PES (director)

PES
Born Adam Pesapane
(1973-05-26) May 26, 1973
Dover, NJ
Occupation American Director and Stop-motion Animator
Years active 1998-present

PES (born Adam Pesapane; May 26, 1973) is an Oscar and Emmy-nominated American director and stop-motion animator of numerous short films and commercials. In 2013, his short film Fresh Guacamole was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[1] It is the shortest film ever nominated for an Oscar.[2] In 2016, his commercial for the Honda Motor Co. entitled "Paper" earned an Emmy Award nomination for "Outstanding Commercial of 2016."

Receiving a B.A. in English Literature at the University of Virginia, PES migrated to film as a storytelling medium. His use of everyday objects and stop-motion animation to create original material is instantly recognizable. His work has been recognized in the United States and internationally, especially the short films Roof Sex, KaBoom!, Game Over, Western Spaghetti, and Fresh Guacamole.

He is currently in development on his first feature film, a movie based on the Garbage Pail Kids franchise. However, in 2013 it was announced the film was cancelled. [3] An early influence on PES's animation style is the work of Czech surrealist Jan Švankmajer.

Early Life

PES was born Adam Pesapane on May 26, 1973 in Dover, NJ, the son of an elementary school principal and a hairdresser.[4] The name "PES" is a family nickname deriving from the Italian surname "Pesapane".[5]

PES grew up in an Italian-American household in Budd Lake, NJ and showed an early facility for drawing and painting.[6][7] He attended Delbarton School, one of the nation's top private high schools,[8] where he began exhibiting and selling his artwork.[4]

PES attended the University of Virginia as an Echols Scholar. In 1995 he earned a B.A. in English Literature and wrote his senior thesis on James Joyce's Ulysses. In addition to his English degree, PES studied printmaking throughout all four years of college. He wrote and illustrated his own books, hand printing them using 15th-century techniques, and even made the paper they were printed on by pulping his own underwear.[9][10]

In his senior year at U.Va, PES lived on The Lawn, one of the University's highest honors. He lived at 33 West Lawn, in the room directly above the cornerstone of the University set by Thomas Jefferson in 1817.[11][12]

After graduation, PES moved to New York City where he landed his first job in the creative department of McCann-Erickson, a large advertising agency. He was hired because the agency's creative recruiter liked his portfolio of etchings, woodcuts, and lithographs, even though they bore no relevance to advertising.[13]

Once inside the agency, PES had daily exposure to award-winning commercials, short films, and music videos from around the world and first began thinking about making a film of his own. He cites the work of the Swedish directing collective Traktor, Michel Gondry, and Spike Jonze as influences from this period.[9][14]

In 1998, while still working at the agency, PES made his first film, a live-action short called Dogs of War. Based on a dream PES had about hot dogs being dropped as bombs, the 48-second film "anticipates PES's animation work through the use of absurd humor, placing everyday objects in unfamiliar situations and slick editing that clearly shows the influence of advertising films."[15]

Career

PES's first animated film, Roof Sex (2001), features two life-sized chairs having sex on a New York rooftop. Though only a minute long, the film took 20 shooting days to complete.[16] Having no prior experience with animation, PES taught himself how to animate by doing tests with doll furniture in his NYC apartment.[16] In 2002, Roof Sex won the Best First Film award at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival. Roof Sex was featured at over 100 film festivals worldwide and won numerous awards.[17]

The war short KaBoom! (2004) was instrumental in defining the artist's personal style and approach to animating objects. The film features an atomic airstrike on a miniature city using children's toys and festive objects such as gift bows, Christmas ornaments, and clown-head cupcake toppers. Originally commissioned by Diesel as part of its "Diesel Dreams" advertising campaign which launched in August 2004, KaBoom! was included on a DVD (along with 29 other short films) that was given away in stores worldwide when a pair of jeans was purchased. A "Making of KaBoom!" narrated by PES is available on the director's website and gives insight into the logic behind the object use and selection.

In Game Over (2006), PES recreated classic arcade death sequences (from the games Centipede, Frogger, Asteroids, Space Invaders, and Pac-Man) with familiar objects including muffins, toy cars, insects, pizza and fried eggs. The film was inspired by an interview with Toru Iwatani, the creator of Pac-Man, who said the original source of inspiration for the Pac-Man character was a pizza with a slice missing.[18][19] In July 2016, PES published a newly remastered HD version of Game Over on his YouTube Channel.

