Posts tagged Daft Punk

Duracell Packaging – Vader

Duracell Packaging – Stormtrooper

Duracell Packaging – C3PO

Duracell Packaging – RoboCop

Duracell Packaging – HAL 9000

Duracell Packaging – Daft Punk 1

Duracell Packaging – Daft Punk 2
Being bored out of your cranium when buying batteries could be a thing of the past, if designer Spencer Bigum has anything to do with it. His new iconic promo packaging designs would make sure of that!
Duracell Promo Packaging by Spencer Bigum (Facebook)
Via: Flooby Nooby | Lovely Package

Record Store Day exclusive TRON: Legacy vinyl! Rolling Stone has a cool (albeit annoyingly formatted) list of 20 RSD exclusive releases to pick up.
Anyone planning on picking up the “Record Day” exclusive “TRON: Legacy Translucence Identity Disc vinyl record” tomorrow?
So for the very few of you who are new…You’ll notice that I’ve been a little heavy on Tron Legacy. I’ll try not to take it personally that you haven’t scrolled back to August to learn that I work for The Walt Disney Company. It’s cool. Even if I weren’t here, I’d be really excited about this film.
Now that I’ve seen it, I can share with you a bit why.
When “Tron” came out in 1982, I was 12. A few months before it came out, a man I’d never seen before came into my classroom at school to introduce a new “computer science class”. There were three Apple II e computers in a small room. the man asked if anyone in my class of 38 were interested in signing up for the class. It would be an after-school program. Two of us raised our hands. I don’t know where Desmond is now, but he was a really bright guy who was very well encouraged by his parents to do anything math and science related. My parents encouraged me to do anything creative. I fell in love with science on my own.
So Desmond and I started in the first computer class at IS 318 in Brooklyn New York, a school now known for it’s championship chess club. I learned to program in BASIC and then learned about all the possible artistic applications. I spent most of my afternoons in an arcade halfway between school and home ( I am still one of the best Defender players in the tri-state area) and my Walkman was always filled with tapes of electronic music (or hip-hop) so I was clearly into the application of electronics into pop culture. In short – I was hooked. I saved gift money and my mom got me a Commodore 64. I had a Cap’n Crunch whistle. That’s all you need to know.
That summer, I was watching TV and a trailer came on for a new movie coming in July. It was Tron. A movie about a dude who gets teleported into a computer world. And the “Switched On Bach” composer (Wendy Carlos) did the music?! I was sold.
So there I went, opening day, at a movie theater on Fulton Street that’s long gone now…I saw “Tron”. The theater was half full. Mostly older people. Nobody of color except me and a Korean kid who was around the same age as me.
I had seen two Star Wars films by that time. But this movie affected my life in a way that no other set of moving pictures had since Star Trek:TOS. My mind raced. Was matter teleportation possible? Was it really just a matter of irradiating sections of your body part by part and storing the broken up pieces in the data stream? Reminder: I was 12 years old. ON the train ride home I decided two things: I was going to learn to play a synthesizer, and computers were going to be a major part of my life.
Fast forward 28 years and I have done both. I’ve built websites, sold websites, I’ve programmed and played synthesizer in bands, on remixes…you get the idea. A weird B-movie inspired me to do great things in real life. And I did them. Who will be inspired by this sequel? I don’t know. But I do know that this crazy story has become a part of my lifelong dedication to the pursuit of happiness and perfection in sight, sound, and science. And so I will continue to champion this story’s impact.
HP ePrint & TRON: Legacy projection mapping – complete animation
The full projection mapping sequence from the HP ePrint & TRON: Legacy Experience on the the roof of the QEH on London’s Southbank, late Nov/early Dec 2010.
An immersive visual spectacle augmented with snippets from Daft Punk’s soundtrack and orignal sound FX from the film… in no way enhanced by the bitterly cold weather.
Plug your headphones in and turn it up!
More pics - bit.ly/?haVdvu
View trailer - vimeo.com/?17283195
This photo gives a good idea of scale - bit.ly/?er4BCE Created using 6x18k projectors onto a projection canvass of approx 50m wide by 20m tall. Audio from an 8k D&B sound rig.
By creative agency Guided Collective in collaboration with Flat-e / Seeper (animation and projection mapping) and Si Begg (sound design and re-jigged elements from Daft Punk’s TRON: Legacy soundtrack).


