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An International Publication of the ASC
36 Left for Dead Emmanuel Lubezki, ASC, AMC braves harsh conditions
on location for The Revenant
54 Savage Sea Anthony Dod Mantle, ASC, BSC, DFF lends a modern
sensibility to the period story In the Heart of the Sea
70 Battle Tested Adam Arkapaw takes the Bardâs play off the stage and
into stunning vistas for Macbeth
82 Leading Lady Danny Cohen, BSC provides painterly atmosphere for
The Danish Girl
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On Our Cover: Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio) seeks revenge while struggling to survive in an unforgiving environment in The Revenant, shot by Emmanuel Lubezki,ASC, AMC. (Photo by Kimberley French, SMPSP, courtesy of Twentieth Century FoxFilm Corp.)
10 Editorâs Note 12 Presidentâs Desk 14 Short Takes: UFO Diary 20 Production Slate: Youth ⢠Son of Saul 96 Post Focus: HPA Awards 100 New Products & Services 110 International Marketplace 111 Classified Ads 112 Ad Index 114 Clubhouse News 115 In Memoriam: Charles Rosher Jr., ASC 116 ASC Close-Up: Peter Levy
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6
OFFICERS - 2015/2016
Richard CrudoPresident
Owen RoizmanVice President
Kees van OostrumVice President
Lowell PetersonVice President
Matthew LeonettiTreasurer
Frederic GoodichSecretary
Isidore MankofskySergeant-at-Arms
MEMBERS OF THEBOARDJohn BaileyBill Bennett
Richard CrudoGeorge Spiro Dibie
Richard EdlundFred ElmesMichael Goi
Victor J. KemperDaryn Okada
Lowell PetersonRobert Primes
Owen RoizmanRodney Taylor
Kees van OostrumHaskell Wexler
ALTERNATESIsidore Mankofsky
Karl Walter LindenlaubKenneth ZunderFrancis Kenny
John C. Flinn III
MUSEUM CURATORSteve Gainer
American Society of Cine ma tog ra phersThe ASC is not a labor union or a guild, butan educational, cultural and pro fes sion al or ga ni za tion. Membership is by invitation
to those who are actively en gaged as di rec tors of photography and have
dem on strated out stand ing ability. ASC membership has be come one of the highest
honors that can be bestowed upon a pro fes sional cin e ma tog ra pher â a mark
of prestige and excellence.
8
Every so often, rumors reach our ears about a showthatâs truly going for broke, and The Revenant is justsuch an endeavor, having achieved legendary statuswhile it was still being made. Shot by EmmanuelLubezki, ASC, AMC for director Alejandro GonzĂĄlez Iùår-ritu, the movie is based upon the remarkable true-lifeexperiences of Hugh Glass (played by LeonardoDiCaprio), a 19th-century explorer cruelly abandoned byhis companions after being mauled by a grizzly bear. Themovieâs dramatization follows Glass as he treks throughmile after mile of freezing, inhospitable terrain to exacthis revenge. In bringing the saga to life, the cast andcrew of The Revenant braved a long, arduous shootamid brutal winter weather conditions that tested theirmettle to the max. The reward for their labors is an
impressive survival epic replete with fierce, jaw-dropping images â including one astoundingsequence in which a strategically induced background avalanche appears, on cue, toaugment the emotional undercurrents of DiCaprioâs performance. In Michael Goldmanâs coverage (âLeft for Dead,â page 36), Lubezki describes TheRevenant as âthe roughest and hardest thing I have ever done in my life,â while Iùårritu notes,âWe couldnât do it on a set, under normal Hollywood rules, and bring in snow and put inbluescreens. I wanted to absolutely kill any artifice. In keeping with that truth, we had to gothrough a true natural process, and challenge ourselves.â In the Heart of the Sea, which reteamed Anthony Dod Mantle, ASC, BSC, DFF withdirector Ron Howard, also tells a rugged tale of survival â complicated by what the cine-matographer recalls as âan orgy of interior and exterior studio work, water-tank shooting,location shooting, second- and third-unit work, underwater photography, aerial work andvisual effects.â David E. Williams has logged all of the details (âSavage Sea,â page 54). Adam Arkapaw further confirms that cinematography is not the best career choice foranyone who prefers the comforts of a Barcalounger to a canvas-backed crew chair. Whileshooting Macbeth on location in Scotland, Arkapaw endured conditions that sent even hardylocals scurrying for cover. âA lot of exteriors were hour-long walk-ins, often on mountain-tops,â he tells Benjamin B (âBattle Tested,â page 70). âIt was super windy, up to 40 miles anhour. My memory of Scotland is having three layers of waterproof jackets on, with my hoodon and my back to the wind, and just watching hail come sideways across my body.â Danny Cohen, BSC and director Tom Hooper had already battled operatic complexitiesseveral years ago while shooting a majestic musical adaptation of Les MisĂŠrables, so they wereprobably somewhat relieved to collaborate on a provocative but intimate drama like TheDanish Girl â which still required them to finesse the nuances of framing and lighting thetransgender protagonist portrayed by Eddie Redmayne. In Mark Dillonâs article (âLeadingLady,â page 82), Cohenâs longtime gaffer, Paul McGeachan, offers a succinct summation ofthe cinematographerâs approach: âWhen Eddie was Einar, we lit him like you would a man.But when he became Lili, we used big, soft sources and concentrated more on eye lights, asyou would with a leading lady.â
Stephen PizzelloEditor-in-Chief and Publisher
Editorâs Note
Phot
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Ow
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oizm
an, A
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10
Hereâs wishing you a happy, healthy and continually employed 2016! Speaking of being happy and healthy, American Cinematographerâs lead time hasdelayed my reporting on this past Novemberâs Camerimage International Film Festival, whichwas held in the delightful city of Bydgoszcz, Poland. Nonetheless, the interval hasnât dulledmy enthusiasm for an event that has become the worldâs premier celebration of who we areand what we do as cinematographers. 2015 marked the 23rd consecutive gathering; it alsopresented my first opportunity to attend. Like each previous one, this yearâs festival broughttogether cinematographers, fans and supporters from every corner of the world. As the firstand most prestigious offering of its kind, Camerimage deserves great praise and encourage-ment from everyone associated with motion pictures. The idea for Camerimage originated in 1992 with Festival Director â and now ASChonorary member â Marek Zydowicz. His reasoning was that cinematographers needed aforum through which to highlight their contributions to world cinema â and those contri-butions alone. Believe me, he has done a sensational job. The explosive growth in atten-dance and recognition over the years â 2015 saw more than 500 cinematographers andsome 5,000 others in attendance â is proof enough of his great achievement. Along withhis top lieutenants Kazik Suwala and Marek Zebrowski, Zydowicz warrants high praise for
a job well done. Their effort is akin to pulling off a second invasion of the beaches at Normandy. This yearâs edition bolted from the gate on Nov. 14 and ran through Nov. 21. In addition to the requisite whirl of semi-nars, roundtable discussions, and master classes that are taught by some of the professionâs most elite practitioners, therewere an endless number of screenings chosen to showcase the best of the best. Using an unconventional yet wholly correctapproach, distinguished panels of cinematographers judged the films in competition purely upon their visual merits. Accord-ing to Zydowicz, by structuring Camerimage in this fashion, he hoped to not only introduce new talents to the world but torefine and expand the scope of our art by dissecting it in fresh, ever more passionate ways. After seeing just a portion of thework, itâs clear that he has exceeded his initial expectations. Camerimage hands out a huge variety of honors to students, educators, actors, directors and other industry figures who have demonstrated a particular facility or appreciation for cinematography. It also draws attention to the collab-orative nature of our work by bestowing the unique Duo Award. This honor is reserved for cinematographer-director teamsthat, as termed by the organizers, have shown a âspecial sensitivityâ to the image. Past winners have included some of thegreatest combos in history. For a complete listing of winners and honorees, I refer you to the official festival website:www.camerimage.pl. You will be astonished! But I would be remiss if I didnât single out the granddaddy of them all: the Lifetime Achievement Award. Thereâs notmuch I can add that will make it seem a bigger deal than it already is. Just consider, if you will, a partial list of previousawardees: Sven Nykvist, ASC; Vittorio Storaro, ASC, AIC; Vilmos Zsigmond, ASC; Laszlo Kovacs, ASC; Owen Roizman, ASC;Freddie Francis, BSC; William A. Fraker, ASC; Witold Sobocinski, PSC; Haskell Wexler, ASC; Conrad Hall, ASC; and CalebDeschanel, ASC. This year, Chris Menges, ASC, BSC took the prize; I can tell you, he deserves that much and more. And did I mention the nightly string of parties that redefine the meaning of fun? If youâre a cinematographer, youhavenât lived until youâve been absorbed into the generous bosom of so many people who truly appreciate you and whatyou do. Iâm not exaggerating when I compare the feeling to something one of the Beatles might have experienced circa 1964. If you ever have an opportunity to attend, I cannot urge you strongly enough to do so. Poland is a beautiful countryand is home to some of the warmest, most welcoming people on Earth. No one else in the industry celebrates cinematog-raphers in as significant a way. Thanks to Marek and his crew for providing a thriving platform for just such celebration. Weall should salute them for it!
Richard P. CrudoASC President
Presidentâs Desk
12 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Phot
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Dan
a Ph
illip
Ros
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UFO
Dia
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Re-Creating the Battle of Los Angeles By Jason Apuzzo
It began with something mysterious appearing in the night sky. In the early hours of Feb. 25, 1942, an unidentified flyingobject flew through the dark skies of wartime Los Angeles. Theintruder set off a public panic and triggered a massive artillery barrageâ yet nothing in the sky was hit, and no wreckage was ever recov-ered. The object looked eerily similar to a flying saucer, and eventuallydisappeared off the coast, never to be seen again. The incident cameto be known as the Battle of Los Angeles. It also became a rewardingand nerve-racking challenge to re-create for a short film I directedcalled UFO Diary, which debuts this January. Indeed, what began as a simple concept for a sci-fi actioncomedy soon became an epic adventure involving more than ahundred World War II re-enactors, a tank, a half-track and a troupe ofdancing pin-up girls â with visual-effects artists from ILM, Weta Digi-tal and Digital Domain along for the ride. In the process, my filmmak-ing partner Govindini Murty and I learned how to make an effects-heavy short without having visual-effects backgrounds, and how tosimulate a World War II combat documentary without photographingactual combat. Shot found-footage style, UFO Diary depicts the Battle of LosAngeles from the point of view of two rambunctious Womenâs ArmyCorps officers who set out to film a trail of mysterious clues, only tobe trapped at a remote coastal bunker by a menacing alien spacecraft.The plucky WACs chase the UFO back to Fort MacArthur and thenconfront the wily invader during a wild nighttime air raid.
Visually inspired by color World War II documentaries likeJohn Fordâs The Battle of Midway, our goal with UFO Diary was toevoke the look of 16mm Kodachrome combat footage while usingmodern digital cameras. Like the Bell & Howell combat cameras ofold, our cameras would have to be small and rugged. âWe designedall of these fluid, handheld shots in which weâre running around thefort, jumping into jeeps, firing anti-aircraft guns â all while handingthe camera back and forth to capture different POVs,â says Murty,UFO Diaryâs lead actress and producer, who also helped shoot thefilm. âThis wasnât feasible with a big camera, but worked very wellwith DSLRs.â For such all-purpose duty we chose the Canon EOS 7D,outfitted with a Canon L-Series EF 24-70mm (f2.8) zoom lens formaximum flexibility. We also used a Nikon D3100 with a Nikon 18-55mm (f3.5) VR lens, and Murty even carried a tiny Canon Power-Shot ELPH 330 HS in the pocket of her World War II jumpsuit, oftengrabbing extra POV shots between takes. âWe wanted the audi-ence to have an immersive, first-person experience, as if they werethere in World War II-era Los Angeles witnessing this fabled UFOincident for themselves,â explains Murty. With Naveen Chaubal, Murty and I handling most of thecinematography, the air-raid sequence was shot over three hecticnights at Fort MacArthur in San Pedro â challenging shoots due tothe low-light conditions. Practical lights like vintage military search-lights, sodium-vapor lamps, gun-muzzle flashes (created by gas jets)and flares were supplemented with LED flashlights and bounceboards. The scarcity of fill light made these shoots tense, yet theresults were often spectacular, especially when colorful pyrotechnics
An alienspacecraft
invades World War II
Los Angeles inthe short film
UFO Diary.
