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The Craft Behind the Commercial: How Tabletop Connects Physics With Creativity

The Craft Behind the Commercial: How Tabletop Connects Physics With Creativity

Culture Culture, Original Content, Studio 5 min read
Profile picture for user Elnaz.Bahrami

Written by
Elnaz Bahrami
Business Lead Tabletop & Food Solutions

Fruit falling into a bowl of yogurt

Whenever someone tries to understand what exactly it is that we do within the field of marketing and advertising, I say the following: imagine if you’re working with an actress, it’s very likely that she will smile when you ask her to smile. Now, imagine your actress is a strawberry. If you ask the strawberry to wiggle and jump gracefully into a bowl of fresh yogurt, what do you think our star of the show is going to do? Exactly, absolutely nothing—because as much as we love this sweet, summery fruit, food is simply not a team player. That’s why every tabletop director needs technical engineers who understand both film and physics, and thus can help make the creative’s wildest imagination come true.

In the field of tabletop, which typically refers to the shooting of objects in great detail, products such as food, drinks, cosmetics or other liquids serve as the actors. But because they don’t live, talk or respond to our cues, we need our technicians on set to make the products move in the ways that our tabletop directors want them to. Using specialized equipment, our engineers can work their magic on said strawberry to not only let it wiggle, but do so perfectly timed and in focus. In other words, every day we have to fight gravity on set to keep our actors in control—all to tell a tasty-looking story that resonates with the audience. Let’s take a look at how.

Appealing to the audience takes tickling the right taste buds.

For the purpose of this piece, let’s focus on the shooting of food, keeping the strawberry in mind as the hero of our campaign. It all starts with defining the taste appeal of a brand and its product. With every client, our team’s goal is to help them translate their brand strategy into food imagery with the aim to create distinctive taste appeal—and there are various routes to arrive at this destination, each with their own expressions and associations. 

“We help brands build recognizable and earnable taste appeal, for instance through tools such as movement,” says our Film Director Catherine Millais. “Should the product move in an explosive or elegant way? Should it breakdance or do ballet? Should it jump, hop or only ever fall? When you’re thinking about how you’re going to present the food to a consumer, those are the types of questions that you have to ask, so that you can start defining a set of visuals for your design, sonic rules for your sound, and behavioral rules for your product.” 

It’s important to keep in mind that food is inherently cultural, social and emotional. As such, the visual language of food products is constantly in flux—it reacts to geography and changing sociocultural attitudes, to what’s happening in popular culture, and even to technological advances. As filmmakers in marketing and advertising, it’s crucial to be sensitive to the changing aesthetics of food and the different ways in which taste appeal can be delivered. In fact, it allows us to view taste through new lenses. Above all, it helps us understand how our clients can establish their own take on deliciousness.

Enter the scene: our toolbox of taste, which we’ve developed for our clients to understand how we can play with various elements to determine the taste appeal of a product. Various tools help us define this, such as movement, camera speed, sound, setting, or even food styling, just to name a few, all of which we have readily available at our studio. Our first job is to sit down with the brand’s marketers and make sure we translate the brand voice and creative brief into a commercial that’s in tune, impactful and tasty-looking. 

The main challenge is how to stand out in a sea of deliciousness. The first thing that will make your commercial distinctive is the creative concept. The second is how you leverage the tools at hand—and this is where our SFX specialists come in.

Need to cause a controlled explosion? Just call our SFX team.

The special effects are a critical part of a tabletop shoot. Our SFX specialists control the motion of the objects we are filming, like the automatic release of liquids or the explosions of products—all with millisecond precision. Each movement has to happen in the exact same place each time so that it’s always in focus. Try telling that to the strawberry that’s meant to jump onto a creamy bed of yogurt.

