The film will premiere online at on Friday, May 18, 2018. Even though it's this sexy provocative new thing, it's use is to serve the story." I just wouldn't be able to tell this story without the tech. Perian concludes, "I resist the idea that this project puts me in the tech world. Perian's production company, Pome-granate Films, has seen interest from both studios and major tech companies in acquiring the tech-nology as well as further exploring its narrative possibilities. The technology used for eye-tracking and story cutting creates a potential film industry game changer. These tracks were then plugged into a custom-built algorithm that turns the five separate perspectives into a seamless experience that looks and plays like a traditional movie. The project was directed by Perian, who shot the film in Oregon over the course of four days, then edited by Alex Hall (The Wire, True Detective) into five distinct narrative tracks. To create it, Perian partnered with Crossbeat New York, who developed the eye gaze detection and machine learning that power the story's algorithm. The film's tech joins a rapidly growing sphere of experience customization, most commonly algo-rithmic profiling that drives everything from the targeted ads we see online to the echo chamber of political news we receive. We were sitting in a very long, very difficult edit and someone said, ‘Man, I wish we could just edit this thing with our minds. He wanted to make a film with the psychological interactivity of a video game but without a controller. But three years ago he got a big idea that required a tech solution. But watching something is still making decisions, and what the viewer decides to pay atten-tion to ultimately drives the action. Armen Perian is a filmmaker, not a tech guy. ![]() "I loved the idea of bringing game theory to film, but I wanted to preserve a cinematic experi-ence, even though you're watching it on your computer," says Perian. The result is "The Angry River," a short film starring Jim Beaver (Deadwood) and Brooke Smith (Bates Motel) that uses eye-tracking technology to gauge who the viewer looks at and where their eyes linger, then edits itself into one of five possible storylines, each crafted to the viewer's inter-est. "We were sitting in a very long, very difficult edit and someone said, 'Man, I wish we could just edit this thing with our minds.' It was totally off-the-cuff but the idea stuck with me." New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Armen Perian is a filmmaker, not a tech guy. ![]() Top 100 Greatest Hip-hop/Rap Singles Of All Time.
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