I
14 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Short Takes
16 January 2016 American Cinematographer
lit up the sky as coastal fog added a layer ofdiffusion. Chaubal used Technicolorâs CineStyleProfile for the Canon 7D to boost dynamicrange, giving us greater detail in the mid-tones and shadows. This also helped thecolor-grading process later on. âWe justtried to push the 7D to the limit, knowingthe footage was going to be heavily treatedto give it a vintage look,â recounts Chaubal. For a warm, nostalgic look, we shotthe daytime sequences at the fort and thecoastal bunker during magic hour. Thisseverely restricted our shooting schedule,but we felt the results were worth it.âMagic hour is always a blessing and acurse to rely on for light,â notes Chaubal,who was assisted on these shoots by the
versatile Jeff Fukuhara. âMostly, itâs a bless-ing.â Because we planned to âcreateâ themovie in the editing room â like an actualdocumentary â getting proper coveragewas critical. Shooting 23.98 fps at 1080pusing the H.264 codec, we captured about750GB of footage for the roughly 16-minute film. Tasked with assembling thisfootage into a cut was Emmy-winningeditor Mitch Danton, ACE, who worked inAvid at Timeline Editing Systems inBurbank. âEditing reality shows like Survivorand the large-scale docudrama The Path to9/11 gave me the confidence to tackle thefound-footage, documentary-style projectUFO Diary,â says Danton. âThe goal was tofind the images that looked the most realis-
tic. Thatâs why I think the film is so good,because the performances are believable.From the principal actors to the extras, itfeels authentic.â Editing would ultimately require agroup effort on UFO Diary, with Murty,editorial assistant Sarah French and myselfalso contributing. âThe effort was worthit,â Murty attests, âbecause this initial cut ofUFO Diary â supervised by Mitch Dantonâ played a crucial role in recruiting top-level visual-effects talent to the project.â A key early recruit was Kiel Figginsâ notable for his animation work onAvengers: Age of Ultron and as a DigitalDomain veteran â who came on board asan animation supervisor after seeing UFODiaryâs rough cut. âIâm personally a hugesci-fi fan,â relates Figgins. âWhat drew methe most to this project was the scale andscope of the shots and assets, whichseemed doable and had a clear directionand goal. âThe heavy lifting of shooting thelive action had already been done,â Figginsadds, âso it was less of a âHey, I have an ideafor a short,â and more of a true collabora-tion with people serious enough about theproject to meet halfway before bringing onmore talent.â Figgins brought other colleaguesonto the project, including animatorsDelano Athias and Bren Wilson, andconcept designer Justin Albers. Figgins alsobuilt the saucerâs animation rig, based onthe 3D model designed primarily by artistShun Kim in Maya. âThe rig allowed theanimators to manipulate the model andcreate the animation,â Figgins says. RiniSugianto â a veteran of ILM and WetaDigital who has served as an animator onsuch projects as The Hobbit: The Desolationof Smaug â also joined the team as ananimation supervisor, bringing along anima-tors Antony Pringorahardjo and OkkiTanaya. Before long, visual-effects artists asfar afield as London, Jakarta, San Franciscoand Montreal were rallying to bring oursaucer to life. Before animation could begin,though, an enormous problem had to beovercome: 3D match-moving. Our night-sky shots provided almost no visible geom-etry to track, and our daylight âheroâ shotâ when the saucer first arrives at the
Top: Background fog, flares and searchlights were used during the air-raid scene when the alien spacecraft attacks. Bottom: In a scene after the air raid, Govindini Murty (as a WAC officer) was lit
by a sodium-vapor streetlight and LED flashlight, which were diffused with fog.
18 January 2016 American Cinematographer
bunker to threaten the WACs â was awhopping 45 seconds long, with thecamera in constant motion. Plus, we hadnâtused physical markers while shooting. The problem was solved in twoways. Using no tracking data whatsoever, ayoung effects prodigy named AntonyVannapho â whose credits include TheTwilight Saga: Breaking Dawn â Part I âhand-animated the saucer in 20 of our 33visual-effects shots while also handlinglighting, rotoscoping, pyrotechnics, particleeffects and compositing. Although manyshots were brief, it was a bravura effort thatinspired the whole team. âI knew from thestart that we wouldnât be able to track thenight sky, so I was already minded toanimate everything manually, frame by
frame, to match the live footage,â saysVannapho, who used Maya and AfterEffects to complete the shots. âI love thestyle of found-footage and the challenge ofvisual-effects integration attached to it.â The remaining longer shots âincluding the hero shot â were trackedusing SynthEyes software by former WetaDigital match-mover Sean Dollins, whoâdonce tracked shots down to the sub-pixellevel for Ridley Scottâs Prometheus. A taskthat Dollins attests was âjust as difficult, butin a different wayâ from those heâd takenon at Weta, UFO Diaryâs hero shot pressedhim to the limit. He explains, âWhen youârematch-moving, there are things that arealways going to make shots hard to do:long [takes], being handheld, having a lot of
fast motion, being in particularly low light,or not having a lot of features to track orlock onto.â He adds drily, âThis shothappened to have the perfect combinationof all of those things.â Once match-moving was complete,our animators could finally bring thesaucerâs menacing personality to life. âTheanimators, Bren and Delano, are both verytalented and capable artists who broughttheir own flare to the character,â notesFiggins. âWhat Iâm most pleased with isthat they used all the controls available tomake the ship feel alive, from the tiny flaps,air vents, swinging hoses, eye rings and soon. These smaller details make the ship feelthat much bigger. The design of the saucerallowed a lot of personality to comethrough.â One final visual challenge remained:creating UFO Diaryâs distressed 16mmKodachrome look. Color documentariesfrom World War II have a very particularcolor profile, with saturated primary colorsbut an otherwise limited spectrum. Theyalso tend to fade to blue as they deteriorate.With Sarah French I crafted a custom lookfor UFO Diary using Avidâs color-gradingtools in 2K, real film grain scanned at 4K,and a host of third-party plug-ins andelements (dirt, scratches, light leaks, filmleader). Keeping a modern 1.78:1 aspectratio and Rec 709 color space, we boostedthe primary colors, especially blue in theshadows, outputting the result to a 1080pQuickTime file. Itâs a unique look intendedto evoke an era rather than imitate it. Ultimately, everything about UFODiary â from its story to its technology âwas a mixture of old and new. âItâs a historicmystery brought to life with cutting-edgevisual effects,â affirms Murty. Danton adds,âItâs a fantastical tale, but we wanted topresent it in a way that felt believable. Ithink we walked that tightrope really well.â For UFO Diary details and updates,follow @UFODiary on Twitter. ďż˝
Top: An alien spacecraft attacks Fort MacArthur. Bottom: Shot at magic hour, the WAC officers (Murtyand Rachel Newell) uncover the otherworldly mystery at the fort.
20 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Time and Age By Neil Matsumoto
Post World War II Italian cinema brought us some of thefinest works in film history, from neorealist pieces such as RobertoRosselliniâs Rome, Open City and Vittorio De Sicaâs Bicycle Thieves, to1950s and â60s auteur productions by Federico Fellini, LuchinoVisconti, Michelangelo Antonioni and others. Over the past fewdecades, however, there has been a bit of a drought in terms ofworld-renowned Italian filmmakers. But that has begun to changewith the emergence of a new crop of directors â including PaoloSorrentino, whose film The Great Beauty won the 2014 AcademyAward for Best Foreign Language Film. Youth is Sorrentinoâs second English-language film, and starsMichael Caine and Harvey Keitel as Fred Ballinger and Mick Boyle,respectively â best friends vacationing in the Swiss Alps at a luxuryspa and resort. Fred is a retired music composer who has beenasked to conduct his most popular composition for the queen ofEngland. Mick is a director working with a group of young writerson a screenplay for his next film, which will star his muse, BrendaMorel (Jane Fonda). In a lyrical style lush with painterly compositionsand vivid hues, Youth deals in lifeâs reciprocals â devotion and infi-delity, youth and old age, life and death. For the project, Sorrentino enlisted the expertise of longtime
collaborator Luca Bigazzi, who has shot six of the directorâs features.The cinematographer got his start working in commercials as anassistant director in Milan, but he âdidnât like it at all,â Bigazzi tellsAC in a phone conversation from Italy, where he is back to workwith Sorrentino on the HBO miniseries The Young Pope. âI wantedto make cinema, not commercials.â Bigazzi shot promotional spots for several years, until hisfriend Silvio Soldini came back from New York University, and thetwo decided to finance and shoot their own black-and-white film,1983âs Landscape With Figures. âI had no camera background atall,â reveals Bigazzi. âI [knew] nothing about fill light, key light orbacklight. At that time, there were no fast film stocks or high-speedlenses, so shooting was much tougher. We mainly used practicallights, fluorescent bulbs and small lights. I tried to light a set in amuch more realistic way that is closer to the feeling of the story, andnot in a classical way.â The imagery that informed the look of Youth included twoSwiss resorts where most of the film was shot â the Hotel Wald-haus in Flims and the Schatzalp Hotel in Davos. Bigazzi was inspiredby the mix of the beautiful ambient light in the Swiss Alps and thecomparatively sterile tone of the hotelâs fluorescent lighting. âIt wasa beautiful season, with mountains and blue skies in the back-ground, but we didnât want to shoot all beautiful skies,â Bigazzisays. âBut toward the end of shooting, we changed our minds
Production Slate
Yout
hph
otos
by
Gia
nni F
iori
to, c
ourt
esy
of T
wen
tieth
Cen
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Fox
Film
Cor
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In the Italianfeature Youth,
longtime friendsFred Ballinger
(Michael Caine, left)and Mick Boyle(Harvey Keitel)
reflect on their pastand ponder
retirement whilevacationing in the
Swiss Alps.
I
22 January 2016 American Cinematographer
because it was just too beautiful. Why goagainst it?â As Bigazzi tells it, he and Sorrentinoknow each other so well that they rarelydiscuss framing or lighting, which makesfor a faster and more efficient shoot. âThisis a great quality,â the cinematographersays, âbecause you donât lose time, youdonât lose the moment, you donât lose theacting or the reality.â Bigazziâs lighting techniques alsocontribute to a speedy production. âWe
light the set not knowing exactly where theactors will be, where the camera will be, orwhat the camera movement will look like,âhe reveals. âAfter the set is lit, the actors[arrive] and then we decide how to shoot.The light is more for the overall ambiencethan for a single shot. That means thecamera can move 360 degrees, we can usethree cameras at the same time, and wewonât change the light between shots inthe same sequence.â On all of the films he works on,
Bigazzi operates the A camera âbecause Idonât want to lose contact with the actors,âhe says. âThis relationship with the actors ispart of the photographic work, and itâs awordless way of relating. The secondcamera in Youth was operated by my long-time collaborator Daria DâAntonio. TheSwiss Steadicam operator was Ariel Salati.â For interiors, Bigazzi usuallysuspends lights from the ceiling or placesunits outside to illuminate throughwindows, thus letting actors feel morecomfortable moving freely throughout theset. âItâs quite difficult sometimes, because Ihave to guess how high my lighting can bewithout it being in the frame,â he says.âThanks to Paolo, I learned how to light aset so my lighting is invisible. Sometimes theactors will ask me, âWhere is my light?â Forme, itâs better for them not to know. I onlyhope itâs better for people watching themovie, as well. Itâs a realistic way of lighting,but itâs not at all flat-looking.â In shooting a night-exteriorsequence at a garden party with a bandplaying on a rotating stage, Bigazzi didnâthave any space for lights, since the camerawould rotate along with the musicians onthe relatively small platform for shots of theband. He also didnât want to use distantlighting balloons or Condors, because itwould spill light across the set. Instead, he
Right: Fred is anacclaimed
composer andconductor with no
intention ofresuming his
musical career.Below:
CinematographerLuca Bigazzi
(wearing glasses)lines up a shot
with director PaoloSorrentino.
24 January 2016 American Cinematographer
had production designer Ludovica Ferrarioconstruct a translucent stage floor withlights placed underneath it, so his cameracould remain fixed onstage, with lightingcoming from below. âWe used very thin and powerfulLED light tubes from Viabizzuno, an inte-rior-design Italian lighting factory,â Bigazziexplains. â[These] allowed us to shoot withpowerful lighting hidden [within the set].We first used them on The Great Beauty,and I really fell in love with them becausetheyâre powerful, yet small. Throughout mycareer Iâve always used strange or unusuallights â anything and everything.â Another big scene that Bigazzi litunconventionally was the finale, in whichBallinger conducts for the queen. It wasshot on location in a concert hall in Green-wich, England, where a translucent whitebacking was placed behind the orchestra.âPaolo had this idea for a soft-white lookfor the scene,â says Bigazzi. âMost of theframe is backlit. There were some ellip-soidal spots for the violin, conductor andsinger from the top of the theater, butmostly it was lit from the background.âBigazzi lit the white backing from behind,using 50 Pallas Groundrow lights â eachfitted with a 625-watt linear tungsten halo-gen lamp â placed on the floor backstage.