Before our specialists can start testing and setting up any effects, they first need to understand the director’s vision. Our SFX Specialist Jesse Dermout tells me that “a director’s idea can be quite abstract, which can make it hard for me to understand what exactly they’re after. Once we’ve talked it through and we’re aligned, it’s a matter of finding the right tools to get the desired effects. For slow movement, for instance, I would use an electric motor that’s programmed to do very precise steps, while for something more explosive, I would use pneumatics, which is pressurized air to blow stuff away with.” 

In essence, our SFX team provides support to our directors and other engineers on set, like our robot operators, which makes the special effects work both creative and technical. “Though my role is mostly technical, the creative side of it is thinking about how to make effects work in a ‘film’ kind of way, meaning that it has to be maneuverable, the movements have to be very small, and there can’t be too many things in frame,” says Dermout. In other words, SFX is about getting past the boundaries that film itself poses, like lighting, the set, the frame and so on—all the while making sure the effects work. 

The way to realize this is through rigorous testing. Once the director’s creative brief is locked and loaded, our SFX specialists do test after test after test—then conducting stress analyses, creating rigs in modeling software, 3D printing prototypes and testing out the physical version of a rig—until they finally get the director’s brief to work in practice. Safe to say, it takes not only a solutions-oriented mind and an eye for detail to be an SFX specialist, but also lots of patience.  

Robotics, the strawberry on top.

Without specialized equipment, such as our custom-made rigs to move materials in specific ways and our high-speed cameras, tabletop wouldn’t be possible. But there’s one more tool that our team can’t do without: our robot. Tabletop requires you to get each element under control, and motion control is key. Mo-co refers to computer controlled motion and can be used to move the camera, the object you are shooting, lighting or all of the above simultaneously. In tabletop, this gives us repeatable and precise accuracy and speed, which helps, since it often comes down to the millisecond. A robotic mo-co arm can travel smoothly at a speed of 1 meter per 0.5 seconds, meaning that you can repeatedly follow your wiggly strawberry and move the camera around the fruit as it falls. 

A human hand will never drop something in the exact same place and at the exact same time. So, you have to limit all your variables to not only achieve a certain effect, but do so in focus, in the right way and at the right moment. You're engineering a product to do something that it wouldn't naturally do, which is a challenge in itself. But people in the field say the real challenge is fighting gravity, because tabletop is where creativity and physics meet. Fortunately, our team of food creatives, directors, engineers, editors and producers is tight-knit and trained to work closely together, from exploring taste identity with a brand’s marketers, to using high-end equipment to deliver delicious and distinguishable commercials—and all the messy moments (literally) in between.

Get a behind the scenes look at how our Film.Monks achieve deliciousness when providing tabletop solutions for some of the worlds biggest brands. tabletop production film production VFX commercial film Studio Original Content Culture
A blue butterfly
Too much to ask video title card

Too Much To Ask • Saving the Planet One Stream at a Time

  • Client

    Justdiggit

  • Solutions

    StudioOriginal ContentArtists

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Inspiring a call to action

Grassroots organization Justdiggit believes in the power of nature to cool down the planet and works to regreen degraded land in Africa to positively affect our world’s climate. As part of Justdiggit’s “Stream to Regreen” initiative, proceeds from participating artists’ tracks streamed across a number of platforms—including Spotify, YouTube and XITE—are donated to the regreening effort.

So when internationally acclaimed record producer, musician and songwriter Don Diablo and Ty Dolla $ign wanted to inspire and empower people all over the world to fight global warming, they released the “Too Much To Ask” video in support of Justdiggit’s mission. And that’s why, in partnership with Havas Group, we worked behind the scenes to make the coolest music video possible—using the most innovative VFX techniques on the planet.

A woman lying down with a blue butterfly over her nose
A person walking with a pick axe that has a butterfly on it

Painting the future green

Our goal was to extend the world we know into the not-so-distant future, to create a true-to-life vision of what our land and our world would look like if we don’t take care to regreen our planet. To elicit a deep connection with our audience, we sought to convey the emotions of our protagonist through the use of lighting and colors. VFX is how we brought that vision to life. We reached into our arsenal of production capabilities: rotoscoping shots by hand, inserting sky replacements and adding depth with shadows. For fully CGI shots, we sculpted digital landscapes from scratch to fit seamlessly into the video's futuristic aesthetic.

