Daft Punk: Human After All

Updated
 
0.0
 
9.8 (3)
1270 2 1
HAA_movieposter10
Faneditor Name:
Original Movie/Show Title:
Genre:
Fanedit Type:
Original Release Date:
2006
Original Running Time:
72 minutes
Fanedit Release Date:
Fanedit Running Time:
48 minutes
Time Cut:
24 minutes
Subtitles Available:
Available in HD:
image
Synopsis:
The original Daft Punk-produced film Electroma, now rescored and re-edited to be a film adaptation of their album, Human After All.
Intention:
Daft Punk's Electroma is a fascinating arthouse movie. There is no 'but' to that statement. It is a well-produced film with a very nice score that was made very specifically to the wants of its creators. It is the film that it is, and it's a film I enjoy. It did, however, begin life as a music video for the band's track 'Human After All,' and that fact has always stuck with me. Prior to Electroma, Daft Punk was involved in the film Inter5tella 5555, a music video movie adaptation of their Discovery album. Being a huge fan of similar music video movies like Pink Floyd - The Wall as well as Inter5tella, and personally finding Human After All (the album) to be my favorite of their catalog, I've always wanted to see a film adaptation in the vein of those two projects. There have been attempts in the past to make such an edit that I've seen, but all have had a very light touch to the film's material. Other projects existed to build Electroma around other Daft Punk material, but I still wanted to see that film adaptation of my favorite album.

Adding a completely different score of a completely different kind to this kind of film necessitates edits to the film itself. As such, "Daft Punk - Human After All" recuts almost all of the film to match the "music video" qualities I've always wanted to see. Still telling a similar story, this is not a replacement for Electroma. It is a remix of it. The film adaptation of Human After All I've always wanted to see.
Other Sources:
Human After All (Daft Punk, 2006)
Homework (Daft Punk, 1997)
Alive 2007 (LeBlanc. Sound Remake) (Daft Punk, LeBlanc Sound, 2015)
Special Thanks:
Summer, for help finding the vision on a couple scenes
Lilly Nightfury, for emotional support
Anonymous, for helping design the poster
Release Information:
Digital
Editing Details:
I used Vegas 14 for the bulk of both video and audio editing. Some work was also done using DarkAudacity, though this ended up being used less than I expected. Most of the editing was about finding the right shots for the right places and knowing when best to cut, very little in the way of highly technical or complicated editing was needed, it was more about eyeballing it with the footage on hand. Electroma has a lot of exceptionally long shots that would get cut down in a less experimental film, which meant coverage was really great. Though I did have to get creative at times when footage ran out or a challenge came up.

One part of one scene features custom foley using sources from freesound.org, the ending shots of the Human After All song segment. This was the only time I got to show my audio editing/foley experience, and it was a lot of fun.

The philosophy behind the edit evolved over the course of its production. Initially I wanted to keep intact all the scenes which had no music associated with them, but this ended up being dropped near the end because I realized it killed the pacing and, while it arguably worked in the original film, was boring in this one. Another philosophy that changed quickly was "no scene without score will have score added." This is contradicted by the Technologic scene, which only ever had a bassy hum accompanying it as the only sound, so that rule got thrown out.
Cuts and Additions:
New opening credit to more readily indicate what version of the film is being viewed
Original credits have been remade in the style of the new credits (this applies for both opening and closing credits)
Recut opening shots with credits
Title card replaced with new "Daft Punk - Human After All" card
Recut the opening driving sequence to "Television Rules the Nation"
Recut the scenes of the neighborhood drive to "Robot Rock" (which has also seen edits for length)
Recut the technicians/white room scene to "Technologic" (which has also seen edits for length and timing)
Recut the walkabout town with the human faces to "Human After All" (which has also seen edits for length and timing)
New sound design at the end of "Human After All", during and after the end of the track.
Recut the bathroom dismantling scene to "Emotion" (which has also seen edits for length)
Cut down the scenes of the robots walking in the outskirts of town
Recut the walking in the desert and dunes sequence to "Primetime of Your Life" (which has also seen edits for lengths)
Cut down the scene of the silver robot's demise
Recut the scene following the explosion to "Make Love" (which has also seen edits for length)
Recut the climax scene and ending shot to "The Brainwasher"
New first closing credits are scored with the opening to the track "Robot Rock - Oh Yeah" from Alive 2007 (LeBlanc Sound version)
Closing credits are scored with the track "Human After All - Together - One More Time (Reprise) - Music Sounds Better With You" from Alive 2007 (LeBlanc Sound version)
Added "1993-2021" closing image from "Daft Punk - Epilogue"
Trailer

