McCann Melbourne invites filmgoers to ‘Feel the film’ with launch of The MIFF Emotion Simulator

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McCann Melbourne is challenging the way films are experienced, with the creation of The MIFF Emotion Simulator for the Melbourne International Film Festival, which kicks off tomorrow.

The MIFF Emotion Simulator will allow Melburnians to physically experience the emotions of a MIFF film, before they see it.

This artistically-lead scientific experiment is a custom-built movie chair, created by advertising agency McCann and produced by AIRBAG, that sees the face of willing participants electro-stimulated to demonstrate the way a movie will make someone feel, before the choose to see it.

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Participants will have 12 electrodes placed on the various major muscles of the face, allowing the simulation of happiness, sadness, disgust, fear, anger, and surprise. Participants can then choose which films from this year’s Festival they’d like to experience. In this way a two-hour film is concentrated into a minute-long experience unlike any other.

A chair-mounted camera films each session creating one-off film clips that can be shared via social media throughout the Festival’s duration, by MIFF itself as well as the participants. These provide a unique facial movie preview for the people of Melbourne to watch to determine what sort of film they wish to watch from the over 370 on offer at this year’s MIFF.

Says Michelle Carey, artistic director of MIFF: “The Melbourne International Film Festival is always looking to push boundaries, and to move our city forward. Because as we all know, movies have the power to move us in ways we never thought possible. And the MIFF Emotion Simulator is an exciting exploration of every human’s emotions. Because no matter what language we speak, we all feel the same things.”

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Says Pat Baron, ECD, McCann Melbourne: “Great film should be felt, not just seen. With the MIFF Emotion Simulator we are allowing people to preview the way a movie will make them feel, rather than simply condensing the plot into two minutes of trailer.”

The emotional journey for each film has been determined through the MIFF Emotion Tracker, which saw the emotions of a range of Melburnians tracked as they watched selected MIFF films while wearing a pulse-rate monitoring Fit-Bit. 

The chair itself builds on the work of Guillame-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne’s 1862 study “The Mechanism of Human Facial Expression”, and is a fresh way to promote the iconic Festival, now in its 64th year.

Melburnians can express interest in participating in a session in The MIFF Emotion Simulator by going to MIFF.com.au/emotionsimulator and registering their name. Places are strictly limited.

The MIFF Emotion Simulator will be located at the MIFF Lounge at the Forum throughout the Festival, which starts on 30 July and runs to 16 August 2015.

Melbourne International Film Festival

Artistic Director: Michelle Carey

General Manager: Amber Sloan

Sponsorship Manager: Nathan Reynolds

Marketing & Communications Manager: Lauren Zoric

Publicity: Asha Holmes Publicity

McCann Melbourne

Managing Director: Adrian Mills 

Executive Creative Director: Pat Baron

Creative Director/Writer: Alex Wadelton

Creative Director/Art Director: Andy Jones

Senior Account Director: Caroline Macmillan

Head of Broadcast: Victoria Conners

Senior Producer: Anne Comber

Assistant Producer: Afrim Memed

Director/Editor: Patrick Jennings

Camera Operators: Anthony Koreny & Jack Murtagh

Camera Assistant: Adrian Ortega

Sound: Jack Mcculloch

Photography: Jay Hynes

PR: Chris Baker

AIRBAG

Executive Producer: Rob Stock

Technologist: Steven Nicholson

Producer: Eliza D’Souza

Art Direction: Illusion Studios