Thursday, June 04, 2009


From slashfilm, 24-year-old Ray Tintori, directed Death To The Tinman as his undergraduate thesis film for Wesleyan University’s Film Studies program. Highly inspired by Wes Anderson and Guy Maddin, the 12-minute black and white short film is a very loose adaptation of the origin story of the Tin Man from The Wizard of Oz. The short tells the story of a human lumberjack who is transformed into a metal man without a heart.

“Tintori transported the story’s basic premise to a surreal, rural 1940s South, replacing Oz magic with evangelical mysticism; pastors, congregations, and the Rapture replace flying monkeys and witches melting upon contact with water.”

The short premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, where it received an Honorable Mention for Short Filmmaking. It also played in the South by Southwest Film Festival and New York Film Festival. Tintori has gone on to a successful career directing music videos, working with MGMT, The Killers, Cool Kids and Chairlift. Ray is also currently developing a couple feature screenplays. Watch his short film, Death to the Tinman here

1 comment:

Octopunk said...

Wow! That was great. I don't know anything about Guy Maddin, but I love Wes Anderson's stuff, and this guy nailed my favorite part of it: how the characters deliver their lines with almost no feeling, and yet they're somehow wearing their raw emotions out on their sleeves.

And I dug the repeated motif of the dude in the suit trying to fly a crap Wright Brothers airplane and crashing in the snow.

Salem's Lot 1979 and Salem's Lot 2024

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