Post Completed with DaVinci Resolve Studio for The Stargate Music Video

Posted by on Jan 21, 2025 | 0 comments

Hit band Blood Incantation uses DaVinci Resolve for editing, grading and VFX to help with complex storylines.

Fremont, CA, USA – Wednesday, January 15, 2025 – Blackmagic Design today announced that “The Stargate” music video, from American death metal band Blood Incantation, was edited and color graded in DaVinci Resolve Studio with visual effects (VFX) completed using the post production software’s Fusion page. The video’s Director and DP Michael Ragen was responsible for the edit and VFX, while Colorist Belal Hibri completed the grade for the 20 minute saga featuring mind bending imagery and unsettling atmospheres.

More short film than music video, “The Stargate” presents the epic story of a mysterious object and its victims. Beginning in the Dark Ages and traveling into the voids of deep space, it blends science fiction and folk horror with interdimensional travel and otherworldly technology.

“This film is an exploration of portals, worlds beyond worlds, and places beyond time,” explained Ragen. “Because it’s so complex, I built out the entire edit to the song using text cards in Resolve initially. Just simple descriptions of what would be happening in every shot. This was key to staying on schedule and shooting exactly what we needed with our limited resources and time.”

“Once we started shooting, I ping ponged between filming, editing, working on VFX, and also doing temp color correction,” he added. “The biggest thing that convinced me to switch to Resolve for editing was the ability to jump into the color page at any time and work on temp grades. I’m primarily a cinematographer so having the right look really helps me dial in the edit, especially on something like this where we transition from black and white to color.”

Ragen also noted that if he found himself stuck while editing, he could switch gears, simply click over to DaVinci Resolve Studio’s Fusion page, and work on compositing a shot.

“In Fusion, I used the planar tracker to track part of someone’s face, then used a secondary take of them and stabilized their head movement with the planar tracker. Next, I took elements of that take and composited it onto the first shot, making them into multi featured mutants,” he said.

According to Ragen, the space shots required traditional compositing with basic 3D elements such as animated particle fields that the camera pans through. “All the organic elements in the space backgrounds were filmed in camera by Chris Parks, who is a master at fluid effects and has worked on films like ‘The Fountain’ and ‘The Tree of Life,’” he explained. “I would take multiple shots from him and stack them or warp them into a new background in Fusion, then bring in the ship, as an EXR or PNG sequence with transparency. The ship itself was something I initially built as a practical miniature and then 3D scanned and did additional 3D kitbashing in Unreal Engine.”

Additional tools essential to Ragen’s work included DaVinci Resolve Studio’s inspector with built in stabilization and retiming tools. “On the color page, personally I would never get too fancy with the nodes in the temp color, but I did end up stacking a lot of FX in there, such as some of the warp and dent tools, as well as Analog Damage,” he said.

According to Hibri, Ragen had a clear vision for the music video’s various phases. “I would describe it as a raw photochemical look that you might see in a low budget sci fi film from the 70s. This matched the analog methods used to record and mix the music as well as the approach to VFX. When we got into the actual grading, it became about sculpting that look in a way that responded to density and layering that you can hear in the recording. In addition to the color palette, we used grain, glow, halation and lens flares in different intensities and styles to distinguish each of the various genres and tonalities in the tracks,” he said.

Hibri continued, “Close to the end of the video, the pilot loses control, and the music and editing get really wild. The scene blends different types of footage from Chris Parks’ macro photography to shots of bubbling fluids to shots of the band members melting as they enter the star. We worked hard to ensure that the sequence flowed together and kept up with the intensity of the moment. We had shots where we blended four types of scanned film grain to fuse them into the rest of the edit and keep the energy flowing. There is a moment when it all comes together, and it’s immensely satisfying when the sound and image match each other.”

“We were lucky to work with a band that was so trusting in us and gave us the creative freedom to realize this vision but at the same time were incredibly hands on and collaborative throughout the process,” Ragen concluded. “The team we had was also amazing. It really felt like working with a bunch of friends on something fun, not a job, however challenging it may have been. It was a good reminder of what filmmaking can be when it feels like there is a common artistic goal.”

Press Photography

Product photos of DaVinci Resolve Studio and all other Blackmagic Design products are available at www.blackmagicdesign.com/media/images

About Blackmagic Design

Blackmagic Design creates the world’s highest quality video editing products, digital film cameras, color correctors, video converters, video monitoring, routers, live production switchers, disk recorders, waveform monitors and real time film scanners for the feature film, post production and television broadcast industries. Blackmagic Design’s DeckLink capture cards launched a revolution in quality and affordability in post production, while the company’s Emmy™ award winning DaVinci color correction products have dominated the television and film industry since 1984. Blackmagic Design continues ground breaking innovations including 6G-SDI and 12G-SDI products and stereoscopic 3D and Ultra HD workflows. Founded by world leading post production editors and engineers, Blackmagic Design has offices in the USA, UK, Japan, Singapore and Australia. For more information, please go to www.blackmagicdesign.com

  • Post Completed with DaVinci Resolve Studio for The Stargate Music Video
    Post Completed with DaVinci Resolve Studio for The Stargate Music Video

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