Peter Gabriel tells us how his life is one big adventure with various stop motion and claymation effects.Peter Gabriel tells us how his life is one big adventure with various stop motion and claymation effects.Peter Gabriel tells us how his life is one big adventure with various stop motion and claymation effects.
- Director
- Star
- Awards
- 2 nominations
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaStrata-cut Clay Animation by David Daniels assisted by Edie Robinette-Petrachi. Graphic designer Wayne White contributed to the creation of the video.
- ConnectionsEdited into Cv (1987)
- SoundtracksBig Time
Performed by Peter Gabriel
Featured review
Higher! "Peter Gabriel: Big Time" is the 2nd part in a trilogy of visually mind-blowing clips started in "Sledgehammer" (1986) and finished in "Steam" (1992), with all the spectacular creations by Stephen R. Johnson. It's hard to top "Sledgehammer" in so many ways but this video has a special place in my heart and to many people out there, even more to those who watched it when of its release back in a time where promotional videos for an artist made not impact but they were part of popular culture of a whole decade.
The technique is the same of the fore-mentioned clips: stop motion, claymation effects and strata-cut animation. Johnson makes a nature's ground turning into ugly monsters and other visually striking combination of effects and concepts. But this time he didn't put more pressure on Gabriel (that first clip had the performer acting and moving very slowly, one small action at a time in order to capture the desired effect, truly a Job's patience). Gabriel isn't much in animation form, he dances and interacts with some of the animation elements. And there's the song, a significant and realistic statement to the excesses of human life with its constant need for getting more and more from anything. It's all about getting bigger, better, faster, more and higher!
And the images beautifully portrayed here follow such intentions: Gabriel's entrance in this tiny house where his gigantic head and diminutive body occupy the whole window frame echoing the line "the place where I come from it's a small town, they think so small, they use small words" and countless of other images. The song isn't so right on the nose with its critique neither the video with its colorful frames. But the intention is right there for curious and wiser minds to see and that's what transforms "Big Time" into one of the most intelligent, captivating and memorable video clips of all time. A perfect combination between sound and image. 10/10
The technique is the same of the fore-mentioned clips: stop motion, claymation effects and strata-cut animation. Johnson makes a nature's ground turning into ugly monsters and other visually striking combination of effects and concepts. But this time he didn't put more pressure on Gabriel (that first clip had the performer acting and moving very slowly, one small action at a time in order to capture the desired effect, truly a Job's patience). Gabriel isn't much in animation form, he dances and interacts with some of the animation elements. And there's the song, a significant and realistic statement to the excesses of human life with its constant need for getting more and more from anything. It's all about getting bigger, better, faster, more and higher!
And the images beautifully portrayed here follow such intentions: Gabriel's entrance in this tiny house where his gigantic head and diminutive body occupy the whole window frame echoing the line "the place where I come from it's a small town, they think so small, they use small words" and countless of other images. The song isn't so right on the nose with its critique neither the video with its colorful frames. But the intention is right there for curious and wiser minds to see and that's what transforms "Big Time" into one of the most intelligent, captivating and memorable video clips of all time. A perfect combination between sound and image. 10/10
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- Mar 28, 2017
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Filming locations
- Soho, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(Animation Studio)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $300,000 (estimated)
- Runtime5 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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