The lit background simultaneously enabledBigazzi to illuminate the audience in thetheater without setting up additionalfixtures. Bigazzi does make use of more tradi-tional tools like Kino Flos and HMIs, but onlyto augment natural light or to enhance hispracticals. âIf you donât learn how to light inschool or from anybody else, youâll feelmore free to find unusual solutions,â heopines. âThe great thing about shootingwith Paolo is that heâs so flexible; heâs notrigid or conventional. If we need or want to,we can change our ideas very quickly, andthatâs a much better way to work.â The cinematographer shot Youth in2:39:1 with a Red Epic Dragon andArri/Zeiss Ultra Prime lenses. Although theDragon is capable of 6K capture, Bigazzichose to shoot in 4K for day and 5K fornight. âTo be honest, the images are sosharp that I donât need [any more detail],because I donât want to see all of the actorsâskin defects,â he says. âThe only problemwith digital is that itâs too sharp. I like softerimages [because] our eyes are not alwayssuper-sharp. Iâm not a fanatic about lenssharpness, either.â Bigazzi is also not romantic aboutfilm negative, and will always opt for digitalif given the choice. âI feel more free creat-
ing crazy kinds of lighting setups with digi-tal because itâs more sensitive in readinginto the shadows,â he explains. He addswith a laugh, âApparently, Iâm alone in thisopinion.â For high-contrast environments,Bigazzi has also embraced Redâs HDRxtechnology, which records two trackssimultaneously â a normal exposure (Aframe), and an exposure that protects yourhighlights (X frame) by using an adjustableshutter speed that is up to 6 stops faster.When working in RedCine-X, the tonallevels from the X frame can be blendedwith the A frame to produce extendeddynamic range. âIt gives you much more ofan advantage when youâre shooting withnatural light, especially for interiors,âexplains Bigazzi. âIf you donât need to readinto your highlights, you donât need HDR.But if you need to, itâs great to extend yourlatitude while looking more realistic. Iâmsure my way of thinking about lighting onset has changed radically since this double-exposure technique came out. Now, I feelfreer and braver.â According to Bigazzi, 80 percent ofYouth was shot using HDRx. âFor exam-ple,â he says, âin the scenes shot in thebreakfast hall, [the need for] this devicewas really undeniable because of the
With the lightingsuspended from
the ceiling,Bigazzi and crew
prepare to rollthree cameras
simultaneously.
[extremely] big windows â so we shotwith HDRx and [used] very few lights, main-taining the opportunity to see thepanorama through the windows.â Because the process essentiallydoubles the data stream, Bigazzi shoots at
tal in Rome on a DaVinci Resolve system byBigazziâs longtime colorist Andrea Orsini.According to Bigazzi, it is important to payincreased attention to contrast and chromawhen shooting on digital. âMany scenes,especially those shot at night, get their trueatmosphere in the lab,â he says. âMakingactors come further from the backgroundwith masks, [adding] more contrast, orletting shadows become readable is theonly solution to getting rid of the âsettyrannyâ of [tight] schedules or problemswith the actual scenic area.â Apropos of the themes explored inthe film, Bigazzi concludes: âIâm gettingolder now, but I donât want to be consid-ered an âexperiencedâ cinematographer,because any time I learn something, I [lose]my chance to improvise. I know how tolight, but I really donât want to know. Youfeel closer to the subject and the scriptwhen trying to find new solutions.â
TECHNICAL SPECS
2.39:1Digital CaptureRed Epic DragonArri/Zeiss Ultra Prime
a higher compression rate when employingthe HDRx system than he would for normalRed files. âI canât really see much of a differ-ence between 5:1 and 7:1 compression,âhe says. Youth was graded at Margutta Digi-
26 January 2016 American Cinematographer
The lighting isrigged high
above awalkway for a
dream sequencein which Fredapproaches a
concert hall for aperformance butis thwarted byrising waters.
��
28 January 2016 American Cinematographer
A Guided Tour of Hell By Jean Oppenheimer
Shooting on 35mm stock is rareenough these days, but color-timingphotochemically is almost unheard of.Yet, thatâs the path cinematographerMĂĄtyĂĄs ErdĂŠly, HSC and director LĂĄszlĂłNemes insisted on for the Hungarian filmSon of Saul. The harrowing Holocaustdrama won four awards at the 2015Cannes Film Festival, including the GrandPrix, and is Hungaryâs submission for thisyearâs Foreign Language Film AcademyAward. The film also screened at therecent Camerimage festival, where ErdĂŠlywas awarded the Bronze Frog. Son of Saul is set in the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in October 1944.Both dramatically and visually, the filmfocuses on a single individual, SaulAusländer (GĂŠza RĂśhrig), a member of theSonderkommando work unit â Jewishprisoners who were forced to removecorpses from the gas chambers and trans-port them to the crematoriums. One daySaul spots the body of a boy he believes tobe his son. He becomes obsessed withhiding the body and giving the child a
proper Jewish burial. Saulâs single-minded quest leaveshim oblivious to everything else aroundhim, and his psychological fog is mirroredin the filmâs visual concept. âThe lensremains focused on Saul, almost always inclose-up or tight medium, while thehorrors unfolding in the background âinmates herded into gas chambers, deadbodies being dragged away â are out offocus,â ErdĂŠly tells AC, speaking by phonefrom his home in Budapest. âBy shootingclose to wide-open [T2 on interiors andT2.8½ for exteriors] and focusing the lensapproximately 2½ feet from the filmplane, objects [beyond those 30 inches]are still visible, but blurry. LĂĄszlĂłâs geniuswas in using this very basic photographictool for dramatic purposes.â Nemes started thinking about Saulmore than a decade ago, and initiallymentioned the project to ErdĂŠly in 2007,after the cinematographer shot the direc-torâs first short film. Over the years, evenwhile working on other projects, theyestablished a set of rules to follow: theentire film would be shot handheld, usinga single lens and a single stock. As to the filmâs unusually narrow
aspect ratio, the cinematographerexplains that initially âwe were concernedthat 1.37:1 wouldnât give us enough ofthe environment. But once you move thecamera â which we do constantly onSaul â you can reveal as much as youlike. âThis film absolutely could nothave been made without focus pullerGergely Csepregi,â ErdĂŠly adds. âHe wasremarkable.â Son of Saul was shot predomi-nantly on an Arricam Lite (with an HDvideo assist to ensure high-resolutionpreview images). An Arriflex 235 wassubstituted when confronted with espe-cially tight spaces; when running with thecamera was required; and when thecamera was placed in an underwaterhousing unit, even as the lens remainedabove the water line. Far more significant for ErdĂŠly thanthe camera selection was the choice oflens and film stock. âOne of the mostimportant aspects of choosing the rightlens was how the out-of-focus imageswould look,â he submits. âThe filmâswhole visual approach relies on what isrevealed, how it is revealed, and the infor- So
n of
Sau
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LĂĄsz
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In the Holocaustdrama Son of
Saul, Auschwitz-Birkenau prisoner
Saul Ausländer(GÊza RÜhrig)
becomesobsessed with
hiding the bodyof a boy he
believes to be hisson, determined
to give the child aproper Jewish
burial.
I
30 January 2016 American Cinematographer
mation that is kept from the audience. Ifyou show a dead body, how much of it ishinted at and how much is actually[seen]? We wanted a very precise record-ing of reality, and Zeiss makes the mostprecise lenses out there: super-sharp, veryclean and no artifice. I opted for[Arri/Zeiss] Master Primes, which Iconsider the most pristine.â The same reasoning lay behind thechoice of focal length. âApproximately 85percent of the film was shot on a 40mmand the rest was on a 35mm,â ErdĂŠlysays. âWe wanted a focal length thatwould translate reality onto film in themost precise way â one that didnât
distort or magnify, and was neither toowide nor too long. I believe the 40mm isthe closest to how we see the world.â For his film stock, ErdĂŠly explains, âIshot everything on Kodak Vision3 500T5219. I wanted the levels of grain andcontrast to be consistent throughout thefilm.â He rated the stock at 320 ASAduring the day and pushed it one stop fornight exteriors. A Tiffen Ultra Contrast 2was always on the lens, and ND filterswere used to keep the T-stop consistent. The camera was constantly on themove, and scenes play out in extended,continuous takes â often two to threeminutes long. âBecause we didnât have
coverage, we were editing in-camera,âsays Nemes, who sat down with AC inSeptember, during a brief stop in LosAngeles. Noting that editor MatthieuTaponier was on set every day, ErdĂŠly adds,âThe three of us were constantlydiscussing the pacing of the scenes,because once we shot it, we couldnâtchange it.â The concentration-camp sceneswere staged in an abandoned militarybarracks in Hungary, with sets built intothe practical structure. Three of the build-ingâs four levels were used. âThe gaschamber and undressing area had to berooms without shadows, suggesting thereis nowhere to hide,â says ErdĂŠly of theground-floor set. Working with gafferJĂłzsef Simon, he adds, âwe used bare,500-watt tungsten bulbs in the ceiling.The bulbs had to be hidden, so productiondesigner LĂĄszlĂł Rajk designed fake ceilingbeams.â The doctorâs office on the secondlevel had table lamps and surgical lights,while the crematorium area â located onthe same floor â was darker and mood-ier, lit by wall practicals and flames leapingfrom the ovens. One oven contained a realfire, while the other two had Blondes oncustom-made flicker boxes, bounced intoâsmall poly boards,â ErdĂŠly says, âand ametallic bounce material used in construc-tion for insulating chimneys. Both ovens
Right: Best boySzabolcs GalgĂłczi
(far left),cinematographer
MĂĄtyĂĄs ErdĂŠly(wearing hoodie)and camera grip
LĂĄszlĂł Egyedi (farright) move with
RĂśhrig as he carriesa body through the
death-camp set.Below (from left):First AC GergelyCsepregi, Egyedi,ErdĂŠly and boomoperator SĂĄmuel
CsĂłka on the moveduring the
physically taxing,single-camera
project.
32 January 2016 American Cinematographer
had two to three lights [with] a mixture oforange and red gels.â The third floor, where theSonderkommandos lived, was lit withcandles and a few bare 60- and 100-wattbulbs. âI tried to keep all the light prettymuch white,â reports ErdĂŠly. âThe mostimportant thing was to avoid any flatter-ing light. This film could not be pretty.â Nemes spent the better part of ayear choreographing and mapping Saulâsevery move on his iPad, creating a floorplan with a circle representing Saul and atriangle indicating the camera. âLĂĄszlĂłwanted a feeling of chaos and unpre-dictability,â says ErdĂŠly, âbut to achievethat, we had to lock down every detail.Each shot required an enormous amountof concentration from everybody. It wasvery rewarding, but also physically taxing.LĂĄszlĂł and I went to a personal trainer formonths in order to get into the best possi-ble shape.â The physical demands on ErdĂŠlywere especially onerous, with the camerasitting on his shoulder at least eight hoursa day. The lens always remained at Saulâseye level, whether he was on his kneesscrubbing the floor, bending over to draga corpse, or simply moving from room toroom. Sometimes Saul would be walkingforward, only to abruptly reverse step. âIknew from blocking and rehearsals thatGĂŠza would take 15 steps before turning
on the 16th, so I counted my steps,â saysErdĂŠly. The cinematographer was neveractually tethered to the actor; instead, agrip â LĂĄszlĂł Egyedi â was assigned tohelp guide him, which was especiallyimportant when ErdĂŠly was walkingbackwards across a floor littered withcorpses. âGĂŠza understood that if hedidnât stop where he was supposed to, orif he made a sharp turn unexpectedly, theshot would be ruined,â says ErdĂŠly. Toward the end of the 28-dayshoot, ErdĂŠly tripped and badly sprainedhis ankle, and two other operators filledin for the final few days. GyĂśrgy RĂŠdershot the last two scenes of the film, whileZoltĂĄn Lovasi shot the nighttimesequence of Jews being shot and throwninto open pits. As the latter scene depicts, prison-ers are marched into the woods, wherethree pits have been dug, and Saul joinsthe line, searching for a rabbi to bury hisson. Chaos erupts when the inmatesarrive at the pits, where they are pushedin and fired upon. This especially longscene consists of multiple shots. To lightthe sequence, âa very old, period 10Ktungsten Fresnel light,â ErdĂŠly describes,was placed atop a military truck parkedon the path, which appears on screen asa giant searchlight. Electricians, dressedas prisoners and placed among the
extras, held flashlights to provide addi-tional illumination. Two more pits lie beyond the first,with huge flames leaping out of them andsilhouetting much of the action. Theflames were produced by âa custom-madesystem,â ErdĂŠly says, â[fueled by] a combi-nation of gas and petrol, [and] provided byour special-effects team â Gyula Kras-nyĂĄnszky and Barna Princz.â Truck head-lights on the far side of the pits offeredadditional light, as did small spotlightsheld by individual Nazi soldiers as theywatched the slaughter. Day exteriors relied exclusively onnatural light. âLĂĄszlĂł really understandslight and was willing to sacrifice certainthings in order to get the best light for thescene,â ErdĂŠly attests. At one point Saul isoutside the compound when a commo-tion suddenly allows him to veer off andjump into the back of a pickup truck thatis transporting inmates to a work area. Theactor jumped easily onto the tailgate âbut ErdĂŠly, with the heavy camera on hisshoulder, had to move quickly to keep up.A small dolly, with a short platform on it,was placed next to the truck for ErdĂŠly tostep onto, and crewmembers Egyedi andJĂĄnos Csikesz guided him onto the truckbed and secured him to a railing beforethe vehicle departed. The entire scene wasdone in one continuous shot. Only one cinematic reference was
Egyedi guidedErdĂŠly as the
cinematographerclosely followed
RĂśhrig during thecarefully
choreographedshoot.
