99 Dollar Music Videos
Ray Tintori Interviewed on We Love You So
Spike Jonze-directed "Where the Wild Things Are" has a pretty fantastic blog called We Love You So. It's full of tangentally related movie items and downright cool stories and factoids inspired by the artists and creators who inspired the movie. They recently interviewed music video director Ray Tintori and it was too good not to pass along to you guys.
An excerpt:
Did you learn a lot by doing these videos over the past two years?
Yeah, I just got a lot more set experience. They’ve all been on really different scales: that Chairlift video was like 00, and the Killers video was, I think, 0,000. And everything in between. I definitely like knowing that I can handle a production on all these different scales of professionalism. I learned a lot about actually being a director.
We tried to make every video in a completely different style than the previous ones, and that’s been really fun. Each one of them was set up with a formal challenge in mind. With the Cool Kids video, we moved the camera a lot, and then on another video we’d have a completely locked off camera, and just to try to make it work. Or, we’d have a lot of really long shots. On “Kids,” we tried to shoot it really, really boring without a lot of extreme camera moves. Sort of like an 80’s horror film.
It's a great read so head on over to get the full text!
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