{"id":7,"date":"2016-02-17T17:23:19","date_gmt":"2016-02-17T17:23:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/demowp.cththemes.net\/monolit\/?page_id=7"},"modified":"2023-06-12T02:59:26","modified_gmt":"2023-06-12T02:59:26","slug":"home-image","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/artificialexistencefilm.com\/","title":{"rendered":"Home"},"content":{"rendered":"
[vc_row full_width=”stretch_row” cth_layout=”monolit_fullheight_sec” css=”.vc_custom_1625527341975{background-color: #0a0a0a !important;}”][vc_column css=”.vc_custom_1455730804223{padding-right: 0px !important;padding-left: 0px !important;}”][monolit_home_vimeo_video video=”558311201″ quality=”4K” bgimg=”76″][\/monolit_home_vimeo_video][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row cth_layout=”monolit_page_sec” el_id=”sec1″][vc_column parallax=”content-moving-fade” offset=”vc_col-md-4″ css=”.vc_custom_1625592453122{background-position: 0 0 !important;background-repeat: no-repeat !important;}”][monolit_parallax_box][\/monolit_parallax_box][vc_single_image image=”768″ img_size=”large” onclick=”img_link_large”][\/vc_column][vc_column offset=”vc_col-md-8″][vc_column_text]<\/p>\n
LOGLINE:<\/strong> A mother desperately yearns to escape an oppressive dystopian society where humans have merged with machines and life is automated by artificial intelligence, but her family would rather live in technological comfort than escape with her into the unforgiving wilderness.<\/p>\n SYNOPSIS:\u00a0<\/strong>In the not too distant future, humans have merged with machines. Microchip implants have made it possible for everyone to be connected to the internet, and each other, at all times. Talking has become a minor inconvenience, instead people telepathically send messages to one another (TK’ing). The average person now spends more time engaging in a virtual reality than they do their own and when they do engage with reality, it’s augmented. This connection to the digital world runs so deep that disconnecting from the network has become a social taboo. Your whereabouts are to be known and shared at all times. This is a world where every single citizen has every comfort and convenience provided to them. This is the world Evelyn desperately wants to escape. . .<\/p>\n Everyday is the same for Evelyn and is planned out by her A.I. personal assistant. Feeling imprisoned, Evelyn begins to break from her normal routine. She shows up to work late. She stays out at night feeding the homeless (those who refuse microchip implants), which is illegal. As a result, Evelyn is forced to attend mandatory psychiatric treatment. At this point, she decides to escape the system and go live in the wilderness with a rumored commune up north. Evelyn refuses leave without her son, but her husband will not allow her to take him away.<\/p>\n Genre: Science Fiction <\/p>\n With the rapid development of technological progress over the last few years, the world is becoming increasingly more Orwellian in nature. We are gradually slipping from a physical reality into a digital one. I wrote, Artificial Existence, to explore a version of the future where we have allowed technology to control us and every aspect of our lives, but no one seems to notice or care that their freedom and humanity has been gradually traded away for comfort and convenience. One mother sees the dystopian prison for what it is and longs for her and her family to escape it. It is my hope that the film would make audiences more cognizant of some of the potential risks technology threatens us with.<\/p>\n Society seems to act retroactively about technology as we are seeing with social media, and we may not have that luxury over the next generation. It\u2019s not that I am against technology, I believe we have to be careful with how we use it. It can be used to empower or to oppress, to bring us closer or to divide us, and if we are not careful it could easily rob us of our humanity. It seems like many of these issues dealt with in Artificial Existence are being ignored in general and that is what I have attempted to capture and communicate with this film.