"Alla Luce" Short Film by Sally Reynolds | STASH MAGAZINE

“Alla Luce” Short Film by Sally Reynolds

Sally Reynolds, an Australian designer/artist living in New York, says the inspirations for her latest short film “Alla Luce” include, ballet, Moby, American kinetic sculptor Anthony Howe, ceramic artist Juz Kitson, and a hangover. [Watch]

Bonnes Feuilles Re-imagine George Orwell's "1984" for 2021 | STASH MAGAZINE

Bonnes Feuilles Re-imagines George Orwell’s “1984” for 2021

Directors Mathilde Ammar and Camille Grangier (aka Bonnes Feuilles) in Paris: “This video is a free interpretation of an extract from the dystopian science-fiction novel “Nineteen Eighty-Four” by George Orwell, published in 1949.”
[Watch]

"Underground Lovers" Short Film by Gianluigi Toccafondo | STASH MAGAZINE

C’mon Tigre feat. Mick Jenkins “Underground Lovers” Music Video by Gianluigi Toccafondo (NSFW)

Italian artist/animator Gianluigi Toccafondo applies his signature paint-over-live-action technique to a music video co-directed with Marco Molinelli he admits was “inspired by science fiction cinema and Japanese erotic culture.” [Watch]

Evinetta short film by Ash Thorp | STASH MAGAZINE

Ash Thorp Merges Past and Present into the “Evinetta”

Following on his ode to the Saab S9 this past summer, director/designer Ash Thorp teams with London automotive CGI artist Carlos Pecino (aka ColorSponge) to wrap a temporal composite vehicle called the Evinetta in mystery and atmosphere. [Watch]

Merry Grandmas! Short Film by Natalia Mirzoyan | STASH MAGAZINE

“Merry Grandmas!” Short Film by Natalia Mirzoyan

A young girl’s disappointment at having to spend New Year’s eve with her grandma slowly turns to delight in this enchanting and richly illustrated short film from Armenian director/animator Natalia Mirzoyan. [Watch]

"Freeze Frame" Short Film by Soetkin Verstegen | STASH MAGAZINE

Soetkin Verstegen Animates Stop-Motion Ice in “Freeze Frame” Short Film

Brussels-based animator Soetkin Verstegen calls her attempt to use ice for a stop-motion film “the most absurd technique since the invention of the moving image.” [Watch]