In July 2008, PES released his short Western Spaghetti. The film shows PES cooking spaghetti (the hands in the film are PES's[20]) but all the ingredients in the dish are replaced with objects such as tomato pin cushions, rubber bands, Rubik's Cubes, post-it notes, and bubblewrap, and all are brought to life through stop-motion animation. TIME Magazine named "Western Spaghetti" the #2 Internet film of 2008 in its "Top Ten of Everything 2008".[21] The film also won an Honorable Mention at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival [22] and the Audience Award at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival in June 2009.

In Winter 2008/2009 PES launched his own version of the classic Yule Log (TV program), creating a miniature fireplace loop using pretzel logs and candy corn animated in stop-motion. The film is available as a free screensaver on the director's website.

PES has also directed over 60 TV commercials, including spots for Honda (2016 and 2015), Android (2015), Kinder Surprise (2011), Washington State Lottery (2010), Scrabble (2008), Sprint (2007), Sneaux Shoes ("Human Skateboard", 2007), Orange (2006), Bacardi (2005), and Coinstar (2005). The commercial for Sneaux, "Human Skateboard", became an internet phenomenon in 2007, amassing millions of views online. His commercial for Honda, "Paper", received an Emmy Award Nomination for "Outstanding Commercial of 2016" in addition to picking up many advertising industry awards in 2016, including a Gold Lion at Cannes, a Gold Pencil at The One Show as well as The One Show's "Automobile Advertising of the Year Award". It was also selected to the permanent collection at the Musée de la Publicité at the Louvre and the Museum of Modern Art.

In August 2016 a new commercial PES directed for the Honda Ridgeline premiered during the Opening Ceremony of the Rio Olympics. Officially called "The Power of Ridgeline", the spot is the director's largest production to date and features workers (who appear as ghosted blurred streaks) building a massive version of the Honda Logo utilizing materials they brought to the location using Ridgeline pickup trucks. The film was mostly shot in-camera and features a mixture of long exposure photography, stop-motion animation, live-action, and CGI.

In June 2008 Director Michel Gondry was quoted in Paste Magazine as saying "Clicking on a PES film is to open a safe and suddenly see a million ideas glittering and exploding. The only reason you close the door is to re-open it just after and discover what will pop this time."[23]

In December 2010, PES's short "The Deep" premiered in Episode 1 of Showtime Network's "Short Stories" series (PES's films were the source of inspiration for the series).[24] "The Deep" features various metallic objects including old hand tools, nut crackers, calipers, film lenses, faucet knobs, chains, skeleton keys, a bike horn, a belt of bullets, and a piece of a flute that come to life as mysterious sea creatures. The film is an imaginary nature documentary.

In March 2012, PES released "Fresh Guacamole", a follow-up to his stop-motion short "Western Spaghetti" (2008). The film features familiar objects such as grenades, a baseball, dice, x-mas bulbs, a miniature golf ball, and poker chips that are transformed into a dish of guacamole. In January 2013, "Fresh Guacamole" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[1] It is the shortest film ever nominated for an Oscar.[2] The film premiered as part of Showtime's "Short Stories" series online and on TV. Showtime's YouTube posting of "Fresh Guacamole" amassed 3.5 million hits in its first 4 days online. Of the initial idea, PES says "I had the core idea of a grenade as an avocado. Even though this type of grenade is referred to as a "Pineapple Grenade" I've always thought they looked more like avocados. I built the film around this idea, filling in the blanks and ingredients around it."[25] As in "Western Spaghetti", the hands in the film are PES's.[25]

After being nominated for an Academy Award, "Fresh Guacamole" was released along with all the other 15 Oscar-nominated short films in theaters by ShortsHD.[26][27]

On December 8, 2014 PES released Submarine Sandwich, the third film in his stop-motion food film trilogy, and the follow-up film to the Oscar-nominated "Fresh Guacamole". The film is set in an old Italian deli in which all the meats and cold cuts have been substituted with vintage athletic equipment such as boxing gloves (ham), footballs (roast beef), baseball gloves (turkey), hockey gloves (wieners), punching bags, old tube socks and soccer balls (various cheeses). The film depicts the construction of a large Submarine Sandwich in which all the ingredients are non edible items such as slinkys, shredded US currency, viewmaster reels, etc, which are chosen because of their resemblance in some way to the ingredients they represent.

