Opens
March 23
California Science Center, Los Angeles
That hulking gorilla in "King Kong" and those rampaging dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" have nothing on the amazing monsters in "Bugs! in 3-D." Filmed with wide-angle lenses that can magnify subjects up to 250,000 times onscreen, "Bugs!" gets audiences up close and personal in the world of insects. Shot in a rain forest on the equatorial island of Borneo and in a studio in England for the many close-ups, this 3-D Imax film puts you at eye level with awesome creatures that look like alien beasts from deep space.
Director Mike Slee and the producers aim the 40-minute film at young people by personalizing the insects and staging their mating rituals and predatory hunts for maximum drama. However, adults also will marvel at the varied hues, body structure and evolutionary traits that only become clear when bugs get magnified to this size.
In an abandoned hut sliding into a lagoon, which the jungle is swiftly reclaiming, the camera prowls the foliage in search of startling insects magnificently camouflaged by nature to escape (not always successfully) the danger of becoming another insect's dinner. There are all kinds of beetles, ants and carnivorous crickets in addition to predators such as scorpions, spiders, frogs, lizards and millions of bats. Mostly, the film focuses on two protagonists: a butterfly and a praying mantis who, with a little poetic license, are "born on the same day" in the same rain forest. The film follows their life cycle.
Papilio undergoes her metamorphosis from a caterpillar to a Great Mormon butterfly, its wings patterned with red, black and white. Hierodula, a green mantis, is a very cool predatory male with compound eyes, molting exoskeleton and forelegs that spear his food. His assault and consumption of a poor fruit fly is equal to any attack by the CG creatures in "Jurassic Park".
Slee oversees a terrific team headed by specialist photographer Peter Parks, who designed and built new systems equipment to shoot insects in extreme close-up, and Sean Phillips, a leading 3-D cinematographer.
Composer John Lunn plays up the drama with hot jazz licks for bugs in jittery motion, strings and horns swooning in awe at a butterfly emerging from her cocoon and Hitchcockian tension for bugs waiting in ambush for their prey. Judi Dench goes for elegant simplicity in her narration of Slee and Abby Aron's script.
BUGS! IN 3-D
SK Films
Terminix presents a Principal Large Format Film productionin association with Image Quest 3-D & U.K. Film and TV Production Co.
Credits:
Director: Mike Slee
Writers: Mike Slee, Abby Aron
Producers: Phil Streather, Alexandra Ferguson
Executive producers: Simon Relph, Peter Fudakowski
Director of photography: Sean Phillips
Music: John Lunn
Systems designer, specialist photography: Peter Parks
Editor: Peter Beston
Insect researcher: Gillian Burke
Narrator: Judi Dench
Running time -- 40 minutes
No MPAA rating...
March 23
California Science Center, Los Angeles
That hulking gorilla in "King Kong" and those rampaging dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" have nothing on the amazing monsters in "Bugs! in 3-D." Filmed with wide-angle lenses that can magnify subjects up to 250,000 times onscreen, "Bugs!" gets audiences up close and personal in the world of insects. Shot in a rain forest on the equatorial island of Borneo and in a studio in England for the many close-ups, this 3-D Imax film puts you at eye level with awesome creatures that look like alien beasts from deep space.
Director Mike Slee and the producers aim the 40-minute film at young people by personalizing the insects and staging their mating rituals and predatory hunts for maximum drama. However, adults also will marvel at the varied hues, body structure and evolutionary traits that only become clear when bugs get magnified to this size.
In an abandoned hut sliding into a lagoon, which the jungle is swiftly reclaiming, the camera prowls the foliage in search of startling insects magnificently camouflaged by nature to escape (not always successfully) the danger of becoming another insect's dinner. There are all kinds of beetles, ants and carnivorous crickets in addition to predators such as scorpions, spiders, frogs, lizards and millions of bats. Mostly, the film focuses on two protagonists: a butterfly and a praying mantis who, with a little poetic license, are "born on the same day" in the same rain forest. The film follows their life cycle.
Papilio undergoes her metamorphosis from a caterpillar to a Great Mormon butterfly, its wings patterned with red, black and white. Hierodula, a green mantis, is a very cool predatory male with compound eyes, molting exoskeleton and forelegs that spear his food. His assault and consumption of a poor fruit fly is equal to any attack by the CG creatures in "Jurassic Park".
Slee oversees a terrific team headed by specialist photographer Peter Parks, who designed and built new systems equipment to shoot insects in extreme close-up, and Sean Phillips, a leading 3-D cinematographer.
Composer John Lunn plays up the drama with hot jazz licks for bugs in jittery motion, strings and horns swooning in awe at a butterfly emerging from her cocoon and Hitchcockian tension for bugs waiting in ambush for their prey. Judi Dench goes for elegant simplicity in her narration of Slee and Abby Aron's script.
BUGS! IN 3-D
SK Films
Terminix presents a Principal Large Format Film productionin association with Image Quest 3-D & U.K. Film and TV Production Co.
