In the film made by director Alex Garland, the external environment of the characters may be the interior of their thoughts. His films tend to focus on themes and characters who have power, expertise or money to force their external and internal reality to match.
Think about the house where the "Ex-Machine" experiment took place. The shimmering pearlescent, seemingly alien intelligence in "Destroy", or the golden, almost sacred computer lab in Devs, is now available on Hulu FX to completely stream media.
But those images are not Garan's works. Many of his film and TV projects have set design from Mark Digby, the production designer and art director. He has collaborated with Garland on each of these three projects, as well as such as "Dred" (Garland) (Author) and "Rush" (Rush) and other films.
However, after watching this movie, I still can't forget the developers. This TV series tells the story of a computer tycoon (Nick Overman) with endless wealth. He set up a team of elite programmers composed of the company Amaya in a secret, closed laboratory in the forest. He worked on a project 24 hours a day, and he hoped that the project would return what he had lost.
There is a murder mystery, a love story, and a slow reveal about what the project code-named "Devs" is actually doing. Devs told a complete story in a quarter. Most of the story revolved around the Amaya quantum computer laboratory, which looks like a sparkling, decadent church of mind.
These golden visual effects, completed through disturbing sound design and soundtrack, gave the show its own soul when most people's views on the future tended to merge. As the old saying goes, the laboratory in Devs is its own characteristic. I have to know how they did it.
I recently talked to Digby about the developer’s awesome workspace, which is one of the show’s most compelling visual effects, and how much it is inspired by quantum computing and modern information security realities.
According to SlashFilm's introduction in "Devs," "A young computer engineer Lily surveyed her employer, the secret development department of a San Francisco-based cutting-edge technology company, which she believes is behind her boyfriend's disappearance." Last year, Garland talked about how he came up with the show’s idea. He said, "Someone is thinking about the principles of determinism. Basically, everything that happens in the world is based on causality. So nothing is not caused by antecedents. This has various effects on us. One is that it deprives free will, but it also means that if you have a sufficiently powerful computer, you can use causality and determinism to not only predict the future, but also understand the past."
Think about the house where the "Ex-Machine" experiment took place. The shimmering pearlescent, seemingly alien intelligence in "Destroy", or the golden, almost sacred computer lab in Devs, is now available on Hulu FX to completely stream media.
But those images are not Garan's works. Many of his film and TV projects have set design from Mark Digby, the production designer and art director. He has collaborated with Garland on each of these three projects, as well as such as "Dred" (Garland) (Author) and "Rush" (Rush) and other films.
However, after watching this movie, I still can't forget the developers. This TV series tells the story of a computer tycoon (Nick Overman) with endless wealth. He set up a team of elite programmers composed of the company Amaya in a secret, closed laboratory in the forest. He worked on a project 24 hours a day, and he hoped that the project would return what he had lost.
There is a murder mystery, a love story, and a slow reveal about what the project code-named "Devs" is actually doing. Devs told a complete story in a quarter. Most of the story revolved around the Amaya quantum computer laboratory, which looks like a sparkling, decadent church of mind.
These golden visual effects, completed through disturbing sound design and soundtrack, gave the show its own soul when most people's views on the future tended to merge. As the old saying goes, the laboratory in Devs is its own characteristic. I have to know how they did it.
I recently talked to Digby about the developer’s awesome workspace, which is one of the show’s most compelling visual effects, and how much it is inspired by quantum computing and modern information security realities.
What is Devs About?
According to SlashFilm's introduction in "Devs," "A young computer engineer Lily surveyed her employer, the secret development department of a San Francisco-based cutting-edge technology company, which she believes is behind her boyfriend's disappearance." Last year, Garland talked about how he came up with the show’s idea. He said, "Someone is thinking about the principles of determinism. Basically, everything that happens in the world is based on causality. So nothing is not caused by antecedents. This has various effects on us. One is that it deprives free will, but it also means that if you have a sufficiently powerful computer, you can use causality and determinism to not only predict the future, but also understand the past."
who will lead star cast?
- Sonoya Mizuno as Lily Chan
- Jin Ha as Jamie
- Nick Offerman as Forest
- Cailee Spaeny as Lyndon
- Stephen Mckinley Henderson as Stewart
- Amaya Mizuno Andre as Amaya
- Alison Pill as Katie
Devs Trailer:
The trailer that went offline last month looks very futuristic, but with a clear garland atmosphere. It introduces Nick Overman in a futuristic, golden office space that looks like a leadership position. When looking for her boyfriend, Chen Lili talked to Alison Peel and tried to figure out who the developer really was.
Although the trailer did not reveal too much through the plot, when we witnessed a bit of a mysterious technological power, it did give an ominous hunch.
If you like ‘Devs’, you will also like:
‘Ex Machina’, ‘Arrival’, ‘Annihilation’, ‘Black Mirror’, and ‘The Feed’.
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