Cannes XR & NewImages Create Joint Metaverse for 2022 Festivals

Film festivals have really come along leaps and bounds over the past couple of years when it comes to connecting with audiences via immersive worlds. Cannes XR has been one event at the forefront of these changes, previously collaborating with Tribeca Immersive and NewImages Festival on XR3 in 2021. Today, Cannes XR and NewImages Festival have announced a new partnership, launching a dedicated metaverse later this year called Alexandria.

CannesXR Alexandria

Built in collaboration with virtual space specialist Kreis, Alexandria has been conceived around the idea of a virtual port, a hub where guests can head out to enjoy the immersive works on offer. Over 30 VR works will be presented in Alexandria during the two festivals, with the inaugural Cannes XR event to take place in May whilst NewImages will be held a month later.

Accessible only through virtual reality (VR) headsets, Alexandria will serve as a common metaverse for both festivals. Previously, these sort of virtual exhibition spaces have been temporary, built for a festival and then taken down, much like the physical events they represent. Alexandria is going to be different as its job will be to host immersive events throughout the year.

“We’re delighted to participate in creating this truly inspiring virtual environment in partnership with NewImages Festival and Kreis. Opening in May, this futuristic world will host our Cannes XR exhibition which will showcase today’s most impressive VR artworks, carefully curated by our partner VeeR,” said Guillaume Esmiol, Co-Executive Director of Cannes’ Marché du Film in a statement.

Tribeca - MOR
XR3 2021 inside Museum of Other Realities

“We are very happy to renew our partnership with Cannes XR by launching a more ambitious project, which makes these virtual works accessible in a world without borders,” adds Michaël Swierczynski, Director of NewImages Festival. “Alexandria is both a shining light on the horizon of immersive creation and the home base for future ‘metaverses ‘ in art and culture.”

Alexandria will be compatible with SteamVR and Meta Quest headsets, with the Cannes XR exhibition taking place from 17th-28th May 2022. The NewImages Festival will run from 8th-12th June. Cannes XR will be free to both public audiences and professionals whilst access to the NewImages Festival exhibition requires accreditation.

For continued updates including which VR works will make the selection, keep reading gmw3.

Museum of Other Realities XR3 Exhibition: A Clear Vision For VR Film Festivals

This week, the Museum of Other Realities launched its XR3 exhibition — a joint project between Cannes XR, the NewImages Festival and the Tribeca Film Festival. Not only does the exhibition feature some fantastic immersive VR content, but it presents it in a way that feels fresh, appropriate and the right direction for VR film festivals.

With more and more immersive content appearing in film festival lineups over the last couple of years, there have a few attempts to create a cohesive immersive festival experience. However, it feels like the Museum of Other Realities (MOR) has properly cracked the code with its XR3 exhibition this year. It’s a joint exhibition staged by the virtual museum and three organizations — Cannes XR, NewImages and Tribeca — and it results in something that feels like a true vision and creative blueprint for the future of immersive festivals.

XR3 exhibition museum of other realities

The focus of XR3 is allowing discovery of immersive festival content in a seamless and accessible way — a task in which it overwhelmingly succeeds. It’s the best structure and presentation of any immersive VR festival content I’ve seen to date.

Each immersive experience comes in its own separate app that runs independently from the MOR app on your PC. In the past, redeeming codes, downloading individual experiences and switching apps with no cohesive hub could make some immersive festivals feel a bit disjointed. MOR’s XR3 exhibit circumvents these problems by installing an entire festival selection as DLC, and then allowing you to discover them in a festival hub within the museum.

Everything is handled by MOR, including switching between experiences and apps, without the need for you to remove your headset. The idea of a festival world or hub has been done before, but XR3 feels like the best version to date and should be the standard going forward.

Each festival is given it’s own wing in the museum, pictured above, with portals on either wall that lead to introductory rooms for each experience. Each room is customized by the creators to thematically fit with their experience, and features a glowing blue shaft of light in the center, pictured below. When you touch the light, MOR will load up the experience’s app and move you into the standalone experience, without you having to do anything. Likewise, once it’s over, you’re sent back to the museum, right where you left off.

It’s a elegant solution, executed perfectly. More importantly, it brings the immersive festival experience closer to how we experience art in real life, while still also preserving the uniqueness of VR as a platform.

