Kevin Parker and his backing band for Tame Impala perform at a rose-tinted wedding reception in the new video for “Lost in Yesterday.”
Directed by the duo Terri Timely (Ian Kibbey and Corey Creasey), the clip shows the same wedding reception played over and over again with more extravagant details each time around, culminating in the characters rebelling against a false memory.
Tame Impala will release their new LP, The Slow Rush, on February 14th, and will embark on a North American tour in support of the LP with Perfume...
Directed by the duo Terri Timely (Ian Kibbey and Corey Creasey), the clip shows the same wedding reception played over and over again with more extravagant details each time around, culminating in the characters rebelling against a false memory.
Tame Impala will release their new LP, The Slow Rush, on February 14th, and will embark on a North American tour in support of the LP with Perfume...
- 1/30/2020
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Why Watch? Because sometimes things that don’t make sense are the only things that make sense. Landon has talked about cinematic synesthesia before (the creation of a sense impression relating to one sense by stimulation of another sense). Smelling colors and seeing sounds make for a troubling neurological disorder, but the phenomenon can be seen in film too. Perhaps it can’t be seen more vividly than in the aptly-titled short film from Terri Timely (the pseudonym of directing pair Ian Kibbey and Corey Creasey). A family goes about their nightly routine. A mother cooks a swath of newspapers into an origami turkey, a father sits down to eat a good book, a boy records the colors that LPs smell like to him, and another hooks up the available produce to the loud speakers. What comes out is insane and truly incredible. This is imagination working over time. What Will It Cost? Just...
- 4/30/2011
- by Cole Abaius
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Probably the easiest-to-explain example of the brain-wire crossing neurological concept of synesthesia is when somebody associates (and sees in their brain) certain colors with numbers. But it doesn't stop there - essentially, synesthesia is when the stimulation of one sensory/cognitive pathway leads to another automatic experience in another sensory/cognitive pathway. Which is a mouthful! But Terri Timely's (who are two men, Ian Kibbey and Corey Creasey) impressive short film turns that concept into an audio/visual feast for the eyes. They have a real gift for composition and color; every frame of the short looks great, and is immediately strange and engrossing. It's a short that will warp your mind - pleasurably - for a few minutes. Enjoy! Synesthesia from Terri Timely on Vimeo. Bonus: St. Vincent, 'Actor Out of Work' Terri Timely first came to our attention via their video, 'Actor Out of Work,' for the musician St.
- 9/22/2009
- TribecaFilm.com
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