34 January 2016 American Cinematographer
used for the film: Elem Klimovâs 1985Soviet war drama Come and See. âIt isdifferent in many ways, but it is also avery personal journey and a very immer-sive experience,â says Nemes. âWe evencontacted Aleksei Rodionov, who shotthe film.â Son of Saul was processed atMagyar Filmlabor in Budapest, andErdĂŠlyâs only instruction was to push onestop for night exteriors. Printed dailieswere screened every day. âI have workedwith that lab, and with color timer ViolaRegĂŠczy, for years,â he reports. âThey areabsolutely amazing.â RegĂŠczy was the colorist on boththe dailies and the final film grade. Thephotochemical finish was completed at
the Hungarian film lab FilmlaboratĂłrium.No digital intermediate was performed inthe generation of the final analog deliver-able, for which Kodak Vision Color PrintFilm 2383 served as the print stock. A 4K FilmLight Northlight scanner,aided by The Pixel Farmâs dust-bustingtechnology, was employed to generatethe digital version of Son of Saul. The digi-tal color grade was performed by LĂĄszlĂłKovĂĄcs with FilmLight Baselight Four, andthe final digital deliverable was a 2K DCP.âWe also did a 4K film-out on an Arrilaserto create an interneg for additionalprints,â ErdĂŠly says. And though digitalprojection is the predominant theatricaldisplay method, it is Nemesâ strong prefer-ence that audiences seek out theaters
projecting Son of Saul on film. As part of their prep, ErdĂŠly notesthat he and Nemes drove to Auschwitzand explored the site for a couple of days.âI have such huge respect for LĂĄszlĂł,â heconcludes. âAnd he is so generous; he hasshared the filmâs success with all of us. Itâsa strange thing to say, given what thismovie is about, but the shoot was themost satisfying I have ever worked on,both professionally and personally.â
TECHNICAL SPECS
1.37:135mmArricam Lite, Arriflex 235Arri/Zeiss Master PrimeKodak Vision3 500T 5219 ďż˝
Top: ErdĂŠlycaptures the
scene in whichSaul, searchingfor a rabbi tobury his son,
joins prisonersbeing marched
into the woods.Bottom: Natural
light wasutilized for dayexteriors filmed
at anabandoned
military barracksin Hungary.
ERRATUMIn our coverage of Everest in the October2015 issue, we misidentified the digital-imaging technician who was with theproduction on location. Kerr Loy served asDIT â with Ash Daniyan as the lab techni-cian â for the location filming in Nepaland Italy, and for a portion of the stagework in London. Jody Neckles thenstepped in as DIT for the remainder of thework in London.
36 January 2016 American Cinematographer
D irector Alejandro GonzĂĄlez Iùårritu and cinematogra-pher Emmanuel Lubezki, ASC, AMC are keenlyaware that their method of shooting The Revenant lastfall and winter â in sequence and relying almost exclu-
sively on natural light in the harsh Canadian wilderness âhas been controversial. Now, after nearly five years of planningand a brutal, extended production and post schedule, the film-makers are eager to explain why they believe the undertakingwas worth enduring such punishing conditions. Adapted from author Michael Punkeâs 2002 novel, TheRevenant is based on the real-life survival and revenge story ofHugh Glass. The 19th-century explorer (played by Leonardo
Emmanuel Lubezki, ASC, AMCand Alejandro Gonzålez Iùårritubrave extreme conditions whileshooting The Revenant on location in the Canadian
wilderness.
By Michael Goldmanâ˘|â˘
DiCaprio) was mauled by a grizzly bear during a MissouriRiver expedition in 1823, and after declaring him beyondhope, his companions took Glassâ weapons and fled. In themovie, Glass awakens wounded and unarmed in a shallowgrave, but rises up and steels himself to track down the menwho had left him for dead. Iùårritu and Lubezki readily concede that the produc-tion was numbingly difficult. Filming took place primarily inthe remote Rocky Mountain region surrounding Calgary,Alberta, Canada â with certain sequences captured at theSquamish River in British Columbia, north of Vancouver, aswell as the Kootenai River in Libby, Montana. The final
Left for Dead
Left for Dead
www.theasc.com January 2016 37
scenes were shot in Ushuaia, Tierra delFuego, Argentina. Iùårritu calls theproject âa once-in-a-lifetime experi-ence,â and Lubezki describes it as âtheroughest and hardest thing I have everdone in my life.â âIt got so intense and so challeng-ing, but we all knew when we signed upthat it would be this way,â Iùårritu says.âWe discovered that when you areexposed to the weather and these condi-tions every day, you have to adapt. I hadto shoot the movie chronologically,because that is how it is written â itstarts in autumn and moves into winter.And the character goes through a veryreal physical experience of being in themiddle of nowhere for months. So wecouldnât do it on a set, under normalHollywood rules, and bring in snow andput in bluescreens. I wanted toabsolutely kill any artifice. In keepingwith that truth, we had to go through atrue natural process, and challengeourselves.â At the center of it all, Iùårrituattests, was âthe Chivo element,â refer-ring to Lubezki by his nickname. âIcould not have done this movie withouthim,â the director says. âHis knowledgeof natural light, the complexity of it âthere could never be a better creativepartner.â Indeed, Iùårritu insists that
In the featureThe Revenant,after Hugh Glass(LeonardoDiCaprio,opposite) ismauled by agrizzly bear, heseeks revengeagainst JohnFitzgerald (TomHardy, this page,top, far left), whohad left him fordead. Middle:CinematographerEmmanuelLubezki, ASC,AMC lines up ashot for a wintryscene. Bottom:DirectorAlejandroGonzålez Iùårritudiscusses a scenewith DiCaprio.
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38 January 2016 American Cinematographer
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Lubezki did âby far his most superbwork everâ on The Revenantâ which ishigh praise, considering Lubezkientered the production after winningtwo consecutive Academy Awards forGravity (AC Nov. â13) and IùårrituâsBirdman (ACDec. â14). As Lubezki explains, he realizedfrom the beginning that shooting inharsh weather amid woods, mountainsand prairies, with constantly shiftingskies and short windows of daylight,would only work if the entire crewperformed âas true filmmakersâ â ahearty band of collaborators on theirown adventure, mirroring the saga theywere putting onscreen. He describes the
colleagues who made it through, fromgrips to camera assistants to fellowoperators, as âindispensibleâ and âmyright handsâ on the project. The original plan for the produc-tion had been to shoot a film/digitalhybrid, and while the production didcarry film cameras early on, no filmfootage appears in the finished cut. TheRevenant ultimately relied on a combi-nation of Arri Alexa cameras: the AlexaXT, which was used primarily forSteadicam and crane shots; the AlexaM, which was designated as theprimary camera; and the new Alexa 65system, an early version of which Arrimade available to the filmmakers in
January of 2015, several weeks intoproduction. Though the Alexa 65 was origi-nally carried primarily for vistas andmore expansive shots, the filmmakersended up using the new large-formatcamera âmore and more and more,âaccording to 1st AC John Connor, andfor all sorts of applications, includingcrane work for entire scenes and someSteadicam. Connor notes that the Alexa65 was commandeered for âlong takes[that progressed] from wide shots intoclose-ups, usually to [the minimumfocus of ] 15" on the widest [24mm]lens.â Lubezki explains that he wasinitially attracted to the idea of âinclud-ing the dynamic range of a film nega-tive. I wanted to shoot a combination of35mm and 65mm film, and then useAlexa for dusk and night. But the testswerenât turning out the way we wantedâ we were having [logistical problems]with X-rays in airports and labs â andI was already [impressed with] theAlexa tests when Arri called and saidthe Alexa 65 was available. âOnce we started testing thatcamera, we decided to switch to all-digital,â he continues. âIn the weatherconditions and the short windows [ofsunlight], the Alexa did great work.Even if the dynamic range is not exactlythe same as film, what the Alexa wasable to do in the low end was something
Top: In a flashback sequence, Glass observes a pile of buffalo skulls. Bottom: Lubezki moves thecamera in for a close-up on DiCaprio and Grace Dove for a flashback of Glass and his wife.
40 January 2016 American Cinematographer
we could never do with film. In theseconditions, with lots of shadows andlimited time with sunlight, it was a verygood decision.â According to Lubezki,approximately 13 percent of TheRevenant was shot with the Alexa 65. Lubezki describes the procuringof cameras and lenses as âthe most
bizarre rental story.â When the produc-tion returned the film-based package toPanavision, they found themselves in asubstantial hurry to obtain the necessarydigital equipment. Various rental housesworked to fulfill The Revenant âs needsâ primarily Panavision and ArriRental, the latter of which provided the
Alexa 65 and its associated Arri Prime65 lenses. âWe were kind of stranded,and the rental houses were very helpful,âLubezki recalls. The Alexas all recorded inuncompressed ArriRaw to Codex512GB XR Capture Drives. The XTand M cameras captured at 3415x2198resolution and the 65 at 6560x3100. Due to the nature of the story âa mountain man fighting for survival,primarily outdoors, in an era when sun,moon, stars and fire would have beenhis only possible light sources âIùårritu says it was essentially a no-brainer to shoot exclusively with naturallight. He concluded it was the only wayto achieve the level of realism he craved,despite the difficulties the approachwould entail. Lubezki notes that this methoddid not contribute to the productionâsextended schedule. âIn reality,â he says,âshooting with natural light allows us toshoot faster, because we didnât have todrive lights into mountains and bringmore people to set up. The film fellbehind because it was [an unseasonablywarm winter] and we lost the snowearly, so we could not shoot the end ofthe movie, and had to shut down [forfour months] before we could finish in
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Glass and hiscompanions
escape an attackin a crucial early
scene that wasshot in one take.
42 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Argentina. Beyond that, the big issuewas that in the woods in the winter inCanada, the natural window to shooteach day was short. The sun came out atabout 9:30 or 9:45 every morning andwas sinking by about 3:45, which is a
short shooting day.â The other complexity involvedimplementing Iùårrituâs preferred styleof extremely long takes with few cuts,an approach that loosely followed themethodology employed on Birdman.
âWe werenât shooting Revenant in [aone-take style],â Iùårritu explains. âButI would say there was a beautiful devel-opment here from what we learned onBirdman, in terms of the value of widelenses, and how to sustain long shotsand why. For instance, in the scene inwhich [a trapper encampment isattacked], I wanted to cover [the action]without lots of chopping or trying toshow every angle. I wanted to show onepoint of view to allow the audience toexperience personally what it must feellike to be attacked in that way. That wasvery challenging, because we had toshoot the sequence straight for about anhour and a half. It was like a live perfor-mance.â Operator Scott Sakamotodescribes the attack as âa long, choreo-graphed sequence starting with anarrow coming out of nowhere andhitting a trapper in the neck. Thecamera continues to a guy coming downa hill, bloody and injured, then pansback to our terrified trappers, who arehearing and seeing arrows coming fromall directions, and then follows themthrough combat. [It was] all achievedwith a Steadicam and handheld cameraâ and finished with a Technocrane â
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Top: ASteadicam
mounted on anice sled was
used to captureGlassâ trekthrough the
snow. Middle: Awide shot
conveys Glassâisolation in thewilderness.
Bottom: Lubezkiworked with
natural light inorder to under-score the realismof Glassâ fightfor survival.
44 January 2016 American Cinematographer
in one seamless flow with minimalcuts.â Virtually the entire movie is shotwith a moving camera, tracking actorsin one of âthree different modes,â asSakamoto explains: either handheld byLubezki, or on a Steadicam orTechnocrane operated by Sakamoto.âIùårritu challenged us to move thecamera with the actors,â Sakamoto says,âsometimes covering 360 degrees ofview and often at eye level, then goingto ground level and back up again, allwithin one shot.â Given The Revenant âs shootingconditions, exposure challenges wereconstant. In this regard, Lubezkiâs part-nership with digital-imaging technicianArthur To was crucial. âOne of theaspects that needed to be in sync wasexposure and iris pulling,â To explains.
âChivo pushes the limits of any mediumhe is shooting on. He may often shoottoward the sun and execute long takesthat move from the inside of a darkroom to a blazing sun outside â andthen back through a dark group of trees.The range is always pushed to what thecamera can handle. On top of that, he isextremely critical regarding exposure,and aims to put the image at an exactstop. On many movies, I may just helpset the exposure from shot to shot oroccasionally do an iris pull, but workingwith Chivo involves riding the iris to hisdesired exposure on almost every shot aswe move through forests, cabins and thebright outdoors. âWorking only with natural lightmade the job more complex,â he adds.âWhile I was constantly chasing theexposure, I was also chasing continuity
of the depth of field between takes ânot scenes, but takes. So, there was alsoa rush of changing ND filters every oneor two takes in order to have a depth offield and f-stop that matched the previ-ous take.â âMy preferred lenses are the[Arri/Zeiss] Master Primes and LeicaSummilux-Cs,â Lubezki says. âA verysmall range of lenses.â His main lenswas a Master Prime 14mm, with 12mmand 16mm used on occasion. He notesthat the Leica lenses â of which theproduction employed the 16mm, thewidest focal length available for thatseries â were particularly useful when alighter-weight lens was warranted. Thecinematographer explains with a laugh,âAs I age, certain equipment becomesvery heavy for all the handheld work, sothe weight of the lenses does matter.The Leica lenses are light, but [retain]an incredible image.â The production encountered anongoing back-focus challenge with itsextensively used Master Prime widelenses whenever the temperaturedropped to near 0°. The problem wasnâtfully sorted out until a few weeks intoproduction, when Lubezki and Connorteamed with Panavision to find a solu-tion. According to Connor, neither henor the Panavision team had seen thisphenomenon before on other showsshot in similar weather. âThe problem,â Lubezki says,âwas that in Alberta, they have Chinookwinds that can raise the temperature atany time, in a matter of minutes, by as
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Top: Fitzgeraldand Jim Bridger
(Will Poulter,background)are on the
lookout as theymake their way
through araided village.Bottom: Hardytakes directionfrom Iùårritu.
