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Andrew Macgregor

Radheya Jang's 'Trading Cards'

Due to premiere at Flickerfest in Australia later this month is Radheya Jang's 'Trading Cards', an animated short film about obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Due to premiere at Flickerfest in Australia later this month is Radheya Jang's 'Trading Cards', an animated short film about obsessive-compulsive disorder. Jang, who lives with OCD, aims to clear up misconceptions about the condition through trippy visuals, time travel, and tarot. We hope viewers are prepared for a card watch, so to speak.

Graded by Andi Chu at Electric Theatre Collective and sound designed by James Utting at Factory, 'Trading Cards' is a chance for Jang—a director's assistant at Blinkink—to make a name for himself. Fans of experimental animation, deck-building games, and the work of Pamela Colman Smith are encouraged to check it out when the festival kicks off on Friday 23 January.


Posted: 12 January 2026 - 13:40
Blinkink

Blinkink

If Blink Productions is the live action arm of the Blink empire, then Blinkink is the place where live action and animation meet... where they shake hands, as it were. By their own description, it's a roster of some of the world's most "visually inventive filmmakers" and a glance at their work demonstrates this to be unquestionably true.

Factory Studios

Factory Studios

Factory is rightly recognised as an excellent sound design and audio facility, often used in the making of TVCs by London-based agencies and production companies. For those who know about these things, it boasts six Pro Tools HD studios plus the UK's first Dolby Atmos licensed suite for Commercials & Trailers. For the rest, it's enough to know they can do pretty much anything while you sit in their comfortable studios eating good sandwiches.

Electric Theatre Collective

Electric Theatre Collective

What makes Electric Theatre Company so special – apart from their incredible talent where all things visual are concerned – is their modesty. Their readiness to listen is what brings an extra layer of magic to everything they (virtually) touch; and while these friendly folk may belong on the A-list of VFX creativity, they don't act like the tech elite they actually are. It's a refreshing and rewarding experience working with ETC.