[\/monolit_parallax_box][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][monolit_our_partners partnerimgs=”747,838,810,830,822,752,770,827,816,601,760,764,791,837,792,751,815,833,857,847,809,836,778,776,796″ css=”.vc_custom_1686538755893{background-color: #0a0a0a !important;}”][\/monolit_our_partners][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row cth_layout=”monolit_page_sec”][vc_column width=”1\/5″][monolit_member photo=”755″ socials=”%5B%7B%7D%5D”]<\/p>\n After earning an acting degree in 2011, S\u00e9 Marie Volk began her film career as a stunt double for Rachel McAdams and Vinessa Shaw. She then transitioned into acting full-time, leading several feature films to major film festivals, including \u201cCareer Opportunities in Organized Crime<\/a>\u201d (South by Southwest Film Festival 2016) and \u201cCareful Not to Cry<\/a>\u201d (Toronto International Film Festival 2017).<\/p>\n In 2020, S\u00e9 starred in a live Zoom play titled \u201cWater Child<\/a>\u201d, which featured an international cast and was critically praised as the first live Zoom theatre production, and she produced\/directed\/starred in an original web series titled \u201cA Very Covid Christmas<\/a>\u201d, which won three 2021 Telly Awards. She was also the winner of the 2020 international Glorioso Casting One Minute Monologue Competition.<\/p>\n S\u00e9 can be seen in the upcoming feature film \u201cUnsinkable<\/a>\u201d about the aftermath of the Titanic, as well as the comedy feature film \u201cMovers Ultimate<\/a>\u201d. She currently studies with The Markland Studio in Los Angeles.[\/monolit_member][\/vc_column][vc_column width=”1\/5″][monolit_member photo=”682″ socials=”%5B%7B%7D%5D”]<\/p>\n Charles started acting as a child and was featured in such films as “Milk Money”, “Striking Distance “, and “Only You”.\u00a0He moved to New York to study at The Neighborhood Playhouse in Manhattan. After the Playhouse, Charles worked on the television shows “Guiding Light” and “The Good Wife” for a number\u00a0of years in various background roles. He also worked on many off Broadway theater productions. The plays “Snake in Frigde” and “No Sex Please We’re British ” being the two he is most proud of.\u00a0After living abroad in Rome, Italy for six years he returned to his hometown of Pittsburgh and has been working on commercials, industrial films, and independent films in the Pittsburgh area. He was also featured in Netflix season two of “Manhunt”.<\/p>\n [\/monolit_member][\/vc_column][vc_column width=”1\/5″][monolit_member photo=”630″ socials=”%5B%7B%7D%5D”]<\/p>\n John D. Marshall is a writer\/director based out of Pittsburgh, PA. Drawing from his diverse background in commercial production and VFX\/post, he released his debut narrative short, Artificial Existence, in 2021 after three years of development.<\/p>\n John is currently developing a feature film and a television project to add to his expanding body of work.<\/p>\n [\/monolit_member][\/vc_column][vc_column width=”1\/5″][monolit_member photo=”40″ socials=”%5B%7B%7D%5D”]<\/p>\n
<\/strong>Running Time: 19\u201931”
<\/strong>Aspect Ratio: 1:2.39
<\/strong>Screening Formats: 2K 5.1 DCP, ProRes.
<\/strong>Sound: 5.1 or Stereo.
<\/strong>Shot on Arri Alexa, 24p, original format 2.8K ANA
<\/strong>Language: English.<\/strong>[\/vc_column_text][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row el_id=”sec2″][vc_column][monolit_images_gallery_masonry galleryimgs=”31,30,29,32,27,19,23,25,22,636,638,640″][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row cth_layout=”monolit_page_dark_sec” parallax_inner=”24″][vc_column width=”1\/2″][monolit_home_image bgimg=”19″][\/monolit_home_image][\/vc_column][vc_column width=”1\/2″][monolit_parallax_box]<\/p>\nDirector’s Statement<\/h2>\n
S\u00e9 Marie Volk – <\/a>Evelyn<\/h3>\n
Charles Mengine <\/a>– Adam<\/h3>\n
John D Marshall<\/a>\u00a0– Writer \/ Director \/ EP<\/h3>\n
Mark Chapman<\/a>\u00a0– DoP \/ Producer<\/h3>\n