Otago Daily Times

‘Utterly spontaneou­s’ film makes the grand final

- FIONA ELLIS fiona.ellis@odt.co.nz

IT is certifiabl­y the strangest film in the city, possibly even the country.

The tale of a job seeker traversing the multiverse has made the 48Hour Film Festival grand final, after winning the newly introduced ‘‘incredibly strange’’ category in the Dunedin City Finals last week.

PolyFuture­s InCorporat­ed is the creation of fourperson team Te Whare Raiona.

University College deputy warden and film editor Chris Jacobs said the film was an ‘‘utterly spontaneou­s’’ creation that nodded to films such as

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and Everything Everywhere All at Once.

In the film a woman undergoes a job interview for a multiverse company.

‘‘Various versions of herself from other universes come and tell her what she’s supposed to be doing, and she has to decide what’s the right thing to do.

‘‘They tell her a bunch of conflictin­g informatio­n,’’ Mr Jacobs explained.

Editing was challengin­g, as the 48hour timeframe did not allow for a perfection­ist approach.

This was compounded by the multiverse storyline which had about 14 different versions of the main character, with up to four versions appearing onscreen at the same time, he said.

He and teammate UniCol subwarden Jamii Kingston had entered the competitio­n before.

However, it was an ‘‘amazing’’ debut effort for the team’s two other members, UniCol resident Tom Walsh and Carrington Residentia­l

College resident Odin Jacobs — Mr Jacobs’ son.

‘‘You just can’t do it yourself, it’s not a solo project.

‘‘It’s amazing to work together and really put something on the screen that resonates,’’ Mr Jacobs said.

PolyFuture­s InCorporat­ed also made the city finals for best use of genre, best editing and best use of required element (whisper) categories.

It felt ‘‘really, really good’’ to be awarded the ‘‘incredibly strange’’ certificat­e and be in the running in the national finals, he said.

‘‘When our names came up for the incredibly strange [award], we were all shouting and screaming and stuff.’’

The grand final will be held in Auckland in November, an event the group will watch via livesteam.

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Behind the lens . . . Te Whare Raiona team members (from left) Odin Jacobs, father Chris Jacobs, Tom Walsh and Jamii Kingston are finalists in the 48Hour Film Festival grand final.
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON Behind the lens . . . Te Whare Raiona team members (from left) Odin Jacobs, father Chris Jacobs, Tom Walsh and Jamii Kingston are finalists in the 48Hour Film Festival grand final.

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