Welcome to Optimism

Nokia N8 ad innovators: the dragonfly love project

Dragonfly Love was shot entirely on a Nokia N8 smartphone by director Thomas Hilland. Editing and some special effects were done separately but everything else was done on the N8 and the remote controlled dragonflies are real, as are the large, hairy Norwegian gentlemen in bizarre costumes.

Screen shot 2010-10-24 at 17.20.30
Wieden + Kennedy's new campaign for the Nokia N8 celebrates the hackers, modders and innovators who take Nokia technology and do cool and surprising things with it. Previously on this blog we've shared the N8 TV spot, which features a number of such projects.  We’ve also shown in more detail some of the projects featured in that TV spot, such as Ji-Dong Yim's dancing Nokia robot phones, Professor Daniel Fletcher's Cellscope and the record breaking 'Dot' stop-frame animation film made using the same technology, electronic graffiti and an innovative skateboarding game. Here’s another such project: Dragonfly Love. Regular W2O readers may have seen the post about the shoot in Norway. Here’s the finished film.

Dragonfly Love – The Film from The Dragonfly Love Project on Vimeo.

This was shot entirely on a Nokia N8 smartphone by director Thomas Hilland.  Editing and some special effects were done separately but everything else was done on the N8 (which comes with 12 megapixel camera, Carl Zeiss optics, Xenon flash, HD-quality video recording, Dolby surround sound) and the remote controlled dragonflies are real, as are the large, hairy Norwegian gentlemen in bizarre costumes. Music is by Kap Bambino.

Here’s a short making-of film that shows how it was all done.

Making of Dragonfly Love from The Dragonfly Love Project on Vimeo.

how Wieden + Kennedy’s ‘Dot’ broke a world record for Nokia

Mark mccall

Above: W+K's Mark McCall and friend

This is Mark's article from this week's Campaign magazine.

Take me back to when I was 14 and I can still hear the cheery chirp of Roy Castle telling me that if I want to be a record breaker 'dedication's what you need'. However, my repeated attempts to cram 'just one more' marshmallow into my mouth came to nothing. I also discovered that sitting in a bath full of baked beans for seventy-three hours isn't as easy as it looks.

But who'd have thought that 20-ish years later I'd get another crack at a World Record. Roy was right. You do need dedication. And in my case you also need a brave Nokia client, a talented art director called Richard Dorey, and a brilliant collaboration with Aardman. It all came about as part of the launch campaign for the Nokia N8. The campaign aims to humanise tech through the thinking that 'it's not technology, it's what you do with it'. This manifested itself as a celebration of amazing, innovative things that have been achieved with Nokia phones.

One of the gems discovered was the CellScope. The brainchild of Professor Fletcher, it's a microscope attached to a Nokia mobile phone. Fantastically simple, yet it's helping to diagnose malaria and save lives in third world countries. A nurse can take a blood sample in a remote village, capture the magnified cell image, then send it anywhere in the world for instant diagnosis. Genius. So we wanted to do something special to celebrate it.

We decided to try and create the world's smallest film using the same CellScope technology. And shoot it all on the new N8. A worthy test for its Carl Zeiss lens and 12 mega-pixel capabilities. Early stages of pencil chewing threw up ideas like blood cell 'Pong'. But then Aardman's Will Studd and Ed Patterson introduced us to the insane capabilities of 3D prototyping. Dot was born. The ridiculous truth is that Dot was a mere 4mm tall initially. But her dinky features weren't forming properly. After a few growth spurts, which took her to 9mm, she was just about ready for her curtain call. 

Just another 275 hours for wardrobe and makeup to go. Seem excessive? Maybe not when you realise that there were actually 150 Dot's – 50 replacement poses, each with three stand-ins in case she broke a leg during her performance. The irony. And it saddens me to say that limbs were lost. And a head. After days of building the epic 1.5 metre set, Dot's adventure eventually began. And if you've seen it, you'll know that she runs for her life as her world unravels, then prevails by knitting the unravelling wave of destruction into a cosy blanket.

I, and all involved are very proud of what she's achieved. Not only has she helped to launch a new Nokia smartphone, conquered a menacing wave, and travelled round the globe. She also holds the Guiness World Record for the 'Smallest Stop-motion Animated Character in a Film'. Who knows, I might be on a roll. Something's telling me to pop to the nearest supermarket and buy a big bag of marshmallows.

Mark McCall

More info on the making of 'Dot' in the video below:

Loading