Computer screen movies, commonly called screenlife films, might initially feel like the next iteration of the found footage genre. Rather than being someone's videos from their phone or camera, it's ...
Do you remember the first time you saw a light saber? Or what about being eye-to-eye with a T-Rex? Did you cry when Andy said good-bye and drove away from Woody and Buzz? Did you reach out to touch ...
We’ve become so used to our computer operating systems that their interfaces are as common a sight as bus stops or office cubicles. With most of our work becoming remote, phone meetings were replaced ...
Firmly established in the digital age as its own genre, Screenlife comprises movies taking place in their entirety on computer screens. A real pioneer in this medium is filmmaker-producer Timur ...
Featuring technology as a central part of your narrative is a gambit. Movies are inherently bound to the technology available at the time of production, yet oftentimes in the past they have wanted to ...
Since the dawn of the technological age, the film and television industry has been mining the world of computers for narrative gain. While some tech narratives depict the industry in a relatively ...
The 1980s were the heyday of “computer movies,” from WarGames to Weird Science to Tron. Personal computing was ubiquitous, but still new enough to be used as an anything-goes plot tool without being ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results