daftpunkhuman_front
Faneditor Name:
Original Movie/Show Title:
Genre:
Fanedit Type:
Original Release Date:
2006
Original Running Time:
72 minutes
Fanedit Release Date:
Fanedit Running Time:
48 minutes
Time Cut:
24 minutes
Subtitles Available:
Available in HD:
image
Synopsis:
The original Daft Punk-produced film Electroma, now rescored and re-edited to be a film adaptation of their album, Human After All.
Intention:
Daft Punk's Electroma is a fascinating arthouse movie. There is no 'but' to that statement. It is a well-produced film with a very nice score that was made very specifically to the wants of its creators. It is the film that it is, and it's a film I enjoy. It did, however, begin life as a music video for the band's track 'Human After All,' and that fact has always stuck with me. Prior to Electroma, Daft Punk was involved in the film Inter5tella 5555, a music video movie adaptation of their Discovery album. Being a huge fan of similar music video movies like Pink Floyd - The Wall as well as Inter5tella, and personally finding Human After All (the album) to be my favorite of their catalog, I've always wanted to see a film adaptation in the vein of those two projects. There have been attempts in the past to make such an edit that I've seen, but all have had a very light touch to the film's material. Other projects existed to build Electroma around other Daft Punk material, but I still wanted to see that film adaptation of my favorite album.

Adding a completely different score of a completely different kind to this kind of film necessitates edits to the film itself. As such, "Daft Punk - Human After All" recuts almost all of the film to match the "music video" qualities I've always wanted to see. Still telling a similar story, this is not a replacement for Electroma. It is a remix of it. The film adaptation of Human After All I've always wanted to see.
Other Sources:
Human After All (Daft Punk, 2006)
Homework (Daft Punk, 1997)
Alive 2007 (LeBlanc. Sound Remake) (Daft Punk, LeBlanc Sound, 2015)
Special Thanks:
Summer, for help finding the vision on a couple scenes
Lilly Nightfury, for emotional support
Anonymous, for helping design the poster
Release Information:
Digital
Editing Details:
I used Vegas 14 for the bulk of both video and audio editing. Some work was also done using DarkAudacity, though this ended up being used less than I expected. Most of the editing was about finding the right shots for the right places and knowing when best to cut, very little in the way of highly technical or complicated editing was needed, it was more about eyeballing it with the footage on hand. Electroma has a lot of exceptionally long shots that would get cut down in a less experimental film, which meant coverage was really great. Though I did have to get creative at times when footage ran out or a challenge came up.

One part of one scene features custom foley using sources from freesound.org, the ending shots of the Human After All song segment. This was the only time I got to show my audio editing/foley experience, and it was a lot of fun.

The philosophy behind the edit evolved over the course of its production. Initially I wanted to keep intact all the scenes which had no music associated with them, but this ended up being dropped near the end because I realized it killed the pacing and, while it arguably worked in the original film, was boring in this one. Another philosophy that changed quickly was "no scene without score will have score added." This is contradicted by the Technologic scene, which only ever had a bassy hum accompanying it as the only sound, so that rule got thrown out.
Cuts and Additions:
New opening credit to more readily indicate what version of the film is being viewed
Original credits have been remade in the style of the new credits (this applies for both opening and closing credits)
Recut opening shots with credits
Title card replaced with new "Daft Punk - Human After All" card
Recut the opening driving sequence to "Television Rules the Nation"
Recut the scenes of the neighborhood drive to "Robot Rock" (which has also seen edits for length)
Recut the technicians/white room scene to "Technologic" (which has also seen edits for length and timing)
Recut the walkabout town with the human faces to "Human After All" (which has also seen edits for length and timing)
New sound design at the end of "Human After All", during and after the end of the track.
Recut the bathroom dismantling scene to "Emotion" (which has also seen edits for length)
Cut down the scenes of the robots walking in the outskirts of town
Recut the walking in the desert and dunes sequence to "Primetime of Your Life" (which has also seen edits for lengths)
Cut down the scene of the silver robot's demise
Recut the scene following the explosion to "Make Love" (which has also seen edits for length)
Recut the climax scene and ending shot to "The Brainwasher"
New first closing credits are scored with the opening to the track "Robot Rock - Oh Yeah" from Alive 2007 (LeBlanc Sound version)
Closing credits are scored with the track "Human After All - Together - One More Time (Reprise) - Music Sounds Better With You" from Alive 2007 (LeBlanc Sound version)
Added "1993-2021" closing image from "Daft Punk - Epilogue"
Trailer

