From a Spark to a Story

Every great story starts with a spark. For Duality, it began with a simple conversation between filmmaker Ben Giese and the 805 team. Something stripped down. Honest. Shot entirely in black and white.

As Ben recalls, “That vision hit me instantly. I’ve always been drawn to black and white — the emotion it captures, the simplicity that somehow reveals everything. From there, we started talking about balance. Light and dark. Fear and courage. The things that push people to the edge — and the beauty that exists right there, on the line between chaos and control.”

That line became the foundation of Duality: a visual meditation on what it takes to achieve greatness in moto. Featuring Tyler Bereman and Vicki Golden, the film explores the opposing forces that drive them — male and female, shadow and light, pain and triumph — all coexisting in perfect balance.

The Team Behind the Lens

Ben directed and produced the film — shaping the concept, building the crew, and leading production on the ground.

Dylan Wineland served as Director of Photography, working alongside Jon Riley, who built out camera rigs and operated throughout the shoot. Colby Elliot handled aerial footage, John Hebert documented stills, and Kacper Viechorek kept the production running smoothly.

Behind the scenes, Steve Shearer helped pull everything together, ensuring the vision came to life.

The Crew’s Chemistry

“Dylan was a no-brainer,” Ben says. “His moto work is cinematic and emotional, but more than that, he understands the deeper themes we wanted to explore.”

And when it came to still photography, John Hebert was the clear choice. “He’s one of the best. His work has a raw honesty — moments that feel timeless.”

The Look and Feel

The team shot during golden hour, leaning into backlit compositions and deep contrasts that mirrored the film’s theme — light and dark in perfect balance.

Vicki in black. Tyler in white. The desert shifting around them. Every frame designed to reflect that eternal tension between chaos and control.

The Grind

Filming in the desert mid-summer was brutal — heat, wind, shifting terrain. Both riders were just coming off injuries, forcing the crew to adapt constantly.

“It pushed everyone to their limits,” Ben recalls. “But in the end, those challenges shaped the story — it became exactly what Duality is about: balance, resilience, and respect for the ride.”

In the End

Duality isn’t just a moto film. It’s a story about what it takes to chase greatness, and the beauty that exists between light and dark, fear and courage, chaos and control.

Because in moto, like in life, balance is everything.

Watch the film below.

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