Credits:
Director: Mike Slee
Writers: Mike Slee, Abby Aron
Producers: Phil Streather, Alexandra Ferguson
Executive producers: Simon Relph, Peter Fudakowski
Director of photography: Sean Phillips
Music: John Lunn
Systems designer, specialist photography: Peter Parks
Editor: Peter Beston
Insect researcher: Gillian Burke
Narrator: Judi Dench
Running time -- 40 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Opens
March 23
California Science Center, Los Angeles
That hulking gorilla in "King Kong" and those rampaging dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" have nothing on the amazing monsters in "Bugs! in 3-D." Filmed with wide-angle lenses that can magnify subjects up to 250,000 times onscreen, "Bugs!" gets audiences up close and personal in the world of insects. Shot in a rain forest on the equatorial island of Borneo and in a studio in England for the many close-ups, this 3-D Imax film puts you at eye level with awesome creatures that look like alien beasts from deep space.
Director Mike Slee and the producers aim the 40-minute film at young people by personalizing the insects and staging their mating rituals and predatory hunts for maximum drama. However, adults also will marvel at the varied hues, body structure and evolutionary traits that only become clear when bugs get magnified to this size.
In an abandoned hut sliding into a lagoon, which the jungle is swiftly reclaiming, the camera prowls the foliage in search of startling insects magnificently camouflaged by nature to escape (not always successfully) the danger of becoming another insect's dinner. There are all kinds of beetles, ants and carnivorous crickets in addition to predators such as scorpions, spiders, frogs, lizards and millions of bats. Mostly, the film focuses on two protagonists: a butterfly and a praying mantis who, with a little poetic license, are "born on the same day" in the same rain forest. The film follows their life cycle.
Papilio undergoes her metamorphosis from a caterpillar to a Great Mormon butterfly, its wings patterned with red, black and white. Hierodula, a green mantis, is a very cool predatory male with compound eyes, molting exoskeleton and forelegs that spear his food. His assault and consumption of a poor fruit fly is equal to any attack by the CG creatures in "Jurassic Park".
Slee oversees a terrific team headed by specialist photographer Peter Parks, who designed and built new systems equipment to shoot insects in extreme close-up, and Sean Phillips, a leading 3-D cinematographer.
Composer John Lunn plays up the drama with hot jazz licks for bugs in jittery motion, strings and horns swooning in awe at a butterfly emerging from her cocoon and Hitchcockian tension for bugs waiting in ambush for their prey. Judi Dench goes for elegant simplicity in her narration of Slee and Abby Aron's script.
BUGS! IN 3-D
SK Films
Terminix presents a Principal Large Format Film productionin association with Image Quest 3-D & U.K. Film and TV Production Co.
Credits:
Director: Mike Slee
Writers: Mike Slee, Abby Aron
Producers: Phil Streather, Alexandra Ferguson
Executive producers: Simon Relph, Peter Fudakowski
Director of photography: Sean Phillips
Music: John Lunn
Systems designer, specialist photography: Peter Parks
Editor: Peter Beston
Insect researcher: Gillian Burke
Narrator: Judi Dench
Running time -- 40 minutes
No MPAA rating...
March 23
California Science Center, Los Angeles
That hulking gorilla in "King Kong" and those rampaging dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" have nothing on the amazing monsters in "Bugs! in 3-D." Filmed with wide-angle lenses that can magnify subjects up to 250,000 times onscreen, "Bugs!" gets audiences up close and personal in the world of insects. Shot in a rain forest on the equatorial island of Borneo and in a studio in England for the many close-ups, this 3-D Imax film puts you at eye level with awesome creatures that look like alien beasts from deep space.
Director Mike Slee and the producers aim the 40-minute film at young people by personalizing the insects and staging their mating rituals and predatory hunts for maximum drama. However, adults also will marvel at the varied hues, body structure and evolutionary traits that only become clear when bugs get magnified to this size.
In an abandoned hut sliding into a lagoon, which the jungle is swiftly reclaiming, the camera prowls the foliage in search of startling insects magnificently camouflaged by nature to escape (not always successfully) the danger of becoming another insect's dinner. There are all kinds of beetles, ants and carnivorous crickets in addition to predators such as scorpions, spiders, frogs, lizards and millions of bats. Mostly, the film focuses on two protagonists: a butterfly and a praying mantis who, with a little poetic license, are "born on the same day" in the same rain forest. The film follows their life cycle.
Papilio undergoes her metamorphosis from a caterpillar to a Great Mormon butterfly, its wings patterned with red, black and white. Hierodula, a green mantis, is a very cool predatory male with compound eyes, molting exoskeleton and forelegs that spear his food. His assault and consumption of a poor fruit fly is equal to any attack by the CG creatures in "Jurassic Park".
Slee oversees a terrific team headed by specialist photographer Peter Parks, who designed and built new systems equipment to shoot insects in extreme close-up, and Sean Phillips, a leading 3-D cinematographer.
Composer John Lunn plays up the drama with hot jazz licks for bugs in jittery motion, strings and horns swooning in awe at a butterfly emerging from her cocoon and Hitchcockian tension for bugs waiting in ambush for their prey. Judi Dench goes for elegant simplicity in her narration of Slee and Abby Aron's script.
BUGS! IN 3-D
SK Films
Terminix presents a Principal Large Format Film productionin association with Image Quest 3-D & U.K. Film and TV Production Co.
Credits:
Director: Mike Slee
Writers: Mike Slee, Abby Aron
Producers: Phil Streather, Alexandra Ferguson
Executive producers: Simon Relph, Peter Fudakowski
Director of photography: Sean Phillips
Music: John Lunn
Systems designer, specialist photography: Peter Parks
Editor: Peter Beston
Insect researcher: Gillian Burke
Narrator: Judi Dench
Running time -- 40 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 3/26/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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