Interviews, News

My Experience Working with Roméo Elvis &Exclusive Interview for Film Convert

Romeo Elvis, Filmconvert, dessert, hollywood, director, olivier hero dressen, los angeles

I had the incredible opportunity of working with Roméo Elvis on the music video for ‘Dessert.’ As part of this collaboration, I also had the chance to sit down for an exclusive interview with Film Convert, where we discussed the creative challenges and breakthroughs during the making of the video.

In my interview for Filmconvert I explain more about the behind the scenes of this music video and how we shot it in Hollywood.

A year ago, I gave an interview for Filmconvert about a music video I directed for Belgian rapper for Romeo Elvis. I almost forget about it when a couple days ago I just found out about it.

Romeo Elvis, Filmconvert, dessert, hollywood, director, olivier hero dressen, los angeles

If you never used filmconvert I invite you to check their website and product:
https://www.filmconvert.com

They also added the link to the music video and the behind the scenes you can discover it all there:
https://www.filmconvert.com/blog/romeo-elvis-x-le-motel-dessert

To this day the music video for Romeo Elvis reach out more than 6 millions views.

Behind the Scenes of Working with Roméo Elvis (Filmconvert Interview):

Olivier H Dressen – The Interview

Give us a bit of detail about yourself – background, profession, how you got into filmmaking and your current role?

Olivier Dressen

I am a director and photographer, currently working between Shanghai, Paris and Los Angeles.

My journey into film-making started with illustrations and comics. In university, I majored in animation and directing. My studies gave me exposure to all aspects of the film-making process, everything from scriptwriting, concept design, character animation, set design to sound recording, editing, special FX and color grading. This was the perfect preparation for a career as a film director.

Tell us about your film – how did it come about?

I had to produce, shoot and direct three music videos for a Belgium rapper within one month in two different countries – China and the USA. My friend Arthur Muller and I brainstormed until we got the idea for ‘Dessert’ and shot it a few days later. ‘Dessert’ was shot in a studio in Los Angeles because we needed a totally controlled environment to match our storyline. Since we only had a day to complete this project, we came up with an idea for an infinite loop, inspired by the retro universe of the Twilight zone.

How did you find out about FilmConvert?

I used to exclusively use a digital scan of 8, 16 and 35mm footage for adding grain to my projects until a friend of mine saw my workflow and told me about FilmConvert. I used it and was extremely impressed by the results and efficiency. Since then I have been using FilmConvert on most of my projects.

Why did you decide to use FilmConvert for this particular project?

FilmConvert is now entirely part of my workflow, generally for adding grain in my footage but this time I wanted to use the LUT extensively.

What was the particular look or style you were going for with your video?

I wanted to emulate the Colorama vintage look on this project, as a kind of tribute to the Twilight Zone and 60’s B movies that I used to love when I was a kid. So FilmConvert was the go-to for me.

Tell us about your workflow. What settings, film stock, camera profiles and tweaks did you use in FilmConvert?

For this, I used a base LUT that I bought from film riot and mixed it with FilmConvert. I like to grade my work in Da Vinci Resolve, I find the software very convenient, it gives me a free control of the color and final tune of the image, especially with the micro panel.
On this specific project, I created a node at the end of my nodal tree with the camera profile set on Arri Alexa (we shot on Alexa Mini). For the film set, we used the Kodak 5207 Vista 3 with a 35mm full-frame sensor, the film color was set at 50% as for the curve, the grain is at 25%.

What other effects or tweaking did you use?

I had to erase a couple of things on some shots, for that, I used the technique of matte painting, paint the face injury on the main character’s face at the beginning but also extended the street in some of the angles where you could see the studio. Usually I also mix 3D objects but, in this case, only 2D elements, I also designed the opening titles based on a font kit purchased on Envato market. All this comes from my old days as an animation director.

Recently gave an interview about my photography work for YouPic, you can read all about it! We also provide another discussion for national TV about the Corona Virus outbreak and another one about our award-winning movie The Passport.

Roméo Elvis
Roméo Johnny Elvis Kiki van Laeken (Dutch pronunciation: [vɑn ˈlaːkə(n)]; born 13 December 1992), better known by his stage name Roméo Elvis (French: [ʁɔmeo

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