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Oasis’s The Shock Of The Lightning by Julian House and Julian Gibbs

Oasis’s The Shock Of The Lightning by Julian House and Julian Gibbs

David Knight - 23rd Sept 2008

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

"Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

"Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

"The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

"Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage.

The Oasis boys are back and making a good choice to help them explore their Beatles obsession by working with Julian House and Julian Gibbs at INTRO: House designed the new album cover and the two Julians directed the clip for The Shock Of The Lightning. It's the visual bombardment we've come to expect from INTRO since their excellent Doves videos - with added White Album-era solarisation - and the canvas really has no limits. As Julian House mentions below the influences are English surrealism, and the collision of apocalyptic imagery with fairy tales, "pre-pop art" - although he forgets to mention the inclusion of the cosmic kitchen sink. "Noel had in mind a psychedelic, apocalyptic design for the album. He gave me the a copy of the album which I listened to for a week and came up with a load of punk psychedelic collages which he thought were great. "Both the album and the video were inspired by Terry Gilliam. The insane stop motion cut and paste collages were from Czech Jan Lenica and the American animator, Stan Vanderbeek. The influences are English surrealism, apocalyptic imagery meets fairy tales, pre-pop art. It's a tsunami of psychedelic English pop art. "The video for Shock of the Lightning relates to the album artwork, but we wanted it to have a specific feeling of its own. We wanted it to feel filmic. By using stop motion animation it was possible to bring life to an After Effects project, so it could have come out of the experimental 60s. "Working with Julian Gibbs is great because we both respect each other's opinions and ability. We start with the idea and rough styling, JG will put together an edit and we bring in a trusted team of animators and compositors. We rotoscoped found footage and found an effective way of getting a solarised look that worked well for the band footage. "Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

"Our challenge was to find new ways of using the collage technique. By using the analogue process in a digital setting it gets brought to life. Julian is great at being able to visualise what I'm trying to achieve and finding a way to execute it."

Watch 'Oasis’s The Shock Of The Lightning by Julian House and Julian Gibbs' here

David Knight - 23rd Sept 2008

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Credits

Production/Creative

Director
Julian House and Julian Gibbs
Producer
Nikki Hildesley
Production Company
Executive Producer
K

Camera

Director of Photography
Tony May

Commission

Commissioner
Emma Greengrass

David Knight - 23rd Sept 2008

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