The campaign promotes The Field Museum’s current exhibit marking the 120th anniversary of the 1893 Chicago's World's Fair and featuring artifacts from the landmark event. One spot offers an over-the-shoulder view of a boy riding the Fair’s famous Ferris wheel (designed by engineer George Ferris) and looking out across the Exposition grounds. “See what he saw!” exhorts the voiceover, “The wonders of the 1893 World’s Fair.” A second spot shows a similar view of a woman gazing at a mammoth dynamo as an electrical arc causes her hair to stand on end.
AGENCY: DDB Chicago. Karin Rose, Creative Director; Mary Beth Adduci, Creative Director; Nathan Monteith, Creative Director; Warren Frost, Creative Director; Cori Donohoe, Creative Director; Jenny Hoffman, Producer; Polly Poulos, Production Business Manager; Brandon Scharold, Account Director; John Schroeder, Account Manager. PRODUCTION: Filmworkers. Rob Churchill, Director. POST: Filmworkers. Rob Churchill, VFX Director; Lisa Long, Executive Producer.
OddBeast Crafts Powerful Opening Film For Half Rez 2025
When OddBeast landed the opportunity to produce this year’s opening film for Half Rez, the Midwest’s largest celebration of design and motion graphics, the studio approached the challenge by embracing discomfort. The goal was to visually express the collective anxieties of creatives facing an uncertain future as emerging tools and technologies reshape their industries. OddBeast Executive Creative Director Kevin Gautraud took the lead on the project’s vision and 3D animation: “I chose to ground the short in responses particular to fears about making a living in today’s creative fields where the rate of change feels insane at times, overwhelming artists with existential questions. Sometimes, ‘I don’t know’ is the most truthful answer anyone can give,” he said. In creating the film, Gautraud tapped into his own response to such anxieties: a meditation on the vastness of time and our small moment in the light, ponderings that bring him perspective, calm and creative inspiration. Powerful visuals of barren yet eerily majestic landscapes take us back to Earth’s origins, giving way – in the film’s final seconds – to the explosion of life – our blip in the planet’s unfathomable journey. Add the ethereal sound design of Bent Stamnes, and the result is a sense of awe, as everyday problems suddenly seem smaller. “For this project in particular, I was inspired by Carl Sagan and his own personal philosophy. He was awestruck at the grandeur of nature, curious about the origin of life, and humble about the extent of human knowledge,” Gautraud explained. “It's about making people feel small, strange and somehow okay with that.” Gautraud used a range of tools to give his concept life, including... Read More