User reviews

3 reviews
Overall rating
 
9.8
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0(3)
Audio Editing
 
9.7(3)
Visual Editing
 
9.7(3)
Narrative
 
9.7(3)
Enjoyment
 
9.7(3)
(Updated: July 24, 2024)
Overall rating
 
9.5
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0
Audio Editing
 
9.0
Visual Editing
 
9.0
Narrative
 
10.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
Wonderful. Some very effective editing on display.

A/V QUALITY

A little soft, but very acceptable for 2.6 GB and not distracting. 10/10

AUDIO EDITING

On the technical side, there were only a few minor things: The footstep foley feels a little off at 20:42, and the music fade at 25:00 feels too quick (a longer fade or a hard cut on the scene change might feel better). More significantly, from 1:26 to 1:50 it sounds like there's a second song playing in the background. It's very faint, but distracting as it doesn't align to the main music. I thought maybe it was a commercial coming from the car radio, but in the original it's just road noise through here.

In terms of overall editing and song selection, the fanedit is very strong. Cuts are timed really well and the songs are excellent. The only one that didn't feel "perfect" to me is Television Rules the Nation. Because it hits hard early and doesn't really develop, it makes the scene drag, as the visuals also don't develop. The original has music with a slow, ominous build that pairs well with the visuals and kicks closer to the end. Kicking early, so to speak, highlights the repetitiveness of "Television". I'm not sure if the editor would be comfortable shortening the song, but I think that would be an effective compromise.

The A/V editing from 41 on is brilliant. This is the kind of stuff we're all here for. Love the accelerating, staccato shots of the "dunes" at 31:30.

9/10

VISUAL EDITING

I'm scoring this a 9/10 because the text on the title card touches the letterboxing, both top and bottom. It may have been a creative choice to have it blend with the black bars this way, but it feels like an error. It's minor, but noticeable for me. Even more minor, the custom titles have that sharp, fully opaque look that can often give away that we're watching a fanedit. Softening the text and adding a touch of jitter would make it feel more like it belongs against the original visuals.

NARRATIVE

The original narrative is perfectly retained. 10/10

ENJOYMENT

I enjoyed this more than the original, so 10/10.

User Review

Do you recommend this edit?
Yes
Format Watched
Digital
Report this review Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0
Overall rating
 
10.0
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0
Audio Editing
 
10.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
10.0
Enjoyment
 
10.0
This was amazing! I;ve always wondered what the movie would be like if it had Daft Punk songs in it and you have answered that question! And trimming it to have much better pacing made it a massive improvement!
Report this review Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0
(Updated: December 23, 2023)
Overall rating
 
9.7
Audio/Video Quality
 
10.0
Audio Editing
 
10.0
Visual Editing
 
10.0
Narrative
 
9.0
Enjoyment
 
9.0
Full disclosure, I was part of the review team for this edit.

The skill on display here is obvious, especially with music selection and applications, which for a project like this that hinges so strongly on the soundtrack is extremely important. The goal here, as stated by BVC, was to make a faster-paced edit with a music video structure using the album Human After All as the soundtrack, and in that they clearly succeeded! I only wish there was more to pull from the original movie to flesh the story out just a little further.

The really impressive part here for me was the song selection, because very often it was used to expand on the narrative of a dialogue-free story. "Television Rules the Nation" is a GREAT choice for introducing them as robots, you can just feel it right away, and "Technologic" during the face-shaping sequence was extremely stressful, like a horror movie, I loved it. There are of course more but I won't list them all.

Great work! I really enjoyed it!

User Review

Do you recommend this edit?
Yes
Format Watched
Digital
Report this review Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0