Advertisement

Adelaide reality studio shines across globe

Having won a major award for its work on a ground-breaking virtual reality documentary, Monkeystack is helping put the local VR industry on the international stage.

Aug 08, 2022, updated Aug 08, 2022
A team from Monkeystack filming the footage for virtual reality documentary "Thin Ice VR". Photo: supplied

A team from Monkeystack filming the footage for virtual reality documentary "Thin Ice VR". Photo: supplied

Monkeystack, an Adelaide game design, experience and animation studio, picked up a win in the Best Virtual Reality category at the monthly Los Angeles Film Awards last month.

Based out of Glenside, the studio won for its work on Thin Ice VR, a 23-minute documentary. The short film follows Tim Jarvis as he retraces the coast-to-coast journey of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.

The documentary, which also picked up a gong at the Cannes World Film Festival, shows the viewer how climate change has impacted the region following Shackleton’s voyage 100 years ago.

Monkeystack’s chief business officer, Rhys Sandery, said the award not only validates the project but also puts South Australia VR industry on the map.

“This journey started in 2018 around a discussion in a kitchen and us putting a whole lot of equipment and a whole lot of people on a boat to Antarctica,” Sandery said.

“In documentary filmmaking, you send production crew away, and then they come back with a whole lot of memory cards, and you work out what film you’re going to make. There is a lot of hope in documentary filmmaking, the award validates that.

“It also helps us open doors and start conversations and from a future production point of view, it puts South Australia on the map as a place that can produce world-class work.”

Once relegated to game arcades, virtual reality is becoming a burgeoning industry in South Australia which now has a string of companies developing immersive experiences.

Local studios aren’t only developing VR for games and film, but corporations and sporting clubs are looking for a new way to engage with staff and fans.

“I think that we have an excellent and growing screen-based industry here,” Sandery said.

“What we have in South Australia is a very supportive and supported screen-based industry, and as a studio that has been around for a long time, like Rising Sun Pictures and KOJO, we’ve tried to form that industry.

“Rather than being a bunch of disparate companies who are competing over the same resources, as an industry, we’ve tried to be a bit more generalist, and therefore provide a lot more employment opportunities to South Australian people so they can stay in South Australia.”

InDaily in your inbox. The best local news every workday at lunch time.
By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement andPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The studio got off the ground in 2004 with a workforce of about three people. Monkeystack now employs more than 20 people, with that swelling to about 60 depending on what projects they have in the pipeline.

Upcoming projects include animation for new series “Koala Man”, Disney’s 20th Television animation for Hulu, and a training module for Australian Electoral Commission staff.

The studio will also finish producing its three-minute 3D animated film “Hike”, which was named a finalist for the Unreal Engine Short Film Challenge.

The short film touches on grief and growth by telling the story of a hiker who retraces a path he and his mother used to follow to scatter her ashes.

Sandery called VR an “empathy machine” that allows the user to have a first-person experience.

“Putting the audience member as a participant in the story is where you get so much connection and engagement and empathy because they feel that they’ve experienced it, not just watched it,” he said.

“Virtual reality films are a very new medium for people and shared VR experiences, in terms of something that you can go to a museum or a cultural institution with a group of people and share an experience is something which is another evolution of cinema.

“You had a standard cinema screen, and then everyone went big with IMAX, which was immersive, and now they’ve taken an IMAX screen and wrapped it all around you in a VR headset.

“I think to the audience, there is a certain amount of novelty to it, and there’s that attractiveness of technology – it’s just a cool thing to do.”

Local News Matters
Advertisement
Copyright © 2024 InDaily.
All rights reserved.