Javier Chillon
Javier Chillon is a Spanish director of films and music videos, known for his "bizarre and compelling" short films, "simply unlike anything anyone else is making".[1] Between them, Die Schneider Krankheit (2008), Decapoda Shock (2011), and the English-language They Will All Die in Space (2015) have been screened at over 800 international film festivals and won approximately 140 awards or honours.
Javier Chillon | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Spanish |
Education | M.A. (Solent University) |
Alma mater | Universidad Complutense de Madrid |
Occupation | Film and video director, producer, screenwriter, animator, title designer |
Years active | (artistic works): 2005- |
Parent(s) | Javier Chillon Sr. |
Awards | Méliès d'Argent (2) |
Website | http://www.javierchillon.com/ |
Early life and education
Javier Chillon was born on 16 July 1977 in Madrid.[2] He attended the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and received a licenciate in audiovisual communication, pursuing further education at the Institute of Filmmaking at Solent University, Southampton, where he graduated with a Master of Arts. After his studies, he began working in the audiovisual world and graphic design.[2]
Career
Music video director
In 2005, Miguel Bosé released Velvetina, a 13-track audio CD as well as a special edition on Creative Zen which included video clips for each single. Together with Jaime Barnatán, Chillon co-directed the clip for the second track on the album, Aún Más.[2] The video is set in a futuristic dystopia inspired by films like the early George Lucas film THX-1138 and novels such as George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.[2]
Chillon has since directed three more music videos for Madrid-based bands Waldorf Histeria in 2010 (Dicen que es Satán[3] and Fantasmas),[4] and Delobos in 2018, No One Saves.[5]
Short film director
Debut
Making a living as an editor,[6] Chillon undertoook a two-and-a-half-year film project in his spare time obtaining various elements for free or cheaply through his family connections or friends.[7] Chillon's first short narrative film, Die Schneider Krankheit (2008), is a science fiction mockumentary inspired by the "Hollywood look of the 50s",[6] in particular, the B movies and newsreels from the United States.[8] Shot on black and white Super 8 film, with a Spanish-language voice-over dubbed over another German one,[6] with credits and most other onscreen text in German, the short film gives the impression of being a West German educational documentary film of the 1950s,[9] concerning the effects of an extraterrestrial plague brought to Earth by a Soviet chimpanzee cosmonaut after its capsule crash landed near the border with East Germany in 1958. Financed entirely by Chillon himself,[7] the short film was selected for more than 200 international film festivals and received more than 45 awards within the first two years of its release.[10] Since the release of his first narrative film, Chillon has accumulated many credits as a poster or title designer on several films.[11]
Later films
In June 2009, Chillon was in Paris pitching a project called Outfinite, which would "pay tribute to sci-fi B movies and blaxploitation pics."[12][13] The film that became Decapoda Shock, a science fiction action parody film, was filmed between July 2009 and March 2011.[8] In this film, the director allowed himself more spontaneity and improvisation.[8] The film depicts an astronaut infected by an alien crab-like creature, transforming him into a decapod crustacean/human hybrid and whose family has disappeared, both the result of a sinister conspiracy, for which he seeks vengeance. As of 2019, Chillon's second film has been selected for more than 300 international film festivals, and received over thirty awards and honours within the first two years of its release,[14] including a Silver Méliès.[15]
For his third film, Javier Chillon wanted to do something a bit more conventional, a film that was "straight up science fiction" with no supernatural elements,[16] something closer to a detective story: he had always liked the idea of a starship stranded in space, and one day the story just came to him.[8][17] They Will All Die in Space (2015) is the director's first English-language film, about a starship technician (Julio Perillán) who is awoken from cryo-sleep and is told that the vessell is adrift and lost in the cosmos, and that he is needed to help repair the communications system to call for help, but quickly realises that something has gone horrifyingly wrong. Like his second film, it has been shown at well over 300 film festivals between its premiere and the end of 2018, and has won approximately sixty awards and honours, including Best Short Film from the 2015 Sitges Film Festival, the most important fantastic film festival in Spain.[8] They Will All Die in Space is included in the 2017 Canadian anthology film, Galaxy of Horrors, which comprises eight shorts within a larger narrative frame, premiering in Toronto at Imagine Cinemas Carlton on 1 March 2017.[18]
Common themes
As well as the director's use of science fiction elements present in his music videos, the director's first two films share particular themes and plot elements, such as monstrous creatures resulting from "spatial" mutations or genetic manipulation, primarily derived from the science fiction B movies of the 1950s, the "atomic age";[8] as well as animated sequences, and "retro-inflected material".[19] The plots of both films involve a returning astronaut.[20]
Filmography
- Videos
- Miguel Bosé: Aún Más (2005)
- Waldorf Histeria: Dicen que es Satán (2010)
- Waldorf Histeria: Fantasmas (2010)
- Delobos: No One Saves (2018)
- Short films
- Die Schneider Krankheit (2008)
- Decapoda Shock (2011)
- They Will All Die in Space (2015)
References
- Brown, Todd. "THEY WILL ALL DIE IN SPACE: Watch The Amazing Teaser For Javier Chillon's Latest!". Screen Anarchy. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
- "Miguel Bosé". Espacio Latino. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
- "Waldorf Histeria: Dicen que es Satán". Vimeo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 March 2019.
- "Waldorf Histeria Nuevo vídeo: "Fantasmas"". todopunk.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 September 2019.
- "Delobos: No One Saves". Vimeo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 March 2019.
- "Die Schneider Krankheit press kit" (PDF). www.javierchillon.com. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
- "Festivales, Certamenes, Concursos en Super 8: entrevista a Javier Chillon director de Die Schneider Krankheit (El mal de Schneider)". Revelocho (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 March 2019.
- "Javier Chillon, el futuro de la ciencia ficción". Sin Final en el Guion (in Spanish). 5 March 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
- "Retrato Robot*: Javier Chillón" (video and text). ROS Film Festival. 21 July 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
- "JAVIER CHILLON – Die Schneider Krankheit". No Fat Clips. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
- "Javier Chillon". IMDb. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
- Hopewell, John (15 June 2009). "Spanish genre talent on show in Paris". Variety. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
- "Différent 2 !: Professional Meeting in Paris around the Spanish fantasy film". Cine & Tele. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
- "Decapoda Shock". www.javierchillon.com. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
- "The 25th Leeds International Film Festival Summary". itpworld.wordpress.com. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
- Liptak, Andrew (30 July 2017). "They Will All Die In Space is a short film that channels the suspense of Alien". The Verge. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- H, Olivier. "Entretien avec le très prometteur réalisateur espagnol Javier CHILLON". Le blog du cinema d'Olivier H (in French). Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- "Galaxy of Horrors - Toronto Screening". www.blogto.com. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
- Frelik, Paweł. (2015). "Famous for Fifteen Minutes: Permutations of Science Fiction Short Film". In Feeley, Jennifer L.; Sarah Ann Wells (eds.). Simultaneous Worlds: Global Science Fiction Cinema. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 50. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
- Puckett, Terek. "THEY WILL ALL DIE IN SPACE". The Brief Macabre. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
External links
Javier Chillon on IMDb