Wave Twisters is a 2001 American animated film directed by Eric Henry and Syd Garon and based on DJ Q-Bert's album of the same name. It is known as the first turntablism-based musical. It is a mix of live-action, computer graphics, and cel animation.

Wave Twisters
DVD cover
Directed byEric Henry
Syd Garon
Screenplay byDoug Cunningham
Syd Garon
Eric Henry
Story byDJ Q-Bert
Produced byYogafrog
Edited byRodney Ascher
Kim Bica
Syd Garon
Eric Henry
Carol Lynn Weaver
Music byDJ Q-Bert
Distributed byThud Rumble
Release date
Running time
46 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$250,000[2]

Plot edit

A crew of heroes is determined to save the lost arts of hip hop: break dancing, graffiti, MCing, and DJing from total extinction. The lost arts are being oppressed throughout inner-space by lord Ook and his evil minions the Chinheads. DJ and dentist The Dental Commander, graffiti artist Honey Drips, robotic MC Rubbish, and breakdancer Grandpa have a series of adventures, synchronized to the music. Armed with the ancient relic known as the Wave Twister (a small turntable/wristwatch, the only weapon powerful enough to defeat the enemies), they travel to the far ends of inner-space for a final confrontation with the sinister army of oppressors. The film ends with the team teaching the liberated the lost fundamentals of hip hop.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film is entirely scripted to match the DJ Q-Bert recording. It was produced digitally using Adobe After Effects and a relatively small team of animators, who used Apple PowerMac G3 computers.[2][3] The film spent three years in production.[4] DJ Q-Bert wanted to make videos for his music without sacrificing his street influences. At the same time, he wanted to highlight the underground elements in hip hop culture.[5][6] Sources for the images used in the film include NASA and old cartoons. Other influences include Shaft, Star Trek, Bullitt, and Lost in Space.[2]

Release edit

The film has had several different premieres, each of which debuted a new cut of the film.[2] After the showing at Sundance Film Festival, DJ Q-Bert self-distributed the film and released it on home video without any copy protection.[3][4]

Reception edit

Vibe called it "a Saturday-morning cartoon gone street".[4] Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote, "A dazzling sensory-overload goof, animated featurette Wave Twisters pays parodic homage to sci-fi actioners in terms as densely layered as its visual and sonic textures."[7] Harvey states that more staid audiences may not get the film, but it will appeal highly to the MTV generation.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Comerford, Will (2001-01-16). "DJ Q-Bert Scratches His Way to Sundance". Retrieved 2014-09-02.
  2. ^ a b c d Lowe, Justin (2001). "SCRATCH BACK". Filmmaker. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
  3. ^ a b Johnson, Gregory (June 2001). "Spaced Invaders". Spin: 61.
  4. ^ a b c Bernstein, Kate (August 2001). "Wave Runner". Vibe: 60.
  5. ^ Kelley, Brendan Joel (2001-02-08). "Enter the Wave Twisters". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
  6. ^ Chonin, Neva (2001-01-28). "Underground DJ Culture Surfaces / Two films at Sundance highlight talent of S.F. stars". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
  7. ^ a b Harvey, Dennis (2001-02-22). "Review: 'Wave Twisters'". Variety. Retrieved 2014-09-02.

External links edit