Much of the indie web series scene is centered around New York City, but I guarantee you've never seen the Big Apple depicted as it is in Everything's Ok. Ace Salisbury's new web series is a wild vision of the future, in which live-action and animation collide to form an energetic post-apocalyptic collage.
A press release describes Everything's Ok as a "post-apocalyptic cardboard punk adventure," and that description does a good job of approximating how far-out Salisbury's vision is. In the first episode alone, we're treated to lo-fi police robots, static backgrounds dressed in bleak shades of green and brown, a wasteland setting torn apart by fracking, and the disembodied, reanimated head of Orson Welles.
While Everything's Ok may seem like an odd concept, the story at its heart -- a woman's search for her father -- is a simple one.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
A press release describes Everything's Ok as a "post-apocalyptic cardboard punk adventure," and that description does a good job of approximating how far-out Salisbury's vision is. In the first episode alone, we're treated to lo-fi police robots, static backgrounds dressed in bleak shades of green and brown, a wasteland setting torn apart by fracking, and the disembodied, reanimated head of Orson Welles.
While Everything's Ok may seem like an odd concept, the story at its heart -- a woman's search for her father -- is a simple one.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
- 9/10/2016
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
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