VR takes early steps toward art – Cast of ‘Taxi Driver’ reunites for 40th ’versary

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This image released by Baobad Studios shows a scene from the VR film ‘Invasion’ which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. (AP)
This image released by Baobad Studios shows a scene from the VR film ‘Invasion’ which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. (AP)

NEW YORK, April 23, (AP): Walking through most doors at the Tribeca Film Festival means taking a seat in a theater full of chattering moviegoers. But there are also darkened, cloth-wrapped chambers — like old carnival booths promising never-before-seen wonders — that offer nothing but a headset, headphones and perhaps some advice, like: “Watch for the dragon.”

Virtual reality has steadily become more of a presence at film festivals, particularly at Tribeca. And the buzz at this year’s Tribeca’s “virtual arcade” was one of the festival’s most vibrant hubs of frenzy, albeit one filled largely with neck-craning people in goggles going “Whoa.”

Tribeca’s VR arcade — an indoor bazaar of film-like tales, journalistic explorations and splendorous dream worlds ripe for immersion — captures a burgeoning medium learning to walk. Most of the creators acknowledge these are just the first — sometimes crude, sometimes dazzling — steps toward art. But the belief is strong that these are the early gestures of a new immersive and interactive art form with eons of evolution to come.

“We’re trying to build the airplane where we’re in flight,” says Eugene Chung, chief executive of Penrose Studios, a VR content maker Chung founded after working at Oculus Rift and Pixar Animation.

Penrose’s “Allumette” is one of the standouts at the festival. Set in a Venice-like city in the clouds, the 20-minute narrative is about a young girl and the magical matchsticks handed down to her by her mother. The viewer can walk around the city or dive inside a docked ship, but the power of “Allumette” is as much in its story as its novel technology.

“For us, it’s all about what is the authentic story that we want to tell,” says Chung. “For me, especially with ‘Allumette,’ it was about thinking about the sacrifices that my own parents, especially my mom, made while growing up, working so hard to provide for us the kind of life she never had.”

Many of the installations play like virtual reality demos providing the chance to dive among the reef off Italy or sit front row for a Grateful Dead concert. But the most interesting ones are predicated on applying traditional storytelling to the tools of virtual reality.

“Invasion!” is the creation of Eric Darnell and Maureen Fan of Baobab Studios. Darnell, a veteran feature film director (the “Madagascar” movies, “Antz”) was watching “War of the Worlds” when he hit upon the idea of bumbling aliens coming down to earth while a curious white bunny looks on.

“They’re kind of buffoons. They didn’t think of, like, microbes? They should know that right?” says Darnell of the “War of the Worlds” invaders. “I thought: What if you took that to the nth degree? Not only did they not think about microbes, they also didn’t think of little white bunnies.”

“Invasion!” could probably work as animated short, but the viewer has more intimacy with the film’s furry protagonist. The bunny looks the viewer straight in the eye, and when the aliens deplane, you can’t help but feel protective of the little one standing next to you. Besides, when you look down, you realize that you have bunny feet, too.

“There’s a lot to learn and there’s a long way to go,” Darnell says of VR. “But the holy grail for me to find that kind of emotional experience that we’re all used to getting from more traditional storytelling.”

Convert

Darnell, accustom to the roar of packed movie theaters, acknowledges missing the communal aspect of film. But he became a quick convert to virtual reality.

“It was putting the headset on for the first time. It’s one of those things that’s hard to talk about to somebody who hasn’t worn a headset,” says Darnell. “I wanted to see what we could do with storytelling, and the kind of storytelling I’ve been doing for the last 15, 20 years.”

The questions, though, are endless about the unique grammar of virtual reality — some kind of combination of film and video games. How much should the viewer be a part of a story? How can you lay out a narrative while still giving the viewer freedom to explore? What should these creations be called, anyway?

Chung feels an affinity with the first creators-technicians of cinema, like the Lumiere brothers and Georges Melies: hybrid inventors and storytellers.

Invent

“We’re trying to create this from scratch in many ways,” says Chung. “We’re trying to define this new language in the same way the early film pioneers basically needed to invent new things.”

“We have all this expertise, but we’re not the boss here,” he adds. “It’s virtual reality that’s the boss. Every day she tells you what works and what doesn’t.”

You talkin’ to me? Sorry, not this time.

Robert De Niro bypassed waiting media on the red carpet Thursday night before heading into a Tribeca Film Festival screening of “Taxi Driver” in celebration of the iconic film’s 40th anniversary.

But inside, he introduced the film at the Beacon Theatre as cast and key creators reunited, mocking the famous line of his famous character, deranged driver Travis Bickle.

De Niro reportedly told the crowd every day for 40 (bleepin’) years “at least one of you has come up to me and said ó what do you think ó ‘You talkin’ to me?’”

Director Martin Scorsese, who was a no-show on the red carpet, also attended. Cast members Jodie Foster, Cybill Shepherd and the screenwriter, Paul Schrader, posed for photos and shared memories with reporters about their roles in the film considered by some to be in the Top 100 of all time.

Foster was only 12 but already a Hollywood veteran when she played Iris, a runaway who becomes a kid prostitute. Foster began her career as a toddler in modeling and acting in commercials and had worked with Scorsese, playing delinquent tomboy Audrey in his 1974 “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,” two years before “Taxi Driver” was released.

What did her 12-year-old self recall about the role in Scorsese’s filthy, mid-70s New York City, and of the blood and sex scenes?

“I knew it was great, and I knew that I was excited to work with Scorsese, enough to fly myself to New York and put myself at a hotel in order to play the part,” said Foster, who was raised in Los Angeles. “I knew that it was something worthwhile.”

She called her memories “all good,” except, perhaps, for the platform shoes she had to wear.

“And I didn’t like the hot pants. I was embarrassed to have to walk down the street like that,” Foster said. The film’s frank violence, she added, “today looks like nothing, but was ahead of its time.”

Care, she said, was taken with her on set.

“I remember being fascinated by (makeup artist) Dick Smith mixing all the fake blood together and showing me how he did it and applying all the prosthetics to the different actors,” Foster said. “It really made me love how movies are made. It was a great introduction to all of that.”

In the film, Schrader’s Bickle, a Vietnam War vet, becomes increasing agitated by the violence and sleaze of the city he sees as a night taxi driver. He grows obsessed with a beautiful presidential campaign worker, Betsy (played by Shepherd), as his mental state deteriorates, culminating in a violent shooting.

John Hinckley Jr, imprisoned for attempting to assassinate president Ronald Reagan, was influenced in part by the movie. Foster would not comment about Hinckley.

Shepherd, meanwhile, was in it for the chance to work with Scorsese and De Niro.

“It was one of the best experiences of my entire career,” she said. “We were like a guerrilla film group. We were grabbing the stuff, grabbing the shots, and it was really thrilling.”

So how’d she get the part sought at the time by so many actresses?

“Scorsese called my agent and said I’d like a Cybill Shepherd type, and she said how about the real thing? My agent said, OK Cybill, do your hair, do your makeup but don’t talk, and you’ll probably get the part?”

Schrader’s memories were intensely personal.

 

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