Through rigorous compositing and color grading, the music video looks just as good as it sounds—dazzling EDM fans and helping to cool down the planet in the process. Released in June 2021, Don Diablo & Ty Dolla $ign’s “Too Much To Ask” video accumulated over seven million streams in just a few short months, resulting in 280,000 square meters of restored land—and counting.

Monk Thoughts With the help of our ambitious video effects team we changed almost every shot with digital technology to bring to life this magical film.
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A person falling in the air
A person lies with their eyes closed

Xibalba • An Epic, Filmic Journey into the Underworld

  • Client

    Victoria Cerveza, Ogilvy

  • Solutions

    StudioOriginal ContentArtistsImmersive Brand Storytelling

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Celebrating an ancient Mexican tradition.

Día de los Muertos is an important holiday in Mexico, in which friends and family come together to honor and pray for loved ones who have passed. Every year, Victoria Cerveza celebrates the holiday by paying tribute to ancient traditions of indigenous Mexican culture, including Aztec, Mayan and Nahuatl. For the second in a series of annual films, we partnered with the brand, Ogilvy and film director Salomon Ligthelm to take viewers on an epic journey through Xibalba, the Mayan conception of the underworld.

A person stands in the middle of a crowd
A masked monster stares in the dark

A tribute to Mayan myth.

According to Mayan myth, entering Xibalba is no easy task; one must overcome a series of trials before reaching eternal rest. Our film follows the recently deceased Ikal as he is greeted by Ah Puch, the God-King of Death, who leads him into the depths of the underworld while a parallel story shows his family mourning his death and praying for a successful passage. Shot in several locations throughout the state of Yucatán—home of the Mayan people—the film is a visually moving odyssey through farewells and reunions, told against the backdrop of traditions and the perils of the underworld.

In sights and sounds, spirits come alive.

Taking viewers on a sublime journey into the underworld was the culmination of several skills across our multidisciplinary team. Our in-house team of employees handled both production and post production, including VFX work that brought the spectacular sights of Xibalba to viewers. A dramatic original score penned by our musical employees further drove home the emotional resonance of the story. “It’s always a pleasure working with a truly collaborative team of people on amazing creative,” said Salomon Ligthelm, the film’s director. 

Finally, we built Mexico’s Biggest Offering, a WebGL experience that invites people to step down a candlelit path bordered by virtual ofrendas, or altars dedicated to the deceased. Visitors could visit each altar to pay their respects, and even set up one of their own in memory of a loved one who has passed. The companion experience thus invited people to engage with the traditions of the holiday and wish the dead a successful journey to the other side.

Our Craft

A cultural experience gone virtual.

  • Xibalba website title
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  • A person lays on their back with hands held on their back
  • Upload a photo screen from Xibalba website
  • An altar with a photo of a person and candles lit around it

Results

  • 24x Circulo Creativo Awards

  • 1x FWA

  • 1x Shots Award

  • 3x El Ojo Awards

  • 2x Effies

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Repensar la Producción con VFX

Repensar la Producción con VFX

3 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

Repensar la Producción con VFX

Los últimos meses han planteado desafíos completamente nuevos para las marcas y, a medida que la situación continúa desarrollándose, no hemos visto un mejor momento para reenfocar la publicidad en entregar valor real y reactivar la obsesión del cliente. “Es el momento de comenzar a pensar en los escenarios de cómo tu negocio y tu marca vivirán en un mundo diferente,” dice Wesley ter Haar, Fundador de MediaMonks. Han surgido enfoques innovadores de producción en todo el mundo mientras que muchas marcas siguen adelante, a medida que el cambio hacia lo digital se vuelve cada vez más inevitable, pensando en un momento posterior al COVID-19.