46 January 2016 American Cinematographer
much as 15 to 20 degrees.â âWhen that happens,â Connoradds, âthe lenses contract and/orexpand. The [Master Prime] lenselements are affected and focus markscan shift, making the marks incorrect tothe point where infinity canât bereached.â Connor consulted with ASCassociate Dan Sasaki, Panavisionâs vicepresident of optical engineering andlens strategy, to conduct tests, duringwhich they bracketed different focusdistances on the lenses versus actualobject distances. âWe saw a pattern inwhich everything was focusing dispro-portionately close â more than couldbe explained by a depth error or miscal-ibration,â Sasaki relates. âThat pointedto a thermal shift. The finding madesense due to some of the exotic types of
glass that were inside the lenses in ques-tion. Unfortunately, the shifts were notlinear, so the best solution was to setdifferent lenses of the same focal lengthto work within their best [respective]temperature zones.â âDan set the back focus on eachwide lens for specific temperatureranges: minus 15 degrees [Celsius],minus 5 degrees and plus 5 degrees,âConnor explains. âThen we had a lasertemperature gauge, and we wouldmeasure the temperature of the back ofthe lens â near the camera, which putsoff heat â so we could determine acommon ground to establish our tableof temperature, so it wouldnât berandom, and we could transfer that toour daily shooting. We then had ourwarmer lenses and our colder lenses. Weended up with three different sets of
lenses for 12mm, 14mm, 16mm and18mm; we colored them as our âyellowâlenses, our âblueâ lenses and our âredâlenses.â As to the Alexa 65âs Prime 65lenses â which utilize optics fromHasselblad HCs â the 24mm was themain lens, and a 28mm was used occa-sionally. In terms of pulling focus, Connorattests that The Revenant was âthe singlemost difficult movie I have ever done.âNoting that he uses a combination ofclassic and modern focus-pulling tech-niques, he says, âI still like to be close tothe camera, with a wireless focus andmonitor in hand. About 20 years ago, Itook the Preston wireless focus systemoff the Steadicam and used it on groundcameras to give me an advantage withever-challenging styles of shooting andextremely long lenses. Itâs comprised ofa small 8-inch HD monitor with built-in LUTs and real peaking. Chivo onlyhas Log C coming out of the camera,and doesnât like to see peaking on hismonitor or the directorâs. The small HDmonitor allows me to apply any LUT, aswell as its own peaking. Along with aParalinx wireless transmitter mountedon the focus unit, [the rig] gives mecomplete mobility to move through theset terrain and see the scene develop orchange. âChivo uses wireless headsets sothat the timing of focus racks can becalled out,â Connor says, âor [so] I canlet him know when we are at minimumfocus, which is where we were a lot onthis show. [To] also pulls the iris live, sothese styles allow Chivo to move wher-ever and whenever he wants â organi-cally throughout the scene, without anylimitations. There was a lot of pressureto get each take all the way through âand at last light, it had to come together.There had to be synergy.â Connor is keen to add that work-ing alongside Lubezki made âa difficultsituation enjoyable.â He also notes thatboth he and Lubezki are grateful for thehard work of their crew, âspecificallyhow amazing the crew from Canadawas.â
ďż˝ Left for DeadProduction
designer Jack Fiskcreated sets thatallowed naturallight to stream inthrough windowsand doorways.Interior scenes
were staged nearor adjacent to
these entryways,as evidenced inthese photos ofPoulter (top) and
DomhnallGleeson(bottom).
ďż˝
48 January 2016 American Cinematographer
According to Lubezki, interiorlight was accomplished with the help ofproduction designer Jack Fisk, whosecrew built a fort and two NativeAmerican villages in such a way thatfirelight, moonlight and sunlight couldenter and illuminate to maximumeffect. Interior scenes were staged nearwindows or doorways, or the produc-tion would cut out sections of the set toallow ambient light to stream in. âFor interiors, we built the fortwith the windows facing south, becausewe knew we would have direct sunlightat certain times,â Lubezki explains.âBeyond natural sunlight, we used onlyfires and candles for illumination. Jackbuilt smartly designed sets that basicallylit themselves.â Lubezki also praises gaffer
Martin Keough, who lent his expertisedespite the lack of motion-picture light-ing rigs. Among other duties, Keoughperformed the crucial task of lightingwilderness trails so crewmembers couldmaneuver safely after dusk, and helpedwith the HME headset communicationsystem and other electronics. In addi-tion, some night scenes with real fireswere augmented by Keough with light-bulb clusters or 6" tubes filled withhousehold bulbs, used to mitigatefrequency changes caused by the fireâsflicker in windy conditions. According to key grip RayGarcia, the production also carried acollection of bounces, diffusion andnegatives that were painted as needed toresemble naturally occurring environ-mental colors. Lubezki notes that the
way Garcia âprepped and supported themovie under these conditions wassomething I had never experiencedbefore.â Sakamoto adds that Garciaâwas responsible for engineering theplacement and execution of theTechnocranes â and on many locationsthat were not near roads or even accesstrails. Our dolly grip, Ryan Monro,worked the back or front end of thecranes like a surgeon, threading thembetween people, horses, trees andbranches, or scraping them along theground. That allowed us to have ourcamera dance around our actors withflow and intent.â Garcia explains that much of thechallenge involved finding ways for hisrigging team to transport cranes to vari-ous locations where movement wasrestricted. âWe had to disassemble a 23-foot [Servicevision] Scorpio telescopiccrane and high-line each piece to thelocation, because we were not allowedto walk in the stream that ran up to theset,â he recalls. âA series of towers weremade out of truss at every redirect pointuntil the crane finally arrived at its posi-tion. Decking was also high-lined tobuild a platform and ramp for the craneposition. No off-road vehicles wereallowed in the area, and the use ofheavy-lift helicopters was also prohib-ited because of the impact to wildlife, sothe use of high lines became the normin these instances. On other occasions,we built rafts to ferry Technocranesacross rivers.â Garcia adds that âthe tools neces-sary to achieve what Alejandro andChivo describedâ included the 23'Scorpio telescopic crane; a 35/45MovieBird on a CineMoves ExtremeGator with a Libra 5 remote head; aMini Libra; a selection of Technocranesand Chapman/Leonard Hydrascopes,the latter of which were employed incombination with Raptor and Mavericktracking vehicles; various cable-camrigs; a GF Jib; a PerformanceFilmworks Edge Crane mounted on aToyota Tundra, operated by AllanPadelford Camera Cars; an AllanPadelford Camera Car Biscuit rig; an
ďż˝ Left for DeadTop: Lubezki
lines up a shotof Glassâ son,Hawk (Forrest
Goodluck).Bottom: A
Technocranewas utilized tofinish off thefilming of theattack on the
trappersâencampment.
Edge Arch Head; an Edge Head; aâT90â Edge Head variation customdesigned by Lev Yevstratov; and an elec-tric Polaris camera car. Meanwhile, on the data side, Tosays he had to âadapt my normal process[and become] extremely mobile in orderto be flexible enough to cater to the run-and-gun nature of the show. Since muchof the show involved moving quicklyacross large distances and difficult terrain,I built what I called âMission Controlâ [toserve as a mobile DIT station]. MissionControl contained [Boxx Meridian,Paralinx Tomahawk and Teradek Bolt2000 units] that gave me the ability toreceive an image from multiple cameras;distribute the image in raw, Log orcolored with our show LUT; analyze theimage with false color; and transmitwaveform and false colors to my irishandset. It operated off the same[Anton/Bauer Dionic 91 onboardcamera] batteries we all used as a depart-ment, and could operate with the caseclosed in order to recirculate heat and befully weatherproof. âThen, if I had the chance,â Tocontinues, âI would also set up an ice-fishing tent with a small â but stillmobile â DIT station inside. This unitconsisted of a larger [17" Sony PVM-A170] OLED monitor calibrated byTechnicolor; it could do everythingMission Control did, but in a more stableenvironment. It was wired so it could runoff of block batteries, since power was notalways available, and could be linked toMission Control to handle multiplecameras.â After shooting, Toâs team woulddownload one copy of the footage to a48TB RAID media station on a cameratruck as a backup, and then ship the XRmag itself in a Pelican case, via the trans-portation department, to Technicolorstaff â including Kenny Vicent, ChrisVan Duyn and Chris Giuffrida â at thefilmâs production office in Calgary. There,To explains, Technicolor âcolored andmanufactured dailies, which wereprojected for us using their mobile on-site projection lab.â âWe used [Autodesk] Lustre [for
50 January 2016 American Cinematographer
the] front end to grade dailies,â saysMichael Dillon, senior producer atTechnicolor, âutilizing full DI color andcontrols on a 2K projector, which wasset up in our Technicolor trailer near theproduction office, [which was the case]in both Calgary and Squamish. For theback end, we used Frame Logic torender out deliverables â DNxHD 36and 175 for edit, H.264 for Pix, andHDCam SR for studio marketingrequests. We also archived LTO back-ups. In addition, we set up a dailiesscreening room for editorial andcreative in the production office. Chivowould grade in the trailer in 2K andthen go to the screening room fornightly screening sessions. [Dailiesengineer] Kenny Vicent helped support[in the field].â Iùårritu recounts that whenwarm weather melted the snow, causingthe winter environment required for themovieâs climactic scene to disappear, histeam âscouted the world, chasing iceâ inplaces with topography resembling thatof the Alberta Rockies. The filmmakersfinally settled on Argentina. Whenproduction resumed in South America,the methodology was identical â aswas the grueling nature of the work. Yetaccording to both Iùårritu and Lubezki,the hardship and sacrifice has beenworth it to achieve âobjective intimacyâwith their camera, as Lubezki puts it. âThere [was a] constant tensionbetween the objective and the subjec-tive,â the cinematographer explains.âThat made it very difficult for cameraoperators and actors, and that is whatmade it a dance. Sometimes, we werevery close to Leo because we were using[extremely] wide lenses â [at times]even the 24mm with the Alexa 65. Wegot so close to him, inside minimumfocus, sometimes touching his cheek,actually. That let us feel his breath andperspiration, and get the subtlest move-ments of his eyes. Then we allowed himto move away, and the camera watchedmore from the objective âaudienceâ pointof view.â A prime example of segueingbetween objective and subjective
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Top: Glass ventshis rage. Middle:The director and
cinematographerflank DiCaprio.
Bottom: Lubezkisets the camera
on location.
perspectives within the same sequencecomes at a key moment when Glassdiscovers that John Fitzgerald (TomHardy) has murdered an ally. Glassdiscovers the body and mourns in cold,silent rage, just as an actual avalanchecommences on the mountain behindhim, seemingly in sync with his fury âa sequence achieved without the use ofdigital effects. With cooperation fromCanadian authorities, the productionsafely triggered an actual avalanche on amountain in the distance with the aid ofa helicopter that dropped explosivecharges in precise coordination withDiCaprioâs reactions. Due to the enor-mity of the undertaking, it was strictly ahit-or-miss maneuver. âWe had the Alexa 65 on a littlecrane arm with the 24mm lens to get aclose-up on Leo, while incorporatingthe landscape in the background,âLubezki says. âThe entire crew was100-percent concentrated on allelements, from the AD cueing Leo tocommunication with the helicopter. Weknew we had only one chance, and wedidnât want to blow it. Usually, youwould have at least two [crewmembers]for something like this â the guy whooperates the crane and the guy whooperates the extension. But in this case,Ryan Monro was able to operate bothby himself, like an octopus, whilecommunicating with us by headset aswe told him âgo up,â âgo left.â The digitalcamera let us shoot that at 1,200 ASAfor more depth of field, while keepingLeo and the mountain sharp. The detailin the background is exquisite. Wenever could have done that with a filmcamera.â As Lubezki experimented withultra-close focus, he inadvertentlydiscovered a technique that would serveto provide a trio of defining moments inthe film. âWe wanted to get close toLeo,â he recalls, âbut the closest wecould get was 7 inches, and I wanted 4inches, so we needed a diopter [on the14mm lens]. But one wasnât enough toachieve that, so I asked John Connor fortwo diopters.â The result was an imagethat was only in focus at the center of
the lens, âand the sides of the image fellapart,â he explains. âIt was verydistorted. As a cinematographer youâretrying to find a consistent language, andthis was [disrupting] that language,[making it feel] like it was from anotherfilm â but it was such a powerful andiconic image that we used it anyway. âIt was the kind of thing a goodcinematographer would plan,â he sayswith a laugh. âAnd the kind of accident
you always hope will happen.â The film-makers reserved the effect for only twoother scenes, for a total of three â whenGlass awakes to discover the fate of hisson, when he emerges from the carcassof a horse that had kept him alivethrough a terminally frigid night, andthe filmâs closing scene â which, asLubezki enthuses, each embody thedefinition of ârevenant,â a person whoreturns after death. âThe image is like a
punctuation mark,â the cinematogra-pher opines, â[denoting] that heâs eithercoming back to life again, or that some-thing else is happening. Itâs ambiguous,and it has a syntactic power that wefound by pure accident.â At press time, Lubezki andIùårritu were deep in the digital-inter-mediate process at Technicolor LosAngeles with their longtime collabora-tor, and ASC associate, Steve Scott âTechnicolorâs vice president of theatricalimaging and supervising finishing artistâ color grading with Autodeskâs Lustre2015 Extension 3, using a Christie 4Kprojector, and conforming the movie inthe 2.39:1 aspect ratio and generating a4K DCP. âI have been âgrowing upâ withSteve Scott,â Lubezki says. âHeâs one ofmy teachers, and all of the knowledge[Iâve gained] from working with himthrough the years was useful in finishingthe movie the way we did.â Lubezki, infact, had predicted that this project
ďż˝ Left for Dead
Lubezki wadesinto position toshoot an action
sequence.
