One Night
Framestore’s New York office collaborated with BBH London and multi-Academy Award winning cinematographer Emmanuel ‘Chivo’ Lubezki to create the stunning ‘One Night’ film for Absolut.
The film celebrates humanity’s biggest moments of creativity, starting with the Big Bang and moving through to the modern day. The fundamental idea behind this visually complex and evolving piece was to show the defining moments of creativity that have changed the world.
An intimidating task, but also extraordinarily provocative
The project was a collaborative effort as visual storytelling was intrinsic to the narrative blending CG, archival footage and live-action. There was a wide variety of source material (spanning multiple eras and production processes), and an equally wide variety of tools and techniques used to combine them into a conceptually coherent, frictionless flow. With the final film totalling a weighty 100+ shots, with each and every shot requiring some sort of CG or compositional treatment, Framestore’s artists had a full slate— adding to the mix four fully CG scenes, plus the closing end frame that sees the Absolut bottle suspended in space.
The film starts at the very beginning: with the Big Bang itself. ‘One Night’ starts in a static and quiet place. Then the energy of the blast propels the film forward— a journey through space and time, through the cosmos and all of creation. The sheer scale made the project quite open-ended.
Visual Language and Graphic Unity
As the energy of the blast unfurls, the film forges forward. Motion, sound and pacing were handled with exacting precision by a team of talented editors, whose task it was to create the forward-moving effect for the ad’s viewer. Shooting like an arrow along the Z axis, creating the ‘deeper into the screen’ feeling, the camera’s wide lens framing pushes the effect even further, immersing the audience in our vignettes, whilst maintaining a cinematic unity across the film’s many vignettes. To maintain creative continuity Framestore’s Creative Director and Head of CG Andy Rowan Robinson explains, 'The project leads spent a lot of time with the edit, viewing it as a consistent unit and not simply a collection of shots.'
The camera halts for outstanding moments in time, amidst its rapid array of sequence changes. Key evolutionary and historical happenings are represented, spanning the primitive to the present: the discovery of fire, caveman’s paintings, farming and fishing pave the way for the forefathers (and mothers) of modern discovery. The film is set to 70’s classic ‘Sunny’ by Boney M.
Framestore’s artists worked to create a tactile, participatory feel to the piece, encouraging audiences to feel part of the narrative as opposed to watching passively from afar. Aware that the narrative itself tells the story of all humankind, it was imperative that the audience, too, felt that they were made of the same star stuff.
Our collective journey soon lands promptly in the present, decelerating from its warp speed. Absolut calls for its viewers to project their own visions of the future on the depicted night ahead, throwing open a new world of possibilities in the starry night skies.
Emmanuel ‘Chivo’ Lubezki
Framestore was excited to join forces with Emmanuel ‘Chivo’ Lubezki once again, having won the Oscar for Visual Effects together for Gravity in 2013. Knowing Chivo was on board, Framestore was confident that the final piece would, as ever, be both ambitious and beautiful.
The teams established a process that would allow them to simultaneously fine-tune the look of the film and the execution of the scene-to-scene transitions, whilst collaborating with Chivo to design and compile specific images.
Chivo worked closely with Framestore on how best to convey the continuity of cosmic matter and energy. The creative result is apparent in the edges of the objects and figures within the frame ‘fraying’ a little bit, breaking down. An effervescent halo of molecular matter is seen around the periphery, refracting the light and breaking down into shifting shimmers of color.
Whilst impressive, the aesthetic is still subtle and tangible, like a nebula occurring in reverse. The implication is that everything and everyone is in a constant state of creative transformation, and that nothing is truly fixed. The energy remains the same, but the form it takes is forever in the hands of its users.
Conceptual continuity was also enforced in the positioning of the light throughout the film: always originating from a particular direction, and simply varying in intensity, as we move through space and time. Nothing in the film is ever still; the combination of artistic direction and visuals effects perfected a transition style that maintained the all-important, subjective sense of forward movement, despite the wide-ranging collection of source footage and stills. As Rowan Robinson states, 'The project truly bought elements from the entire Framestore team together—design worked really closely with 3D and 2D and there was a really tight camaraderie.'
Framestore ensured that the finished film maintained its perfect flow through meticulous R&D work with the entire team: continuously reiterating a process of brainstorm, design and test. Once seamlessly assembled and smoothed down, the nuts and bolts of the piece melt away, leaving nothing but pure emotion.
Press
BBH Celebrates History and The Creative Arts for Absolut Vodka - LBB Online
Absolut issues creative call to arms for a better world - Campaign
The story of One Night: how Absolut captured the history of the universe on film - The Drum
Absolut launches new campaign with a film directed by Emmanuel Lubezki - It's Nice That
Emmanuel Lubezki and Framestore Celebrate Creativity - Stash Media
Ad of the Day: Absolut’s Epic New Ad Whizzes Through Time and Space, From the Big Bang to Now - Adweek
Emmanuel Lubezki Directs Absolut's "One Night" For BBH London - SHOOT Online
Absolut and Emmanuel 'Chivo' Lubezki Whisk You Through History at Breakneck Speed - Creativity-Online
ONE NIGHT BY EMMANUEL LUBEZKI FOR ABSOLUT - IA Magazine
Framestore Creates Big Bang In Absolut Film - Source Creative
October 2017 Top Ten VFX Chart - SHOOT Online
SHOOT's Picks For The Best Work of 2017 - SHOOT Online