Alan Melikdjanian

Alan Melikdjanian

Alan Melikdjanian as 'Captain Disillusion'
Born April 13, 1980 (1980-04-13) (age 31)
Riga, USSR, (now Latvia)
Occupation Independent filmmaker.
Years active 1984, 2001- present
Parents Vilen, Tatiana
Website
amelik.com
captaindisillusion.com

Alan Melikdjanian (born April 13, 1980) is a Latvian-born independent filmmaker. He is the founder of Amelik Entertainment, LLC, a South Florida-based video production company specializing in unique and inventive films, web series, commercials and music videos.

Alan has been active in the founding of video-sharing sites Openfilm and FilmNet, and is the creator of the YouTube web-series Captain Disillusion, a comedic series of videos promoting critical thinking and skepticism.

Since 2008, he has regularly attended The Amaz!ng Meeting, an annual conference that focuses on science, skepticism, and atheism.

Contents

Early life

Alan Melikdjanian was the son of Soviet-era circus performer parents. His father, Vilen, was a particularly well-known performer. He toured the Soviet Union with his parents until beginning school at age 6, at which time he would live with his grandmother in Riga. During that time, Alan assumed he'd grow up to be a circus performer himself:

I thought I'd do magic, maybe. I'd get to know all the magicians. They'd show me little sleight-of-hand things, and I was all set to go that route when I was maybe 5, 6 years old.

In Riga, during the school year, Melikdjanian would spend most of his free time trying to copy the styles of Disney animators. During summer, he'd resume his circus life on the road.[1]

At the age of 4, Alan appeared (in scenes deleted) in the 1984 Russian film 'Shutki v storonu' (Jokes Aside) though his image remained on the movie's poster.[2] At the age of 12, Alan and his family immigrated to the United States.

He attended high school at William H. Turner Tech, in Miami, and studied video production and 3-D animation. He continued to do so at the International Fine Arts College, now known as the Miami International University of Art & Design.[1]

He graduated from college with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Film Production.[3]

Career

Early career, Amelik Entertainment, 2001–present

In 2001, Alan directed and composed the low-budget independent film: The Realm, about an introverted high school student who worries his teachers because he likes to write short stories full of violence and gore.

Also that year, Alan worked as an animator on the English-language, award-winning film Zelimo, a coming of age film that tells the story of a young Jewish farm boy who embarks on a journey from Russia to America in search of a better life.

Citizen Mavzik

Alan was the director, writer (with his father), editor and composer of the 2006 direct-to-DVD Russian-language film Citizen Mavzik,[4] the story of a Russian immigrant family's assimilation into American culture. The film was produced by Vilalan Productions, named after Alan and his father Vilen.

The movie took three years to make, and first premiered at the Cinema Paradiso, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The film first streamed live on RTVi, on February 4, 2007. However, it aired during the Super Bowl.[5] The same day, Melikdjanian posted a humorous video expressing his frustration to YouTube.

Website founding

Melikdjanian is the co-founder and creative director of FilmNet, and is the co-founder and chief creative officer of Openfilm. Both are intended as alternatives to popular video-sharing site YouTube, but for serious amateur filmmakers who "don't want to place their work alongside YouTube's mediocrities."[1][6][7]

In 2009, Alan founded his own video production company, Amelik Entertainment, LLC, an abbreviation of what he has called his 'unpronouncable' last name. The company is involved in the pre-production, filming, and post-production of various independent films, music videos, commercials, etc, and showcases its efforts on its official website.

Captain Disillusion, 2008–present

Captain Disilllusion
Genre Education
Comedy
Created by Alan Melikdjanian
Voices of Alan Melikdjanian,
Penn Jillette[8] (1 episode)
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
No. of episodes Regular - 16
Quick D - 3
Production
Editor(s) Alan Melikdjanian
Running time Varies, usually 4 - 7 minutes per episode
Broadcast
Original channel YouTube
Original run 2008 (2008) – present

He is perhaps most widely known for his Captain Disillusion videos on his eponymous YouTube channel, which currently has over 23,500 subscribers. However, videos are released at a rate of only 3 - 4 a year, due to his exacting production standards.[1] On his channel, he debunks, amongst other things, viral and paranormal 'hoax' videos, doing so humorously, and with a heavy focus on digital special effects. He edits his videos with Adobe After Effects.

In his videos, he wears a vintage 1980s tracksuit, and the skin of the lower part of his face is covered in silvery paint.[1] He later introduced a sidekick, 'Mr Flare,' also voiced by Melikdjanian.

Format

Firstly, the Captain addresses the audience. A typical introduction to his videos is Hey, kids, Captain D here. Secondly, he goes on to show a popular video, often a paranormal or viral video which is 'too good to be true.' Thirdly, he reviews the footage, utilizing his experience with digital editing, to 'break down' the video and show how the end result was accomplished.