52
would be âthe most complicated DI Ihave ever done.â And according to Scott, thiscomplexity was integral to Lubezkiâsoverall strategy of using the DI tools toenhance the natural light of his on-setwork. âThe extra âtoolsetâ Chivo bringswith him to any set,â Scott says, âis histhorough knowledge of what optionsand capabilities await him in the DI. Heplans ahead of time â and while heâsshooting â what he is going to needdown the line.â By way of example, Scott pointsto the particularly complex ârotoâ workperformed throughout The Revenantfor individual faces. âFor each shot wewent through,â he explains, âwe wouldhand-animate mattes to conform to thenatural contours and shadings of amoving face or body. Sometimes Chivowould want to lift a whole face andsometimes he would want to createmore of a directional key light, so wewould make a couple of mattes â one
for the shadow side of the face and onefor the highlight side.â Scott makes apoint to emphasize that this process isâby Chivoâs design. For months inadvance of us ever doing the DI, heinsisted that we work on the rawfootage to help develop the mattes. Healways shot with that process in mind. âThe clichĂŠ that âit takes a villageâis certainly applicable here,â Scott addswith good humor. âNo single artistcould have ever accomplished what wedid here.â He points to the efforts of hisfellow finishing artists Mike Hatzer,Charles Bunnag and Ntana Key;Dillon, his finishing producer; DougSpilatro, who led the roto team; andBob Schneider, who headed the DI-specific editorial work, and concludes,âThatâs another way Chivo haspioneered this whole process â theidea of coordinating the efforts of somany talented artists for a single DI.â Iùårritu describes the digitalintermediate work on The Revenant as
the âfinal touchesâ on Lubezkiâs expertuse of natural light. âThe light is thesauce on the plate â what is pouredover the whole thing,â the director says.âItâs about Chivoâs use of light, and alsohis knowledge of the light. That is whathe brings here, and why I needed him toshoot the movie, and why he is doingsuch great work in the DI right now.â Additional reporting by AndrewFish. ďż˝
TECHNICAL SPECS
2.39:1
Digital Capture
Arri Alexa XT, M, 65
Arri/Zeiss Master Prime, Leica Summilux-C, Arri Prime 65
53
Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle, ASC, BSC, DFFhits the deck with director Ron Howard
for the period adventure In the Heart of the Sea.
By David E. Williams
â˘|â˘
54 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Savage Sea
www.theasc.com January 2016 55
The director notes, âI brought thisproject to Anthony because I wasinterested in his take on the script,especially [given that] there are classicelements to the story but also verymodern ideas. I wanted a moderncinematic aesthetic â not in apretentious, rock ânâ roll way, but in astyle that would make it personal andinteresting and memorable. Thatâswhat modern photography offers âsubtle meanings that go beyond theliteral to work on a subconscious levelthatâs immersive and emotional. AndAnthony immediately connectedwith that. Thereâs still a painterly
about the power of creating a myth âthe writing of Moby-Dick,â Howardexplains, taking time to speak with ACwhile cutting the thriller Inferno. âAndthe attack itself is so cinematic in theway it was described by Melville andin the journals written by some of theEssex survivors. That scene alone wasa huge jumping-off point for me.â An Academy Award and ASCAward winner for his camerawork ondirector Danny Boyleâs SlumdogMillionaire (AC Dec. â08), DodMantle had previously collaboratedwith Howard on the period FormulaOne racing drama Rush (AC Oct. â13).
H erman Melvilleâs 1851 adven-ture, Moby-Dick, has beenadapted to the screen numer-ous times, most famously in
1956 by director John Huston andcinematographer Oswald Morris,BSC. Yet the factual tale that inspiredthe novelist was not well known untilNathaniel Philbrickâs well-researchedaccount, In the Heart of the Sea: TheTragedy of the Whaleship Essex, waspublished in 2000. That book formedthe basis of the Warner Bros. releaseIn the Heart of the Sea, directed byRon Howard and photographed byAnthony Dod Mantle, ASC, BSC,DFF. The film begins in 1820, as theEssex â led by inexperienced captainGeorge Pollard Jr. (Benjamin Walker)and fiery first mate Owen Chase(Chris Hemsworth) â sets sail fromNantucket toward the rich huntingwaters off South America. After earlysuccess in taking their first whale, theship is crippled by a violent storm andlater sinks after being attacked by amassive, enraged cetacean. Thesurvivors, marooned on a rocky isle,are forced to resort to the mostdesperate measures before their even-tual rescue. âThis is an interesting talebecause itâs a true story, but itâs alsoUnit ph
otog
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y by
Jon
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e an
d Chris R
apha
el, c
ourtesy of W
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r Bros. Pictures. A
ddition
al im
ages provide
d by
Peter Z
uccarini.
When the NewEngland whalingship Essex isattacked by amassive whale, thesurviving crew âincluding first mateOwen Chase (ChrisHemsworth,opposite, right) âmust resort to theunthinkable inorder to survive inthe feature In theHeart of the Sea.Below: Director RonHoward (left) andcinematographerAnthony DodMantle, ASC, BSC,DFF discuss a scene.
56 January 2016 American Cinematographer
quality to many of the images â onesthat would remind you of a 19th-century work hanging in some galleryâ but others are so personal andimmediate, much like what we wereable to do on Rush.â Speaking to AC from Munich,Germany, where he was prepping toshoot Oliver Stoneâs political dramaSnowden, Dod Mantle offers, âThisfilm was an orgy of interior and exte-rior studio work, water-tank shoot-ing, location shooting, second- andthird-unit work, underwater photog-raphy, aerial work and visual effects.Fortunately, we had a long prepphase, and all the department headsâ including production designerMark Tildesley and visual-effectssupervisor Jody Johnson â broke thescript down with Ron to determineexactly how to shoot it. Itâs all aboutthe methodology, because if you donâtget that right on a film like this, youârestuffed.â These preproduction talksresulted in a shooting schedule thatcalled for the production to do all thestage work first, and then match thatfootage while out on location. âItwent against logic,â admits Howard,âbut we had special considerationsbecause of the controlled-starvationdiets our actors were on in order to
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Whaleboataction, the storm
sequence andthe sinking of
the Essex werefilmed at the
outdoor D Stagewater tank atWarner Bros.
StudiosLeavesden.
www.theasc.com January 2016 57
appear thinner and thinner and,finally, emaciated during the finalact.â Dod Mantleâs key crewmem-bers included a number of veterancollaborators, such as gaffer ThomasNeivelt, key grip Rupert Lloyd-Parryand 1st AC and operator TelferBarnes, as well as 2nd-unit director ofphotography Michael Wood. Thecinematographer also expresses grati-tude to B-camera and Steadicamoperator Alastair Rae and Raeâs 1stAC John Watters. The productionâs primarycamera was the Arri Alexa XT (deliv-ering ArriRaw files), but he alsoemployed an array of secondarysystems, including Canon CinemaEOS-1D C DSLRs, and CinemaEOS C300s and C500s. His selectionof lenses was equally diverse, includ-ing Panavision Primos, as well asArri/Zeiss Ultra Primes specificallyfor the PL-mount Canon cameras.âMy favorite lenses were the close-focus 21mm and 27mm Primoseries,â Dod Mantle enthuses. Assessing this camera selection,
the cinematographer says, âI think ofthem as thick, medium, thin andminute paintbrushes. This mixing offormats is much more about acameraâs form, for physical andergonomic reasons. I donât want theaudience to be conscious of thosechoices, but for me to use the righttool for the job. In this case, I wantedto embed the audience in this story,to get them closer to the characters,
to feel the scenes and remove thedistance thatâs sometimes there inperiod movies. âPart of that was also the depic-tion of the sea,â he continues. âIwanted to capture that look ofJ.M.W. Turnerâs paintings, in whichthe density of the water in the lowerpart of the frame is the same as thesky â that moody mysteriousness.And thatâs unusual in landscapes,
Left: Dod Mantlechose to shootmajor scenesaboard the Essexnight-for-day. Tocreate a baseâdaylight,â thecrew used balloonlights rigged inscaffolding cagessuspended fromcranes above thetank. Below: Fordirectionalsunlight, the crewplaced 20Ks and12-lights on cherrypickers behind thebluescreen thatencircled the tank.
because generally the sea has a densityof blue-green to it but the sky just goespop, maybe [with] some clouds, a bit ofblue or a sunset. But I wanted to gofurther, and Ron was on board withthat.â Helping to achieve this goal wasa set of 40-year-old grad filters that letDod Mantle add up to eight or 10layers of ND to the top of the image.âThey took me in the direction ofmaking the first half of the filmdarker,â he describes. âSo after theEssex crew departs Nantucket âa grimy place consuming the whale oilthey are seeking â and survives thisgodforsaken voyage down the coast ofSouth America and around CapeHorn, opening up into this blistering-hot South Pacific, we have a realcontrast.â This also led Dod Mantle toshoot in 1.85:1, as he âwanted tocompose the shots a little looser andalways have the sea and sky tiedtogether in the frame. If I were shoot-ing widescreen, Iâd constantly be tilt-ing up and down. I needed the heightof 1.85.â Key to the visual approach wasthe blending of classical compositionswith almost avant-garde, subjectiveperspectives, often fleeting andcaptured in extreme close-up.
58 January 2016 American Cinematographer
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Bluescreen-surroundedwater tanks
were utilized forshooting scenes
in which theEssex crew row
their skiffs,chasing down
whales.
60 January 2016 American Cinematographer
âFinding these shots is somethingAnthony has a particular attentionfor and understanding of,â saysHoward. âIâve always loved detailshots because they draw you in âthey create a poetic insight. Once yousee this material coming in, it startsto become really exciting. Itâs likecasting a net, and you can besurprised by what you find.â An essential tool in this shoot-ing approach was the IndiecamIndieGS2K, a tiny â 40mm x 40mmx 100mm â 2K camera with a 2â3"CMOS global-shutter sensor. The
cinematographer had previously usedIndiecam units to shoot portions ofRush and the crime drama Trance.Numerous saltwater-proof tubehousings were built for these C-mount cameras â fitted primarilywith Kowa 5.6mm, 8mm and 12mmlenses â which could be easilyhidden on set and operated remotelyfor additional in-shot coverage, withthe data streams stored by offboardrecorders. Dod Mantle explains, âGettingthese unique Indiecam shots justbecame a part of our coverage
approach, sometimes with me plop-ping one of them in the sand orbehind a shrub or rock or in a boat,with objects in extreme foregroundwhile our character is in the distance,and the focus falling off. Weâd just letthem roll and see what weâd get. Thewide, fixed-focus lenses we had forthem were a bit brutal, so Iâd add alittle diffusion to it, and diffuse evenfurther in post. Itâs hard to communi-cate the value of these Indiecam shotsâ especially on a studio picture âuntil people see them, since theyusually have the actors out of focusway off in the background. But Ronsaw the potential for this on Rush; hegot it straightaway.â Another inspiration for thefilmmakers was the 2012 documen-tary Leviathan, directed by LucienCastaing-Taylor and Verena Paraveland largely shot with GoPro cameras.âItâs an absolutely horrific film aboutthe fishing industry,â Dod Mantlesays, âwith these breathtaking imagesof these fish swimming in their ownblood â truly disturbing. Ron and Iwatched a few scenes, and it wasabout understanding what we feltwhile watching these often abstract
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Right: CaptainGeorge Pollard
(Benjamin Walker,right) and select
crew board one ofthe three Essex
skiffs in search ofwhales. Below:Dod Mantleoperates awatertightIndiecam
IndieGS2K forclose-ups on actorCillian Murphy.
