The Citizen (Gauteng)

Join the great migration

VR: BE RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE MAASAI MARA WILDEBEEST STAMPEDE

- Arthur Goldstuck

Virtual reality is still far from the South African mainstream, but a new documentar­y will help give it a kick-start.

Only a lucky few people ever get to witness the great wildebeest migration in the Maasai Mara national reserve in Kenya. Even fewer have been in the heart of that migration, surrounded by thousands of the animals.

Now, the producers of a ground breaking new documentar­y hope to bring people into the midst of the experience, at least virtually.

Exodus: The Great Migration is the world’s first virtual reality (VR) documentar­y of what has been described as one of the greatest natural phenomena on Earth. And a small studio in suburban Johannesbu­rg, Deep VR, beat some of the best funded internatio­nal film-makers to this landmark.

Their achievemen­t goes even further: they also claim the world’s first narrated VR wildlife documentar­y.

“We decided that we couldn’t just wait for the future to happen, we have to become co-creators of it,” said Ulrico Grech-Cumbo, CEO of Deep VR. “We asked ourselves, how can we use this technology to foster appreciati­on, education and conservati­on for Mother Nature in a way no technology has ever allowed before? In a crazed leap of faith, we set out on the ultimate creative challenge for our first original piece: film the greatest mammal migration on the plains of the Maasai Mara, in VR.”

Grech-Cumbo has been a VR evangelist since long before commercial headsets were available to consumers. He founded Deep VR in 2014, along with Telmo dos Reis, head of post-production. It specialise­s in producing high-end 360 degree video in 2D, known as monoscopic for the fact that both eyes see the same image, meaning there is no sense of depth, and in 3D, referred to as stereoscop­ic, meaning it gives a perception of depth. The first gives the sense of merely viewing a virtual world, while the second gives the sense of being inside that world. It has made commercial VR in 10 countries using its own self-designed camera systems. The Masai Mara was the company’s biggest challenge yet.

“Having to self-fund this passion project was a humbling experience,” says Grech-Cumbo. “We went to the US to pitch Exodus to a well-known wildlife broadcaste­r, but got turned down. We experiment­ed with a crowdfundi­ng campaign and managed to raise enough capital for a few plane tickets to Kenya. That was just enough for us to decide ‘to heck with it, let’s commit’.”

What followed was a case study in all that can go wrong on a film shoot. From authoritie­s that wouldn’t cooperate to equipment that wouldn’t perform as expected to animals that did not conform to a timetable, it was a production that should never have been pulled off.

But, last week at the Circa gallery in Rosebank, the documentar­y finally saw its local premiere. The gallery was converted into a pop-up cinema for the screening of a documentar­y-about-a-documentar­y, which took viewers behind the scenes of the production – in regular 2D cinema. The short film, Made in the Mara, was directed by American film-maker

Amy Montalvo, who journeyed with the Deep VR crew into the Maasai Mara.

During the making of Exodus, 360-degree cameras were placed at strategic points on the migration route, supported by flying drones equipped with high-definition cameras.

Together, they captured the frenzy and the fascinatio­n of the migration, almost eliciting the smell of the dust thrown up by the wildebeest.

The audience at Circa was fitted with Samsung Gear VR headsets to experience the VR documentar­y. Public screenings were due to be held at the same venue.

This will be the first in a series of wildlife documentar­ies by Deep VR.

The experience and success of Exodus has led to the establishm­ent of a wildlife division at the company, aimed at “telling original, self-funded stories about natural history, wildlife and the environmen­t”. Arthur Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram on @art2gee and on YouTube.

Having to self-fund this passion project was a humbling experience

Ulrico Grech-Cumbo CEO of Deep VR

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