XR3 Festival Access, Pricing and Dates

In terms of pricing, festival passes are available to purchase for $15 each on Steam as DLC content for the Museums of Other Realities app. Without the DLC pack installed, you can still walk around the festival area, but any attempt to start the content will be met with a prompt to buy and/or download the DLC festival pass content first. If you’re downloading all 3 festival selections, it comes in at a hefty 60GB add-on to the regular museum app, so leave time for downloading.

Only the NewImages and Tribeca selections are available at the moment. They’ll be around until June 20, after which XR3 will shut down briefly. On July 6, it reopens with access to the Cannes XR portion of the exhibit until July 17. To make the festival more accessible and encourage participation, the base Museum of Other Realities app is available for free until July 20 (usually priced at $20). If you redeem it now, you’ll be able to keep the app and retain access to the museum after XR3 is over as well.

XR3 Museum of other realities

XR3 Tribecca and NewImages Impressions

We had a chance to check out some of XR3 a few days early. I haven’t been able to try everything due to time constraints, but what I did try was quite compelling. More than ever, experiences seem to be honing in on elements that are unique and elevated by the VR medium. Many also seem to be finding the right balance between interactive elements and passive viewing — an area I’ve previously found to be a precarious tightrope that some fail to walk.

Madrid Noir

A personal highlight was Madrid Noir, available as part of Tribeca, which was already on my radar before the festival. This latest immersive experience from Atlas V (the same group behind the Colin Farrell-narrated Gloomy Eyes) is a delight. It follows a young girl Lola, living in Madrid in the early 20th century, as she investigates the strange comings and goings of her uncle as he travels across the city at night.

madrid noir xr3

Directed by James A. Castillo, Madrid Noir truly stuns from a composition and visual perspective. Some sections are staged and presented like theater — encouraging passive viewing — while others are framed and set up in a manner closer to a traditional video game, often requiring you to interact with the environment as the story plays out around you. The animation and artwork is superb and aesthetically delectable, while the story keeps things simple but nonetheless intriguing. Overall, it does feel a little on the long side at around 45 minutes, but there’s an intermission about two thirds of the way through, so you could break it up into two sessions if need be.

My experience was marred by quite a few consistent visual bugs — some objects would only render in one eye from certain angles, and moving my head often messed with a scene’s lighting effects. I can’t say whether the glitches were unique to my experience or whether they’re a common occurrence.

Despite this, it remained an enjoyable ride and is a fantastic experience overall.

Jailbirds

Jailbirds VR

Jailbirds is another fascinating experience on offer, available as part of both the NewImages and Tribeca selection. Directed by Thomas Villepoux, it’s a short immersive film, roughly 5 minutes, with very little interactivity. Following two cellmates who are paid a visit by the prison’s warden, Jailbirds features a breathtaking and creepy aesthetic that looks almost like it was all drawn with a lead pencil. The experience is short, intimate and quite unsettling at times — highly recommended.

Marco and Polo Go Round

Marco and Polo Go Around

Another fantastic experience from the NewImages selection is Marco and Polo Go Round, directed by Benjamin Steiger Levine. It follows a frustrated couple through a 10-15 minute conversation navigating their complicated relationship. As time goes on, things start getting weird — the conversation continues but the gravity of objects in the room begins to invert. Things go flying up to the roof in what feels like a metaphor for the chaos of the still-continuing conversation.

This creative imagery and storytelling feels so appropriate to witness in VR, taking proper advantage of the different ways we can experience narrative in the medium. There’s no interactivity here either, but it’s not to the experience’s detriment — the dialogue is well-written and, along with the increasingly wacky environmental antics, it keeps your interest throughout. To cap it all off, it uses a beautiful, soft watercolor-like aesthetic that fits the melancholic mood perfectly.

If you’ve got time, give Marco and Polo Go Round a look.


Will you be checking out the XR3 exhibition at the Museum of Other Realities? Let us know what your favorite experiences are in the comments below.

Don’t Miss Cannes XR, Free This Week In Museum Of Other Realities

The Museum of Other Realities is free to visit until Friday this week as part of the Cannes XR festival, which features a huge selection of artworks and pieces of XR content created across several mediums.

