Moody short Maximize shows LA like you’ve never seen before
- Text by Alex King
“Have we forgotten how to feel,” asks the narrator in Gardens & Villa’s moody new short doc Maximize. Shot beautifully on 35mm and Super 8, it presents Los Angeles as if viewed through the eyes of 1920s avant-garde provocateurs Dziga Vertov and Sergei Eisenstein, giving an insight into the ideas, doubts and reflections swirling around the bands’ heads as they wrote and recorded their new LP, Music For Dogs.
Gardens & Villa’s move from sun-dappled California college town Santa Barbara to a hulking warehouse in East LA has clearly had an effect, taking the synth-driven four-piece to a darker and more introspective place. Where previous records riffed on New Age and Eastern Religion, songwriters Chris Lynch and Adam Rasmussen are now exploring technological alienation, false hopes and obsolescence. “Are machines making me less me, or am I more because of machines,” ponders Maximize’s narrator. “Some day all will be rendered obsolete.”
To document the process of making Music For Dogs, the band brought director David Del Sur and cinematographer SL Perlin on side. “We were not concerned with answering any questions since their answers live on the record,” Del Sur explains. “Our job was to merely convey the mental and physical environment in which the music was created in thus setting up the world that record lives in.”
Ahead of Music For Dogs’ release on August 21 via Secretly Canadian (War on Drugs, SUUNS, Here We Go Magic), Maximize is an arresting opening salvo. Nodding its head to French artist Chris Marker’s science fiction featurette La Jetée, it stakes Gardens & Villa’s grand ambitions, while lifting the lid on their non-linear and contemplative mental universe.
“Our home, our studio, and all of our Los Angeles haunts were captured and explained with a sharpness boarding on clairvoyance,” Adam explains. “The process of writing and recording Music For Dogs is encapsulated brilliantly in this short documentary, Maximize. We hope hope you enjoy this window into our madness and love.”
Music For Dogs from Gardens & Villa is out August 21 on Secretly Canadian.
You might like
What we’re excited for at SXSW 2026
Austin 40 — For the festival’s 40th anniversary edition, we are heading to Texas to join one of the biggest global meetups of the year. We’ve selected a few things to highlight on your schedules.
Written by: Huck
Wu-Tang Clan forever, and ever
The Final Chamber — RZA, the spiritual leader of one of the most important hip hop groups of all time explains why they won’t rest until their legacy is secured.
Written by: Yoh Phillips
On The Mountain, Jamie Hewlett’s Gorillaz explore life after death
Going East — As everyone’s favourite animated band release their latest album, the visual artist behind it all catches up with Josh Jones to chat about the grief and spirituality underlining the record, as well as his learnings from how other cultures approach death and the afterlife.
Written by: Josh Jones
The wild, gruelling beauty of fell running
Winner Gets Cake — With no marked route and often brutal conditions, the “quintessentially British sport” is the subject of a new joint film by TCO and Rab. Hannah Bentley explores its vertical climbs, downhill dashes and punk roots.
Written by: Hannah Bentley
The Women of the Sea Film Fund is granting £10k to tell femme-focused surfing stories
Finisterre x London Surf / Film Festival — Open exclusively to women to tell stories about other women, applications are open until March 8.
Written by: Isaac Muk
New documentary explores football ultras culture around the world
ULTRAS — Directed by Swedish filmmaker Ragnhild Ekner, the film takes an insider’s view of the terrace subculture, and the unifying power of fandom.
Written by: Isaac Muk