360 Film ‘Dinner Party’ is a Symbolic Exploration of Race in America Wrapped in an Alien Abduction Story

laura-wexler
Laura Wexler

Dinner Party is an immersive exploration of Betty and Barney Hill’s widely known 1961 alien abduction story that premiered at the Sundance New Frontier film festival. Rather than using normal alien tropes, writers Laura Wexler & Charlotte Stoudt chose to use the spatial affordances of VR to present a symbolic representation of each of their experiences to highlight how vastly different they were.

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charlotte-stoudt
Charlotte Stoudt

Betty and Barney were an interracial couple in New Hampshire, and their purported encounter with aliens was a positive peak experience for Betty, but Barney had an opposite experience that Wexler & Stoudt attribute to his experience as a black man in the early 1960s. Inspired by passages of Barney’s hypnosis recordings posted online, Wexler & Stoudt expanded Hill’s story into an immersive narrative at the New Frontier Story Lab, and collaborated with director Angel Manuel Soto to bring this story to life in a 360 film.

Dinner Party is the pilot episode of a larger series called The Incident, which explores the aftermath of how people deal with a variety of paranormal or taboo experiences. Wexler & Stoudt are using these stories to explore themes of truth and belief such as: Who is believed in America? Who isn’t? What’s it feel like to go through an extreme experience that no one believes happened to you? And can immersive media allow you to empathize with someone’s extreme subjective experience without being held back by an objective reality that you believe is impossible?

Dinner Party is great use of immersive storytelling, and it was one of my favorite 360 experiences I saw at Sundance this year. It has a lot of depth and subtext that goes beyond what’s explicitly said, and I thought they were able to really use the affordances of immersive storytelling to explore a phenomenological experience in a symbolic way. It’s a really fascinating exploration of radical empathy using paranormal narrative themes that you might see in the The X-Files or The Twilight Zone, and I look forward to see what other themes are explored in future episodes.

Here’s a teaser for Dinner Party


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The post 360 Film ‘Dinner Party’ is a Symbolic Exploration of Race in America Wrapped in an Alien Abduction Story appeared first on Road to VR.

RYOT’s Virtual Reality Short Dinner Party Heads To Sundance

Virtual reality’s (VR’s) role, or should that be potential role, in the film world has always been a topic of conversation ever since the first modern commercial line of VR head mounted displays were announced. How would it change film? How would film shape VR? What parts of the creative process would evolve and what new previously unthought of ways could directors and producers find themselves telling stories.

Sundance_Header2Whilst VR was certainly a topic during 2014 and 2015 it was in 2016 that we first saw things begin to take off and VR became not just a talking point but became a feature of film festivals. Now in 2017 discussion about VR is common place and having it at said festivals is an expected part of its make-up. Be it RaindanceSundance, the Vancouver International Film Festival or the Venice Film Festival.

VR film has also had notable success in 2017, with Legendary Entertainment’s VR installation winning an honourary Oscar for Carne Y Arena

Today however it is RYOT who have an announcement. The Verizon owned creators of VR and other film media revealing that this year’s Sundance Film Festival is set to feature two world premieres from the studio – one of which will be in VR. Appearing as part of the VR Showcase, Dinner Party follows the tale of Betty and Barney Hill and their experience in 1961 which led to the first reported UFO abduction. After a mysterious event occurs the Hills are left with gaps in their memories and at a subsequent dinner party are placed under hypnosis to find the truth. But what is revealed no one could have expected.

Made by RYOT in conjunction with both Skybound Entertainment and Telexist, Dinner Party also acts for the pilot for a new series of VR shorts called The Incident, which charts true to life stories of strange occurrences and paranormal events.

 

The other non-VR film is On Her Shoulders, which follows the story of Nadia Murad, who was thrust onto the world’s stage after escaping the genocide being perpetrated by ISIS in her country.

Co-Founder of RYOT Bryn Mooser was particularly pleased about having not one but two items attending the festival. “We couldn’t be more excited to plant our flag at Sundance, with our feature documentary On Her Shoulders and our VR short Dinner Party. Between the two projects, you get a glimpse into the future of RYOT – working with top talent and technology to tell stories that move the world.”

“It’s an honor to premiere On Her Shoulders in competition.” Added Producer Hayley Pappas, “A proud and humbling moment to see this film come to life alongside a world-class roster of documentaries.”

VRFocus will be bringing you more news, features and interviews on the various film festivals throughout 2018.