If you’ve never visited the Museum of Other Realities (commonly referred to as the MOR) before, then there’s never been a better time to pay it a visit. Not only is the museum free until this Friday, but there’s a huge display of different XR artworks as part of the Cannes XR festival. The festival itself ran from June 24 to June 26, with some live events taking place. However, the pieces of art selected for the festival are on display until this Friday.

When you enter the museum, you’ll be greeted by a red carpet and some big Cannes XR graphics to mark the event. Heading inside, you’ll find immersive movies, explorable environments, artworks created in Tilt Brush, and much more. With many of the 3D artworks, the Museum lets you teleport inside them and explore them at the intended scale, which is a neat feature.

I spent some time walking around and exploring earlier today, and found some really interesting and creative pieces that could only work in virtual reality. If you’re interested in groundbreaking new forms of art, you’ll want to take a look for yourself.

Be aware though — some of the Cannes XR artworks are additional downloads separate from the base museum, available as DLC on the Steam page. When you add them all up, the download size can be as large as 60GB. If you’ve got a slow connection, you might want to put aside some time to download all the content in full.

The Cannes XR festival is available to view for free in the Museum of Other Realities on Steam until July 3. You can read more about the selected artworks on the Cannes XR site.

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Museum Of Other Realities To Present 55 XR Works For Cannes Festival Program

As previously reported, the Marché du Film – Festival de Cannes’ XR program takes place next week from June 24 to 26 and now we have even more details about the events. 55 pieces will be available for viewing in the Museum of Other Realities for free, alongside other events and programs.

After the Cannes Film Festival was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the organizers have instead decided to run an online event for their XR program, which starts next week. Everything takes place inside the Museum of Other Realities (MOR), which VR headset owners will be able to access for free during the event between June 24 to June 26. Everything will also be available for replay until July 3, if you miss the events live.

The program will see 55 XR pieces displayed in the Museum of Other Realities, selected by the Tribeca Film Festival, VeeR VR and Positron. A panel of professionals will judge the work and two prizes will be awarded at 9pm on June 26. The Tribeca Virtual Arcade will also be hosted within MOR, featuring 12 VR and MR experiences and 2 panel discussions. The Cannes XR Development Showcase will also take place, which will highlight 23 in-development projects from 14 different countries, including 6DoF and 360 video projects, augmented reality projects and real time installations.

If you’re unable to attend the events in VR, industry professionals who were registered before June 14 will be able to access a 2D stream that will be broadcast on the Marché du Film website.

All in all, there’s a lot of interesting stuff going on. If you want a proper breakdown of the program and scheduling, head over to the Marché du Film website.

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Museum Of Other Realities To Host Cannes XR Virtual Program In June

Announced this morning, the Museum of Other Realities will co-host the Cannes XR Virtual festival next month. Originally planned as a physical event as part of the Cannes Film Market (the business counterpart to the Cannes Film Festival), all of the program will now be moved to an online setting.

The Cannes Film Festival is the latest in a string of events that have been canceled or moved to an online format due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. This year, the festival was planning to launch a new immersive and augmented reality program. However, the new program will now pivot to take place entirely online, in a collaboration with the Museum of Other Realities.

Titled Cannes XR 2020, the event will run across June 22-26 and feature a variety of different panels, presentations and events, made available online through 2D live video streams. There will also be a showcase of XR and VR projects on offer, which will be selected by the Tribecca Film Festival and available to experience for three days.

“After having prepared for a promising edition in Cannes, where for the first time we would have expanded the VR to the Palm Beach, we had to reinvent Cannes XR and find a way to put it online,” said Cannes Film Market Executive Director Jérôme Paillard to Variety. “It has been possible to build a totally new concept where we will be able to show worldwide, and with optimal quality, the VR experiences that we were expecting to show in Cannes.”

The Cannes XR Festival has some prominent figures confirmed for events, including Todd Shaiman, Head of Immersive Arts at Google, Colum Slevin, Head of Media, ARVR Experiences at Facebook, Ishita Kapur, Director, Mixed Reality Content and Partnerships at Microsoft and more.

More information and the full line-up is available on the Cannes Film Maret (Marcé du Film) website.

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