He ends each video with his motto: Love with your heart. Use your head for everything else.[1] His videos often conclude with a humorous ending sequence, which occasionally relates with the preceding video. There are 16 regular episodes.

Quick D

In addition to his regular Captain Disillusion series, Alan uploads 'Quick D' episodes, which he describes as "Shorter, crisper "debunks" that will be posted more frequently than regular episodes (which will still continue as well)." There are currently 3 Quick D episodes.

DVD

In 2011, Alan released a DVD of his Captain Disillusion series, entitled Captain Disillusion - Fame Curve Collection. It contains all 16 episodes remastered, with optional commentary, with additional bonus features. He debuted it at TAM9, and later made it available online.[9][10] The money made from the DVD will go towards future episodes.

Recognition

His work has gained recognition from Russian TV International, Phil Plait,[11] the James Randi Educational Foundation,[12] Fortean Times,[13] Home Media Magazine[6] and Sun Sentinel,[14] among others.

In 2008, as his YouTube videos first became popular, he was interviewed for 'The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe,' a downloadable podcast.[15] He has been interviewed for The Skeptic Zone, an Australian podcast, in 2010[16] and 2011,[17] respectively.

Credits

Filmography

Actor, Director, Writer, Editor, Composer, Visual Effects Artist, Animator.

Year Title As Notes
1984 Shuntki v storonu actor Russian for Jokes Aside (scenes deleted)
2001 The Realm director, composer
The Monster Man editor
Zelimo animator Directed by Aleks Rosenberg,
Won—WorldFest-Houston Gold Special Jury Award for Best Feature
2002 Sin neudachnika editor (Television film) Russian-language.
2006 Citizen Mavzik director, writer, editor, composer (DVD) Co-written with father, Vilen. Produced by Vilalan Productions.
Available in Russian and English.
2008 Director visual effects artist Directed by Aleks Rosenberg
Starring American rapper Prodigal Sunn.
2010 Crimefighters visual effects artist, sound editor

Additional work

Television / web series

Year Title As Notes
2008
present
Captain Disillusion Captain Disillusion
Mr Flare (voice)
(Web series) 16 episodes,
(18, including Quick D episodes) Also creator.
2011 Community (TV series) Pistol Patty (voice) Episode: "A Fistful of Paintballs"

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Thorp, Brandon K. (December 24, 2009), "South Florida superhero Captain Disillusion talks ghosts, superpowers, and skepticism", Miami New Times, http://www.miaminewtimes.com/2009-12-24/news/south-florida-superhero-captain-disillusion-talks-ghosts-superpowers-and-skepticism/, retrieved July 22, 2011 
  2. ^ Alan Melikdjanian IMDb Trivia
  3. ^ About Amelik
  4. ^ Amelik - Films - Citizen Mavzik
  5. ^ As stated by Melikdjanian in his video "Movie vs Superbowl."
  6. ^ a b Gil, Billy (29 Jan, 2009). "Openfilm Gives Cash Reward to Filmmakers". Home Media Magazine. http://www.homemediamagazine.com/electronic-delivery/openfilm-gives-cash-reward-filmmakers-14452. Retrieved August 24, 2011. 
  7. ^ Lewin, Elizabeth (29 Jan, 2009). "Openfilm Rewarding $500 to Indie Filmmakers". Podcasting News. http://www.podcastingnews.com/content/2009/01/openfilm-offers-500-prize-to-filmmakers/. Retrieved 24 August 2011. 
  8. ^ Captain Disillusion - Off Screen
  9. ^ Captain Disillusion Fame Curve Collection - IMDb
  10. ^ Captain Disillusion Journal
  11. ^ Plait, Phil (19 Jun, 2009). "Captain Disillusion is Amazing". Discover. http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2009/06/19/captain-disillusion-is-amazing/. Retrieved August 24, 2011. 
  12. ^ Wagg, Jeff (28 Feb, 2008). "Captain Disillusion - Fire Angel Debunk". James Randi Educational Foundation. http://www.randi.org/site/index.php/jref-news/168-captain-disillusion-fire-angel-debunk.html. Retrieved August 24, 2011. 
  13. ^ "'Captain Disillusion.'". Fortean Times. http://www.forteantimes.com/community/links/1314/captain_disillusion.html. Retrieved August 29, 2011. 
  14. ^ Ratterman, David (23 Jan, 2002). "Soviet Block Party". Sun Sentinel. http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2002-01-23/lifestyle/0201220384_1_soviet-republics-soviet-people-russian/2. Retrieved August 24, 2011. 
  15. ^ Captain Disillusion - Skeptic's Guide
  16. ^ Skeptic Zone Archives
  17. ^ Complete Skeptic Zone Archives

External links

Alan Melikdjanian

Captain Disillusion

Additional