Fifty People, One Question: Brooklyn
General | Movie
Saturday, January 24th, 2009 by Christian, No Comments

After 23 years of brain-aided communication, the much admired and much copied studio The Designers Republic closed for business on Tuesday. Read the whole story here. Via

Renkman already said it: There is a new best burger joint in town – a sure shot! And you can even buy ‘food stock’ from them.

Architects Zandbelt&vandenBerg designed an outstanding villa located at the edge of the dunes in the Hook of Holland, the Netherlands.

The National film Board of Canada (NFB) has opened up its vault with more than 700 films, clips and trailers. From entertaining shorts and cartoons to documentaries – they’re all there for free, with more being added every week.
Maripolarma is a polaroid excursion of the 80s in New York. Vernissage at Sevenstar Gallery Berlin, Friday, 30th Jan. at 9 pm.

With QuadCamera you can take continuous shooting. Just pressing a button, it proceeds to take 4-8 serial shoots and create one image. AppStore
The Sundance Film Festival will put Ten Short Films online. For free. Via

After the appearance of the Imperial Forces’ vanguard last week, the boss has now landed in a black Ariel Atom. I hope they launch some Snowtroopers or Biker Scouts in the next few days.

Photographer Simon Hoegsberg from Denmark just released his latest work We’re all Gonna Die – 100 meters of existence which is a photography at the size of 100 m x 78 cm. Via
Directed by Michelle Lehman, last year’s Tropfest Australia winning film, Marry Me, tells a little love story about a little girl who likes a little boy and a little boy who likes his BMX bike. The film was inspired by a true story when director, Michelle, at 5 years of age, would chase Jason Mahooney around the school in a pretend wedding dress (her mother’s nightie).

Unique motion design by K. Ulrich Schneider for his bachelor project at the University of Applied Sciences in Darmstadt, Germany. Via

The Lightlane system from Altitude Inc. projects a virtual bike lane using lasers on the ground around the cyclists, providing drivers with a recognizable boundary they can easily avoid. The idea is to allow riders to take safety into their own hands, rather than leaving it to the city. Via