Technology Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedCamden posts Love Machine
Post, Nov, 2004 by Marc Loftus
CAMDEN, UK -- Avid editor Danny Tull at Camden Post (www.camdenpost.com) recently offlined a music video for Polydor Records' glamour girl group, Girls Aloud. The video promotes the all-girl band's single Love Machine.
Stuart Gosling, director/DP at music video production studio Image Dynamic Pictures, directed the project, which was filmed at the Titanic restaurant on Brewer Street in London. The video depicts a nightclub/restaurant scene with the five Girls Aloud artists dancing and sipping champagne at the club while singing their pop number.
Gosling shot the project on 35mm film in order to give it the desired sleek, stylized, polished and glossy look.
Most RecentTechnology Articles
- Google Becomes (Almost) Full-Fledged Telecom, Vonage, Skype, Others In Sites
- Google Android Will Increasingly Win According to Gartner [UPDATE: Palm...
- Microsoft, Sony Were Right, Consoles Are the Future. Where's Apple?
- AOL, the $200 Million Coming Disaster
- Intel to Pay AMD $1.25 Billion; the Antitrust Cost Keeps Rising
- More »
Girls Aloud members Cheryl Tweedy, Kimberley Walsh, Nadine Coyle, Nicola Roberts and Sarah Harding stopped in at Camden Post to view the final results of the offline.
The music video was onlined by Joe Billington at Rushes with Dom Aarons completing the final color grading there.
Triangle Online handled the final online.
According to Gosling, the online included a 10-hour Discreet Flame session where artist Mark Beardal created opening and ending title sequences. During the online, Beardall also performed additional color correction, added CGI lens flare and starbursts, and provided general cosmetic clean-up.
CXO UnpluggedSmart Business interviews on BNET
Brought to you by CBS MoneyWatch.com
- Best- and Worst-Paid College Degrees
- 6 Things You Should Never Do on Twitter or Facebook
- How Much Sleep Do You Really Need?
- 6 Big Myths about Gas Mileage
Most Recent Arts Articles
- Slumdog comprador: coming to terms with the Slumdog phenomenon
- Still mining his Winnipeg: an interview with Guy Maddin
- It doesn't seem 'Canadian': quality television' and Canadian-American co-productions
- Second city or second country? The question of Canadian identity in SCTV'S transcultural text
- Hop on pop: jiangshi films in a transnational context
Most Recent Arts Publications
Most Popular Arts Articles
- What makes a successful business person? Business people who are tops in their field have a lot in common, and art professionals can learn a lot from their successes and strategies
- It's urban, it's real, but is this literature? Controversy rages over a new genre whose sales are headed off the charts
- The Horn identity: by day, Justin, Murdock is one of L.A.'s flashiest bachelors. By bight, he's Eliphas Horn, Goth antihero. (Eye).
- The Arnolfini double portrait: a simple solution
- An Occasion of Sin