El VFX nos Transporta a Otro Mundo

Para MediaMonks, hemos actualizado nuestro enfoque tradicional para filmar con nuevos formatos (incluido nuestro nuevo estudio de filmación seguro y desinfectado), pero además, hemos continuado trabajando a través de otros tipos de producción tradicionales que se mantienen dentro de las pautas de seguridad locales por la naturaleza misma de ser digital. Una de estas experiencias visuales se creó el año pasado entre nuestras oficinas de la Ciudad de México y Ámsterdam, para dar vida a una pantera de ocho metros de altura hecha de material similar al pedernal, una entidad hecha de humo, entre muchas otras cosas, para recrear el inframundo maya en “Xibalba” para la marca de mexicana Cerveza Victoria.

En “Xibalba”, seguimos a nuestro protagonista en un viaje emocional a través del inframundo, donde lucha contra seres míticos en una mundo fantástico para tener la oportunidad de encontrarse con sus seres queridos una vez más. Este escenario exigía la creación de varios elementos visuales que, para lograr su máximo efecto, sólo podían hacerse a través del arte de efectos visuales.

Desde el primer momento, uno de los principales desafíos para el equipo de VFX fue crear todos los elementos visuales en solo diez días. “Necesitábamos pensar en una forma de trabajar de manera muy eficiente sin comprometer la calidad, para poder adelantarnos a la curva y hacer varias revisiones al día,” dice Okke Voerman, VFX Lead de MediaMonks. “También hubo tomas con algunas simulaciones de humo sin tiempo para hacer muchas iteraciones. Al conectar a nuestro artista de Houdini con uno de nuestros compositores de efectos visuales, colocamos muchos renders para obtener el humo que queríamos.”

Pero ese no fue el único desafío. La pieza, rodada en la Península de Yucatán en México, hogar de la antigua civilización maya, fue producida y editada en la Ciudad de México, mientras que el tratamiento con efectos visuales tuvo lugar al mismo tiempo en Ámsterdam.

“Trabajar desde diferentes oficinas en todo el mundo puede ser muy desafiante. Para que funcione, debes buscar los beneficios que puede aportar y centrarse en ellos,” explica Voerman. “Al tener a nuestro equipo de producción de efectos visuales en Ámsterdam y nuestros productores trabajando directamente con el cliente en México, tuvimos más horas en un día de lo normal.” Entonces, en lugar de trabajar solo ocho horas al día, combinamos nuestro trabajo en diferentes zonas horarias para lograr un día laboral de 16 horas que de otra manera sería agotador. Nuestros equipos en dos continentes trabajaron en conjunto para crear a tiempo un film de alta calidad.

3-Xibalba-Victoria

Nuestro film que promociona la computadora portátil convertible HP Dragonfly fue otro tour-de-force colaborativo, que involucró a varios socios galardonados que trabajan juntos en todos los continentes, entre ellos The Mill, una galardonada casa de efectos visuales cuyo trabajo también abarca films. Los efectos especiales y la belleza de la película sirven como testimonio del valor de una colaboración cercana y rápida entre equipos que no están restringidos por el espacio físico.

Una Oficina Cerrada, Un Mundo Abierto

Debido a que las compañías de producción globales, que trabajan en televisión, películas, contenido experimental y otros tipos de contenido visual, tienen que cerrar o dejar de trabajar debido a los efectos económicos de la pandemia, las marcas están comprensiblemente preocupadas por cómo pueden continuar produciendo contenido. Pero los nuevos e innovadores métodos de producción y la estrecha colaboración digital les permiten eludir las limitaciones comunes.

A medida que las marcas se adaptan a trabajar en medio de la pandemia, este espíritu de colaboración e innovación se convierte en la clave del éxito. Desde la producción virtual y CGI hasta la postproducción de contenido preexistente, hay muchas formas en que las marcas pueden continuar su producción sin perder el ritmo. “Durante esta pandemia global, hay muchas limitaciones físicas que hacen que las filmaciones sean muy desafiantes,” dice Voerman. “En la postproducción, no las tenemos.”