62 January 2016 American Cinematographer
images captured with tiny cameras.â Howard adds, âWe alsowatched a lot of Greenpeace docu-mentary footage, sailing footage onYouTube, Ridley Scottâs WhiteSquall, and episodes of DeadliestCatch. There were a lot of influenceson how we could remain real, but becreative.â The production began filmingin September 2013 outside Londonat Warner Bros. Studios Leavesdenin Hertfordshire, where theNantucket scenes and ship interiors
could be captured on stage, whilewhaleboat action, the storm sequenceand the sinking of the Essex wouldbe photographed in the facilityâsoutdoor D Stage water tank. Due tothe short daylight hours and unpre-dictable English weather, DodMantle chose to shoot major scenesaboard the Essex night-for-day. âIt was two weeks of nights,shooting from dusk until the sun wascoming up over Heathrow Airport,âthe cinematographer says. âOur baseâdaylightâ mainly comprised three sets
of balloon lights with 24K in eachset, rigged in scaffolding cagessuspended from cranes above thetank. Then, for directional sunlight,we had 20Ks and 12-lights on cherrypickers behind the bluescreen thatencircled the tank. We were outside,still subject to wind, rain or snow, butwe could absolutely control the[color] temperature, contrast andangle of the light, which gave us anadvantage. When youâre dealing withthings like woodwork and white sails,changes in the color temperature andintensity of the light can make a hugedifference as the day goes on.â As the production wouldrequire extensive wet cameraworkboth in the studio and on location,Dod Mantle turned to underwaterspecialist Peter Zuccarini (see sidebaron page 64), whom he had firstworked with on Boyleâs harrowingdrama 127 Hours (AC Dec. â10). ForIn the Heart of the Sea, Zuccariniexplains, âWith the main unit in thetanks at Leavesden, I was doing blue-screen shots with the Essex crew inboats, chasing the whales and thenbeing tossed from the boats into theair â a lot of stunt work. And on thedays I wasnât with the main unit, Iwas with second unit gettingelements, like harpoons plunginginto the water or ship debris hittingthe sea or boats being destroyed, andfinally the sinking of the Essex after[the whale stoves the boat].â Like Dod Mantle, Zuccarinialso employed a blend of Alexa andCanon cameras. âThe main advan-tage of the EOS-1D C was the smallform factor,â Zuccarini opines. âItâs a4K camera, but compact. The Alexais pretty big, and itâs really big onceyou get it into a watertight housing.But with the EOS-1D C, I couldspin it around fast to come across thebow of a small boat, or jump off thegunwale with it in my hands whilestill operating â itâs just a great size. âWe were primarily usingPrimo lenses, but with the CanonEOS cameras, we were also using
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Top: The crew preps a scene while shooting in open water on location in the Canary Islands.Bottom: Underwater cinematographer Peter Zuccarini and his underwater assistant, Peter
Manno, frame a whaleboat from below.
In American Hustle, Linus Sandgren, FSF and David O. Russell forged imagery that evoked the glitz of the 1970s. That fi lm struck a chord, earning 10 OscarÂŽ nominations, including a nod for Best Picture. Now Sandgren and Russell have reteamed for Joy, the story of a family across four generations that centers on the girl who grows up and establishes a
powerful business dynasty. Like much of Russellâs work, Joy is impossible to pigeonhole. It is a drama with quirky, dark humor and a unique humanity. The cast includes Jennifer Lawrence as Joy, and reunites her onscreen with Robert De Niro and Bradley Cooper.
As they did with American Hustle, Sandgren and Russell shot Joy on 35mm fi lm. But the similarities end there. This time around, they devised a more classically cinematic approach with more specifi c lighting and deliberate framing. Taking inspiration from older black-and-white movies, the production design was often muted in color and contrast.
âWe lit more for a single direction, rather than a 360 lighting, which was our approach on American Hustle,â says Sandgren. âIt was more of a noir approach, this time.â
Two Steadicam operators helped with that. Even static shots were often accomplished with the camera on the rigs, which allowed for quick push-ins, for example. A 1.85:1 aspect ratio was used to compose more painterly, classic frames. The lenses were Zeiss Ultra Primes with special vintage coatings developed by CamTec to enhance fl ares and veiling.
Sandgren worked mostly with KODAK VISION3 500T Color Negative Film 5219. A few exterior scenes were done with KODAK VISION3 200T Color Negative Film 5213. Testing revealed the right exposure/development recipe for the fi lm. The 500T was rated at E.I. 200, and the 200T was rated at E.I. 80.
âWe pull processed the entire film, and I overexposed everything one and a third stop,â Sandgren says. âI thought this gave the film much more beautiful highlights and blacks, and a richness in the details of the sets and costumes. The colors are slightly muted and the grain is finer. We lit with harder light to maintain strong contrast. The result is a smooth, soft image where you see all the details.â
Shooting fi lm didnât interfere with Russellâs proclivity for a fast, fl exible shoot.
âAlthough we were shooting in a more traditional manner, David still wanted to maintain the fl ow and energy,â says Sandgren. âHe values extensive quality time with the actors during the shoot. He
RUSSELL AND SANDGREN BRING
TO THE BIG SCREEN
JAN
UA
RY 2
01
6
Photos: Previous page: (Top) Jennifer Lawrence in Joy. (Right) DP Linus Sandgren on set. Photo by Merie Weismiller Wallace. This page: (Top) Lawrence and Bradley Cooper. (Bottom) Edgar Ramirez, Lawrence and Robert DeNiro. (All photos TM & Š Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.)
âWhen film is rolling, it intensifies the moment. Thereâs more concentration around a take, which results in more magic moments.â
likes to keep the film alive and adapt as we are making it, so we did a lot of pre-lighting and ran everything through dimmers to allow for flexibility.â
âShooting 3-perf gave us about six minutes between reloads,â he says. âBy the time David talks to the actors, the camera is reloaded. Also, when the film is rolling, it intensifies the moment. Thereâs more concentration around a take, which results in more magic moments. Add to that, our mutual love for the texture of celluloid.â
Silhouettes and partial silhouettes are a key visual motif in the film. âDavid wanted to visually dive deeper into characterâs soul,â says Sandgren. âWe felt the silhouettes symbolized the interior of the person, making us feel more like we are with them or inside them, seeing the world around them. Often, we put ourselves in shadow, with the light on the other side of the subject or modeling them from the side.â
On day one of the 42-day shoot, production was cancelled due to a blizzard. But over the course of the project, shooting on Long Island in winter helped take the film in a monochromatic direction.
âJoy learns that achieving her dreams is difficult, and it was nice to let the beautiful, snowy landscape work as a metaphor for the obstacles she faces. With the white snow and the black trees, it becomes graphic and black and white. Other worlds that Joy finds along the way, are more colorful, as a visual contrast to where she comes from.â
Filmâs ability to resolve subtle shades of white was a major advantage, he says. âWith a contrasty lighting, the pull processing brings the range together, and the entire scene is exposed within that range. It looks very different than it would if we had shot on digital.â
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âYou can feel film going through the camera. Itâs something with texture and breath that has a heartbeat to it.â
The short film Boy follows the ghost of a boy who is killed in a bicycle accident, and then follows a classmate home after school. The film, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), was written, produced and directed by Connor Jessup. Best known as an actor for his roles in Falling Skies, American Crime and Closet Monster, the film is Jessupâs second turn at the helm.
âI kind of fell backward into acting before I knew what it was,â notes Jessup. âI have come to love it on its own terms, but as soon as I was old enough to be taken even mildly seriously, I knew I had to start making (movies).â
For Boy, Jessup enlisted cinematographer Bobby Shore, CSC â an American Film Institute graduate and Montreal native. He and Jessup had worked together on director Stephen Dunnâs Closet Monster, a coming-of-age drama that won the 2015 Best Canadian Feature at TIFF. Shore was so adamant about shooting certain segments of that feature on film that he bought his own stock and borrowed an ARRIFLEX 435.
Given the supernatural elements of Boy, the two filmmakers wanted a natural palate, subdued and restrained.
âWe spoke a lot about the films of Hirokazu Koreeda and Edward Yang,â explained Shore. âConnor has an almost encyclopedic knowledge of Asian cinema. I had tested (KODAK) VISION3 500T (Color Negative Film 5219) and tended toward the additional texture I got with the 5219 when itâs underexposed by two or three stops. The image becomes slightly lifted and almost creamy, but with a lot of texture as the inherently tighter grain structure of the VISION3 stock starts to degrade a bit.â
They used a set of Ultra Speeds and a Panaflex Millennium XL from Panavision Toronto. They shot entirely on (KODAK VISION3) 5219 with an ND 6 filter in front of the camera the whole time, but metered as if Shore was rating the film at 500. âIt was a bit nerve-wracking sometimes when the light levels were already so low that theyâd barely register on the meter,â he said. âBut understanding the latitude of the stock with prior testing, I knew it would result in the looks we were going for.â
Both Jessup and Shore lauded the workflow on set, where spending time to rehearse, finesse, refine, and discuss shots even before rolling was par for the course. âFilmâs a living medium,â offered Jessup. âYou can feel film going through the camera. Itâs something with texture and breath that has a heartbeat to it.â
âIt felt like true filmmaking again, where we trusted and respected the process,â added Shore. âBecause a lot of the scenes play out as static singles or with just a few shots, we really took the time to scrutinize every frame and make sure it was exactly to taste.â
Jessup adds that he feels thereâs a difference in the richness in film compared to digital that is key to storytelling. âI was kind of raised a purist. All the movies that I love and I grew up on, that have changed me and are a part of me, were shot on film.â
FILM CAPTURES THE SPIRIT IN
Photos: Top and Bottom: Kyle Hentschel as Daniel in Boy. Center: Director Connor Jessup, left, checks a shot. Photos by Calvin Thomas
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BOY
Nichols and Stonetake to the
road for Midnight
Special
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Photos: Left page: Jaeden Lieberher as Alton in director Jeff Nicholsâ sci-fi thriller Midnight Special. Photo by Ben Rothstein). This page: Sitting (l-r) Stephen McBride (A cam 2nd AC), Darius Shahmir (2nd unit director), Kenneth Neil Moore (2nd unit DP). Standing (l-r) David Regan (A Cam 1st AC), Matt Gaumer (B Cam 2nd AC), John David Devirgiliis (loader), Steve Early (B Cam 1st AC), Alex Nystrom (camera utility), Dylan Conrad (2nd unit 1st AC), Matt Petrosky (A Cam operator/Steadicam), and Adam Stone (DP). (Midnight Special is a presentation of Warner Bros. Pictures in association with Faliro House Productions, released by Warner Bros. Pictures.)
âOften, things evolved in ways we never anticipated, and film is a great friend in those situations.â
The director-cinematographer team of Jeff Nichols and Adam Stone has produced four films over the past nine years â Shotgun Stories, Mud, Take Shelter and now, Midnight Special. Over that period, Nichols has quickly earned a reputation as a deft and original filmmaker. Mud, which starred Matthew McConaughey, earned a Palme dâOr nomination at Cannes and took home the Robert Altman Award at the 2014 Independent Spirit Awards. Take Shelter also won three prizes at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, and was nominated for five Spirit Awards.
Nichols, who first met Stone at the North Carolina School for the Arts, credits the DP as a key part of his success as a director.
âWe have a tight-knit crew that works on all our films; they are truly great artisans and most importantly great friends,â says Stone. âWe have a lot of fun together. Everyone contributes and we all learn from one another.â
Midnight Special has a measure of writer/director Nicholsâ trademark poetic realism, but as his first foray into the sci-fi thriller realm, it differs from the previous films in its darkness, both literal and figurative, and in its technical complexity â there are more than 300 visual effects. It was also Nicholsâ first studio production, with a budget
under $20 million. The cast features Kirsten Dunst, Joel Edgerton, Adam Driver, Michael Shannon, and Sam Shepard as the leader of an extreme religious sect who hunts down a uniquely gifted child.
The 44-day shoot was based in New Orleans but stretched from west Texas to the Florida panhandle. The weather was often uncharacteristically wintry, with sleet and cold temperatures working against the filmmakers. Much of the action unfolds at night, in old motel
rooms or on drab and desolate stretches of road. In keeping with the story, the look includes a camera that is almost constantly on the move. Steadicam operator Matt Petrosky played a crucial role.
The filmmaking duo prefers to shoot film, often in a widescreen format, as they have on all their previous collaborations. Midnight Special was no exception. Stone shot the majority of the picture on 35mm anamorphic film, using Panavision XL2 cameras and G
Series lenses. He says the format did not slow them down.
âThe first film we did together, Shotgun Stories, was anamorphic,â explains Stone. âThe crew was me, Jeff, a few friends, and his parents. Shooting on film is second nature to us. We feel comfortable in the medium. Itâs beautiful and mysterious. It contains gorgeous aberrations and has an intrinsic beauty digital has yet to replicate. If it were up to us, weâd shoot on film forever.â
The vast majority of Midnight Special was filmed on two stocks â KODAK VISION3 500T Color Negative Film 5219 and KODAK VISION3 250D Color Negative Film 5207 â with a few scenes shot on digital cameras for technical reasons. Stone spent a week and a half of preproduction testing various lenses in every scenario, but settled on the G Series glass. They tested some digital formats as well, but, âFilm always wins,â Stone adds.
One scene that plays out in a 1970s ranch house bedroom was filmed partly in a practical house and partly on a built set. The ceiling of a dimly lit bedroom separates through a marriage of practical and visual effects, and a strong beam of light, representing the sun, smashes through the exposed ceiling joists illuminating the darkness.