As in Fresh Guacamole and Western Spaghetti the hands featured in the film are PES's. The role of the butcher/deli guy in the film is also played by PES, the first time the director has cameoed in one of his own films. The film was sponsored by the Nikon Corporation (and was shot on the D810 camera) and the remainder of the funding was raised through Kickstarter. PES has stated that he got the idea for the film when he saw a Hobart 410 "Streamliner" deli slicer in an exhibit of industrial design at the Museum of Modern Art and was struck by the image of slicing a boxing glove in it.[28]

On March 12, 2012 Deadline.com reported that PES has been set to direct a feature film based on the Garbage Pail Kids trading card series originally published by Topps in 1985.[3] The film will be based on a story by PES and writer Michael Vukadinovich. Former Disney CEO Michael Eisner is set to produce the film through Eisner's The Tornante Company.

On November 17, 2012 WIRED magazine reported that PES has a second feature film project in development entitled "Lost & Found." Based on an original idea and incorporating the director's signature style, PES is teaming up with and Katz/Smith Productions and the writer Seth Grahame-Smith on story development.[4]

Filmography

Feature Films

Short Films

Commercials

References

  1. 1 2 "Nominees for the 85th Academy Awards", Oscars.org, January 10, 2013
  2. 1 2 "Animation Basks in Oscar Spotlight", The New York Times, January 30, 2013
  3. 1 2 "Michael Eisner’s Tornante Company Behind Feature Adaptation Of ‘Garbage Pail Kids’", Deadline.com, March 12, 2012
  4. 1 2 3 "Meet PES, the Stop-Motion Genius Who Turns Grenades Into Fresh Guacamole", WIRED.com, November 17, 2012
  5. Robinson, Chris. "PES Play", in Animators Unearthed: A Guide to the Best of Contemporary Animation, Continuum, 2010, pg. 57
  6. "PES Talks 'Fresh Guacamole'", AWN.com, February 6, 2013
  7. "Oscars 2013: Budd Lake's PES nominated for best animated short for appetizing 'Guacamole'", NJ.com, February 24, 2013
  8. "How The Schools Stack Up", The Wall Street Journal, December, 2007
  9. 1 2 "Fairly Long Interview with the Director of the Shortest Film Ever Nominated for an Academy Award", in 1985, Jonathan Mayor, 2014
  10. "Oscars: PES aims for a long shelf life with 'Fresh Guacamole' buzz", Los Angeles Times, John Horn, February 23, 2013
  11. Lawn & Range Directory 1895-2016
  12. Timeline of the Founding of the University of Virginia, Monticello.org
  13. "PES: The Deep", Motionographer Interview, 2011
  14. "Oscars: PES aims for a long shelf life with 'Fresh Guacamole' buzz", Los Angeles Times, John Horn, February 23, 2013
  15. Robinson, Chris. "PES Play", in Animators Unearthed: A Guide to the Best of Contemporary Animation, Continuum, 2010, pp. 58
  16. 1 2 "The Making of Roof Sex" by PES
  17. Bio from Ottawa '05 International Animated Festival
  18. "Game Over" interview with PES, The Animation Show, 2006
  19. Original interview with Toru Iwatani, transcribed from Programmers at Work, Microsoft Press, June 26, 1986.
  20. "PES discusses the creation of Western Spaghetti", Digital Arts Magazine, August 1, 2008.
  21. "The Top 10 of Everything 2008", TIME Magazine, December 2008
  22. "Sundance Shorts Awards Announced", January 21, 2009
  23. "Glittering Delight", Paste Magazine, June 2008, p.16
  24. "Showtime SHORT Stories - Trevor Noren / PES Interview", The Reel (UK), January 24, 2011
  25. 1 2 "PES dices with magic", 1.4 magazine (UK), March 2012
  26. "Oscar Nominated Short Films 2013". The New York Times. 2013.
  27. "Fresh Guacamole". The New York Times. 2013.
  28. "PES on Stop-Motion & Making of 'Submarine Sandwich'", ImageChaser.com, December 17, 2014

Further Reading

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