Desde la producción virtual y CGI hasta la postproducción de contenido preexistente, hay muchas formas en que las marcas pueden continuar creando películas para llegar a sus clientes. Repensar la Producción con VFX No permitas que las limitaciones físicas impidan que tu marca cree increíbles experiencias audiovisuales.
films producción audiovisual postproducción TVC contenido audiovisual VFX efectos especiales CGI animacion Covid-19

(Re)Think Production with VFX

(Re)Think Production with VFX

3 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

Repensar la Producción con VFX

Recent months have brought up all-new challenges for brands, and as the situation continues to unfold we’ve never seen a better time to refocus advertising on delivering real value and reactivating customer obsession. “It’s the time to start thinking about the scenarios for how your business and your brand will live in a different world,” says Wesley ter Haar, MediaMonks Founder. Innovative production approaches have arisen throughout the world as many brands continue to “keep moving” – as the shift towards digital becomes increasingly inevitable, speaking to a time post-COVID-19 as well. 

VFX Transports Us to Another World

For MediaMonks, we’ve updated our traditional approach to shooting with new formats (including our new safe, sanitized shoot studio) but additionally, we’ve continued work via other established types of production that remain within local safety guidelines by the very nature of being digital. One such visual experience was created last year between our Mexico City and Amsterdam offices to bring to life an eight-meter high panther made of flint-like material, an entity made of smoke, among many other things, to recreate the Mayan underworld in “Xibalba” for Mexican beer brand Victoria Cerveza.

In “Xibalba,” we follow our protagonist on an emotional journey through the underworld, where he fights mythical beings in a fantastical setup for the chance to meet with his loved ones once again. This scenario demanded the creation of several visual elements that, to achieve their full effects, could only be done through VFX artistry.

From the get-go, one of the main challenges for the VFX team was to create all the visual elements in just ten days. “We needed to think of a way to work very efficiently without compromising quality, so we could stay ahead of the curve and do multiple reviews a day,” says Okke Voerman, VFX Lead at MediaMonks. “There were also shots with some heavy smoke simulations without the time to do a lot of iterations. By connecting our Houdini artist with one of our VFX compositors, we layered many renders to get the smoke that we wanted.”

But that was not the only challenge. The film, shot in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, home of the ancient Mayan civilization, was produced and edited in Mexico City, while the VFX treatment took place at the same time in Amsterdam. 

“Working from different offices around the world can be very challenging. To make it work, you need to look for the benefits it can bring and focus on those,” explains Voerman. “By having our VFX production team setup in Amsterdam and our client-facing producers in Mexico, we had more hours in one day than normal.” So instead of working just eight hours a day, we combined our work in different time zones to achieve an otherwise exhausting 16-hour workday. Our diverse teams in two continents worked together to create a high-quality film in time.

3-Xibalba-Victoria

Our film promoting the HP Dragonfly convertible laptop was another collaborative tour-de-force, involving several award-winning partners working together across continents – among them being The Mill, an award-winning VFX house whose work touches feature films. The film’s special effects and beauty serve as a testament to the value of close, speedy collaboration between teams that are unconstrained by physical space.

A Closed Office, An Open World

With global production companies – working in TV, film, experiential and other visual content – having to close or otherwise stop work due to the economic effects of the pandemic, brands are understandably worried about how they can continue producing content. But new, innovative production methods and close digital collaboration enable them to bypass common constraints. 

As brands adapt to working through the pandemic, this spirit of collaboration and innovation become key to success. From virtual production and CGI to post-producing pre-existing content, there are many ways that brands can continue their output without missing a beat. “During this global pandemic, there are a lot of physical limitations which make shoots very challenging,” says Voerman. “In post production, we don’t have them.” 

From virtual production and CGI to post-producing pre-existing content, there are many ways that brands can continue creating films to reach their customers. (Re)Think Production with VFX Don’t let physical limitations prevent your brand from creating amazing audiovisual experiences.
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