Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Interactiv­e films are festival’s latest sensation

- Christophe­r Lawrence PARK CITY, Utah

In 1994, “Reality Bites” caused a stir at Sundance. In 2017, it’s virtual reality. Over the past few days, VR has dropped me in the middle of 1862’s Battle of Antietam and in the living room of a gay man as he’s being disowned by his family. At Sundance, you can even become a tree if you’re so inclined.

“VR in this past year has really accelerate­d,” says Miles Perkins, vice president of marketing communicat­ions for Jaunt VR. “It was a little bit of a niche thing in years past. … It’s turned into a real industry. And this year is probably larger than I’ve ever seen it with VR filmmakers — filmmakers who are dedicated and specifical­ly doing things just in VR.”

Jaunt debuted “My Brother’s Keeper,” an offshoot of the PBS series “Mercy Street,” which follows two brothers fighting on opposite sides of the Civil War. More than 150 Civil War re-enactors were used to film “My Brother’s Keeper,” and

several of them crawl right up in your face as they die. You can practicall­y feel the intensity of the battle.

Jaunt also premiered “Bashir’s Dream,” a mix of live action documentar­y filmmaking and animation that tells the story of Qusai Bashir Masaama, a 14-yearold Syrian refugee living in Jordan, who was shot in the back by a sniper while he was on his way to buy candy.

Other virtual reality standouts at Sundance include the Synesthesi­a Suit, a full-body exoskeleto­n-style suit with 26 sensors to provide as much sensation as possible while playing the video game “Rez Infinite” or experienci­ng the psychedeli­c sounds of “Crystal Vibes.”

In August 2014, Daniel Ashley Pierce recorded the audio of the verbal and physical abuse heaped on him by his conservati­ve parents as they were kicking him out of the house because of his homosexual­ity. That audio is the soundtrack to “Out of Exile: Daniel’s Story,” which lets participan­ts experience Daniel’s hurt and pain in 360 degrees.

And a three-hour wait accompanie­d “Tree,” a haptically enhanced virtual experience by artists Milica Zec and Winslow Porter that follows the life cycle of a rainforest tree.

“You start as a seed, you burst through the ground, and then all of a sudden when you start getting branches, you realize that your arms are branches,” Zec says. “You can move them, and your body’s a trunk. You get to witness what unfortunat­ely way too many trees go through today in rainforest­s.”

Much like “Chasing Coral: The VR Experience,” in which you can watch the Great Barrier Reef dying off as a result of warming oceans, “Tree” is part of the festival’s The New Climate program focusing on environmen­tal issues.

“What we thought with this piece is not to have the standard climate change piece where we are telling some statistics and scaring you,” Zec says. “We actually want you … to see it from the perspectiv­e of nature. There are no words in this piece. You just get to be a tree. And we thought maybe if we evoke emotions through that, if you connect with the tree, maybe you’ll get to feel more for climate change.”

 ?? ENHANCE GAMES/COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? The Synesthesi­a Suit, a full-body exoskeleto­n-style suit, includes 26 sensors to provide as much sensation as possible while playing the video game “Rez Infinite” or experienci­ng the psychedeli­c sounds of “Crystal Vibes.”
ENHANCE GAMES/COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE The Synesthesi­a Suit, a full-body exoskeleto­n-style suit, includes 26 sensors to provide as much sensation as possible while playing the video game “Rez Infinite” or experienci­ng the psychedeli­c sounds of “Crystal Vibes.”
 ??  ??
 ?? COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? “Chasing Coral: The VR Experience” takes you underwater to show how the Great Barrier Reef is dying off as a result of warming oceans.
COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE “Chasing Coral: The VR Experience” takes you underwater to show how the Great Barrier Reef is dying off as a result of warming oceans.
 ?? COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? “Out of Exile: Daniel’s Story” lets participan­ts experience a man’s hurt and pain in 360 degrees as his family disowns him because of his homosexual­ity.
COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE “Out of Exile: Daniel’s Story” lets participan­ts experience a man’s hurt and pain in 360 degrees as his family disowns him because of his homosexual­ity.
 ?? LEO HAMELIN/COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? “We actually want you … to see it from the perspectiv­e of nature. There are no words in this piece. You just get to be a tree,” says Milica Zec, one of the creators of “Tree,” a virtual experience that follows the life cycle of a rainforest tree.
LEO HAMELIN/COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE “We actually want you … to see it from the perspectiv­e of nature. There are no words in this piece. You just get to be a tree,” says Milica Zec, one of the creators of “Tree,” a virtual experience that follows the life cycle of a rainforest tree.

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