
by Toni Pennacchia on Brown University Student Radio, 88.1 FM,
Providence.
DOWNLOAD
INTERVIEW
| Streaming MP3 Audio, 30:00
AnImpact
Festival, Korea - November 22, 2007 
Interview
with Michael Langan, creator of "Doxology," by Sung-Joo
Kim, head programmer for Seoul International Animation Festival.
Sung-Joo Kim:
What would you like to tell to audiences through "Doxology?"
Michael Langan: Learn to adapt to and find contentment
in your surroundings.
SJK: What was your motivation for making the film?
ML: I set out to create a film, having no idea
what the end product would be. The only rule I gave myself was
to trust my intuition completely. I began by creating tons of
animated "sketches," very quickly-executed ideas, which
accumulated into a bank of loosely-associated short films. I rushed
the entire process, not allowing myself to censor or judge each
idea before it had been executed. Eventually the pieces began
to speak to one another, and I started drawing lines between them
and shaping them into a film. The overarching theme that developed
is an account and commentary on the relationship between Heaven
and Earth, incidentally connected by tennis balls (which I like
to think of as prayers.)
SJK: Could you explain your proprietary techniques used
to make this film?
ML: I used a combination of stop-motion and pixilation
in "Doxology," with a little altered live action thrown
in for good measure. There is one scene featuring 3D-animated
snow, but nearly everything else in the film is photographed from
life. I developed a number of original techniques for the film.
The recurring image of the earth from space is in fact a time-lapse
panorama of the sky from below, which I flipped upside-down and
warped to simulate the curvature of the earth. The climactic scene
at the conclusion of the film involves a combination of visual
techniques which alter the original footage into a new interpretation
of space and time. First, I shot image sequences out of plane
windows with a digital still camera every time I flew in a commercial
jet over the course of a year. Then I stabilized these shaky sequences
on a focal point, like a church steeple, so it appears as if the
viewer is rotating around this central point. Next I simulated
a narrow depth of field by blurring the background and foreground,
thereby miniaturizing the subject to call attention to the relativity
of scale. Finally, I duplicated the footage several times and
wove these sequences into themselves, creating an animated Shepard's
Scale in which time and distance appear to pass, but are in fact
perpetually rooted to the same moment and place.
SJK: What was the most difficult point in the production
of "Doxology?"
ML: The most difficult scene to animate in "Doxology"
was the bathroom sequence, in which I appear to be brushing and
flossing my teeth, combing my hair, cleaning my ears, lathering,
and shaving all at the same time. This scene was shot using pixilation--that's
stop motion animation with actual people and places--one frame
at a time, for two hours. Like some other effects that appear
in "Doxology," I had to first take out all drifting
motion before I could connect the elements. Compare it to trying
to assemble a puzzle on a boat in rough seas; you need everything
still before you can put it together. After stabilizing each arm
and the corresponding section of my face, I carefully pieced together
every action so that they could all take place at once without
interfering with one another. The last step was to re-introduce
the motion I removed in order to assemble the puzzle. Shifting
the head with the combing motion and including sideways bumps
from toothbrushing and shaving makes the illusion seem more natural.
The finished composite involved hundreds of layers and over three
months of editing to reach completion.
SJK: Any notable memories?
ML: Perhaps my favorite part of filmmaking is
designing the sound and music for a film. "Doxology"
involved extensive original recording, for which I enlisted the
help of a choir, two organists, a box of corn starch, and a mariachi
band. The song which plays over the climax of the film is called
"The Doxology," which is an English hymn sung at the
close of many church services. To achieve the full sound of an
enormous church congregation, I had to multiply the sound of a
single choir many times over. This required animating a sing-along
video of sorts, from which the choir and organist could take their
cues and sync up when joined by editing. I recorded the Higher
Keys of Brown University in a large dance hall, asking them to
sing the song ten times, changing their voices and positions after
each take to add as much variety as possible to the recording.
They sang like grandparents, children, opera singers, bored teenagers,
and hopelessly tone-deaf churchgoers. On a separate day in another
hall I recorded the organist playing the hymn with no choir. I
then layered all of these sounds on top of each other, creating
the illusion that the audience is listening to a single, gigantic
congregation being led by an organist.
A little trivia: The music playing during the credits sequence
is an old German klezmer tune, "My Hat, It Has Three Corners,"
which is the theme to Jan Svankmajer's film "Etcetera."
I adapted the song for a Mexican mariachi band and recorded it
as an homage to one of my favorite filmmakers.
SJK: What is your purpose in creating animations? For
commercial success or indie animation or what?
ML: My ultimate goal is simply to continue exercising
my artistic license to the fullest extent possible. That said,
I'm definitely not limited to independent filmmaking. So far I've
been very content creating bizarre, commercial short films for
a clothing label in San Francisco called Upper Playground. You
can see these shorts at youtube.com/walrustv.
SJK: Do you have any advice for Korean animators and young
filmmakers?
ML: It's impressive to see polished work from
young filmmakers. But it's fantastic to see good looking
work that is original, or at least takes the status quo one step
further. "Finding your voice" doesn't necessarily mean
discovering what you're good at and repeating it ad nauseum, it
means discovering what original material you have to contribute
to the world and continuing to search for new ideas within yourself.
This takes trusting your intuition and staying one step ahead
of your sanity.
SJK: Have there been any changes in your life since winning at
Ottawa in 2007?
ML: I feel very strongly that I am becoming a member
of the international animation community now, and am excited to
see friends from festivals past at other events around the world.
|