âWe shot the scene wide open on 5219,â says Stone. âIt was a big practical effect and we had only a few chances to capture it. The camera burst into the bedroom, lit by practicals, and the ceiling rips away allowing an array of M-90s to light the room. There was a 5-stop difference from the beginning of the scene to the end of the scene. We never adjusted the iris. The end result is amazing. The look could never be replicated by a digital sensor. The areas that are blown out fall off gracefully. Film is very similar to how the human eye sees the world â realistic and elegant.â
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âShooting on film is second nature to us. We feel comfortable in the medium. Itâs beautiful and mysterious.â
Quentin Tarantino has shot all of his fi lms on 35mm, only experimenting with digital when he guest-directed a scene in Robert Rodriguezâs Sin City. The OscarÂŽ-winning Pulp Fiction directorâs eighth full-length feature sees him revisit the Western genre after Django Unchained, which was his fi rst collaboration with editor Fred Raskin, ACE (Guardians of the Galaxy, Fast & Furious).
Set in 1870s Wyoming, The Hateful Eight traps a rogueâs gallery of characters in an isolated location during a snowstorm, with no certainty as to who can be trusted. Shot by Robert Richardson, ASC, and widely distributed in 70mm, the look of the film helps define the period.
âShooting digitally was never going to be an option, as it would automatically add an element of phoniness to the proceedings,â observes Raskin. âThe warmth and the tight grain of the fi lm stock contribute to the reality of the era. And of course, Bob Richardsonâs lighting and the 1:2.76 compositions combine to make this an absolutely stunning picture.â
The visual style of the movie is classical Hollywood, but with that unique Tarantino imprint. Many of the directorâs signature shots pop up: the split-fi eld diopter and the hard profi les of the actors talking to each other, for example.
âI think we probably held wide shots longer than ever before thanks to the 70mm format and its 1:2.76 aspect ratio,â says Raskin. âWhen the image is that striking and well-composed, cutting away when
not absolutely necessary seems somewhat criminal. The handheld shaky-cam that dominates modern Hollywood cinema is nowhere to be found here. If the camera moves, itâs on a dolly. This visual style contributes to the atmosphere of tension and dread that builds up over the course of the movie.â
The footage was sent to FotoKem in Burbank for processing. The 65mm negative arrived daily for processing, printing, transfer, and creation of dailies fi les. All transfers matched the fi lm print color timing, as a custom LUT was created to emulate the 70mm print. FotoKem also restored a decommissioned 70mm Prevost fl atbed from the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences to assist in the rare process of syncing 70mm print dailies, adding DV40 audio sync playback on the fl atbed.
âWhenever I fi nished working with Quentin for the day, I would go over the work that weâd done and make a handful of tweaks and adjustments,â explains Raskin of the workfl ow. âThen I would turn the sequence over to my fi rst assistant so that the following morning, the fi lm crew could start conforming the section weâd completed the day before. We had to keep the fi lm crew conforming, so that when we fi nished a pass on the entire movie, it would only take an extra day or two before we were able to screen the work picture.â
The photochemical fi nish, including time for negative cutting and color-timing, meant that Raskin and Tarantino had to have the cut locked before beginning to mix the fi lm. âThe upside, obviously, is that we were able to spend more time focusing on the mix,â says Raskin. âThe downside is that our time to cut the movie was forced to be a month shorter.â
While on location in Telluride, Colorado, the production installed a 70mm projector at the Masonâs Hall â one of the venues used for screenings during the Telluride Film Festival. When the footage came back from FotoKem, fi lm assistants Paula Suhy and Michael Backauskas would sync it up.
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EDITING THE STUNNING
70MM 1:2.76ASPECT RATIO OF
âShooting digitally was never going to be an option, as it would automatically add an element of phoniness to the proceedings.â
âAt the end of every shooting day weâd head to the Masonâs Hall to screen the material shot two days earlier,â he relates. âEveryone from the cast and crew was invited to watch. One of our producers would announce at the beginning of every screening, âWelcome back to the Greatest Show in Telluride!â It was a nice way for everyone to end their day.
âBack in Los Angeles while we were working on the directorâs cut, the editorial team would prepare a weekly screening of recently completed scenes at the Directors Guild of America (DGA) to get a sense of how it played in 70mm.
âQuentin and I would sit in the fourth row of Theater 1 at the DGA with huge grins on our faces, immersed in the grandeur of the 70mm images,â recalls Raskin. âThe color of the fi lm was generally richer than that of our Avid dailies, and the detail was astonishing. Sitting that close created the greatest difference in the viewing experience between screening on the Avid and screening in a theater. If we could follow the action sitting that close, we knew the sequences hadnât been cut too quickly.â
The shoot required certain sequences to be fi lmed while snow was falling. Therefore the cast (including Kurt Russell, Channing Tatum, Samuel L Jackson and Jennifer Jason Leigh), had to have the entire script memorized from day one. If they got snow theyâd be shooting one scene, and if they didnât, theyâd be shooting another.
âSince everyone knew the script so well it gave Quentin the ability to shoot 11-minute-long takes if he wanted to, which ended up being great for the performances,â says Raskin. âI was watching some terrifi c theater on a daily basis. This also informed some of the editing choices; there are a handful of shots in the movie that are a couple of minutes long thanks to this, and of course, the trick has been to fi nd an appropriate and effective time to return to the coverage.
Raskin continues, âIn other, digitally-shot projects, I might want to take performances from two separate takes and fuse them, but
Quentin wants to keep as much of the movie as untouched, original negative as possible. Quentin is not into digital trickery. Instead the goal becomes to make the best version of the movie using the footage as it was shot, as opposed to using visual effects to âFrankensteinâ the movie together.â
With the picture complete and in cinemas, Raskin recalls viewing it for the fi rst time with an excited yet unsuspecting crowd. âAt that point it is no longer about watching the movie, itâs about seeing how the audience reacts to it,â he says. âWith a good crowd, itâs a blast. Hearing them laugh, shout, applaud â knowing that theyâre with the fi lm and enjoying it â it makes all of the hard work and the long hours worth it.â
Photos: Left page: Fred Raskin, ACE. Photo by Andrew Eisen. This page: (Top) Samuel L. Jackson stars as Major Marquis Warren. (Bottom) Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Bruce Dern. The Hateful Eight photos by Andrew Cooper (SMPSP/Š2015 The Weinstein Company. All Rights Reserved.)
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The opinions expressed by individuals quoted in articles in InCamera do not necessarily represent those of Kodak Limited, Eastman Kodak Company or the editors of InCamera. Because of our constant endeavour to improve quality and design, modifi cations may be made to products from time to time. Details of stock availability and specifi cations given in this publication are subject to change without notice.
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You probably had no idea that when you were watching American Idol at any point over the last 14 seasons, that you were witnessing the nostalgia of Super 8. It would take a trained eye indeed to notice that all those winter evenings spent in front of the tube with your family, ready for the next Carrie Underwood or Kelly Clarkson, were actually a throwback to many familyâs home videos.
Cinematographer Owen Smith, whoâs been with the show since 2006, has been capturing Super 8 footage that is interspersed throughout the road show portion of the series.
âMy dad shot Super 8,â the St. Augustine, Florida, native reminisces. âHis dad had shot Super 8 too. More than photography, it is a history of people. When my dad was using it, it was to document the life around him. Everybody had one of those cameras, so a lot of people can identify with it as sitting around watching home movies.â
Smith had been doing a lot of travel documentary work earlier in his career, and got to work on shows like Survivor and The Deadliest Catch. When he started on American Idol, an already huge, well-oiled machine, he asked himself what he could do to make his contribution unique.
âIâd just joined the Union and was getting into bigger productions,â he explains, âand I realized that my strength could come from something that Iâve always done â Super 8.â
Smith was on a schedule that had him and his team up at 4 a.m. shooting thousands of screaming people in lines in a different city every few days. During his off time, heâd take a bike or go walking with his Canon 814 and shoot B-roll of the cities. Heâd end up using 24 to 36 rolls of Super 8, which would equal about an hourâs worth of footage.
It was never a fi ght for Smith to shoot the footage, but he would have to usher it through the post-production phase, making sure each editor who already had a million tasks to complete was aware that Super 8 footage was available. Smith says once the producers â namely Charles Boyd, Patrick Lynn and Megan Michaels â began to see the value it added, they asked for more Super 8 shots.
Smith has shot a variety of Super 8 negative and reversal fi lm stocks since his fi rst season with the FOX show. He frames it for 16:9, and Pro8mm in Burbank scans the fi lm in 1920x1080 with 3:1 color correction on a Millennium 2 HD scanner. The fi lm output is a ProRes HQ codec, downloaded to a hard drive for editing of the digital fi les.
âOwen wanted to create a unique look for the American Idol sequences, and he chose Super 8 because it combines a classic fi lm look with a modern application for stunning results,â offers Rhonda Vigeant, VP of Marketing at Pro8mm. âWe provide a one-stop solution with KODAK Super 8mm fi lm, lab processing and HD scanning with just a two-day turn around.â
Smith always felt his Super 8 footage would mimic a dad following his kid as they audition and make the trip across country to compete in the iconic American Idol. He never put it on a jib or a Technocrane, but lately, he has been using it in a more stylized way.
âNow,â he says, âwe talk about how weâre going to compose the frame and how it fi ts into the bigger show. I relate to this medium through travel and a nostalgic emotion of family, friends and adventure. Iâll always use it.â
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Photos: Top: Cinematographer Owen Smith. Bottom: Thousands line up for a chance to become the next American Idol at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Photo by Adam Bettcher. (FOX. Copyright 2014 FOX BROADCASTING Getty Images for FOX Broadcasting)
GETS A TICKET TO HOLLYWOOD ON
64 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Peter Zuccarini, In the Heart of the Seaâsunderwater director of photography,
developed his skills while growing up inthe seaside community of Key Biscayne,Fla. âIt was a marine culture of freediving, spearfishing, lobster catching, andeverything else you could do underwater,âhe says. âMy dad had a waterproof Super8 camera and I had a waterproof Pentaxstill camera, so I started shooting when Iwas just 11 years old, photographingeverything that was going on. Years later,when I went off to school in the 1980s, Istarted making water-themed shortfilms.â Scuba-certified at the age of 12,Zuccarini later gained professional expe-rience working for established experts,including wildlife documentarian BobTalbot; photographer-filmmaker BruceWeber; underwater cinematographerPete Romano, ASC; and Imax specialistGreg MacGillivray. He also learned onthe sets of such projects as Sea of Sharksand The Everglades: Home of the LivingDinosaurs â both of which were install-ments of Disneyâs New True LifeAdventures â and Dolphins (2000). âIhave always endeavored to make imagesthat are new and unfamiliar, while beingopen to learning and seeing every newcollaborator as a sort of mentor,â he says. During prep on Pirates of theCaribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (ACAug. â03), Zuccariniâs name came upwhen the filmmakers were discussing thepictureâs extensive underwater needs, andhe was put in contact with director ofphotography Dariusz Wolski, ASC. âItook Dariusz to an Imax theater inMiami to see Ocean Men: Extreme Dive,which Iâd shot with Bob Talbot, and thatgot me on the picture. That was probablymy big break into Hollywood filmmak-ing, and I went on to do the underwaterphotography on all three Pirates sequels.â Part of what made Zuccariniâsphotography stand out was best show-cased in the adventure drama Into the Blue(2005), a show on which he shot anddirected elaborate underwater sequences.âBecause I came from a free-diving back-ground,â he explains, âwe tried to be more
bold with the camera movement, toreally explore that feeling of motion anddimension. Avoiding the traditionalâepicâ-but-static seascapes, we tried tocontinually move the camera fast withthe action. That, coupled with the abil-ity to direct these scenes, allowed me towork in the fantastic colors and lightavailable in the Bahamian waters. Therippled seafloor provides a creamybounce, and as a background it beauti-fully catches the patterns of refractedsunlight.â Has the immediacy of shootingdigitally increased the appetite forunderwater photography? âAbsolutely,âZuccarini confirms, âand Iâm saying thatas somebody whoâs had a hard timeletting go of film. To my eye, the waylight transmits through water is justbetter recorded by film. Looking intothe sun from underwater, or intoanother strong light source, still looksbetter on film, so it was hard to embracedigital at first. But now weâre deliveringa full-resolution HD image to ourdirector and topside director of photog-raphy, so they can instantly see andunderstand what weâre getting, which isvery beneficial for what we do. Withfilm, there was always a gap in thatunderstanding, but now that gap isgone, and that helps me communicate
better and helps my collaborators on thesurface be more creative about how theywant to use the underwater camerateam.â Still, underwater photographyhas its idiosyncrasies. For instance, thechoice of optics is a different considera-tion when shooting underwater. âMostof what you know about using a partic-ular lens on dry land doesnât apply whenusing it underwater,â Zuccarini says.âThe one constant is how they handleflares when you look into a hard source,but in terms of contrast or color aberra-tion, they respond very differentlyunderwater. Also, shooting through afoot of what looks like very clear wateris like putting diffusion in front of yourlens. So someone who favors a certainlens because of contrast or color charac-teristics might enjoy testing lenses indifferent qualities of water beforemaking final decisions.â Digital cameras may also performdifferently, says Zuccarini, particularlyin terms of contrast, but there are waysto deal with the issue: âFor instance,with the Alexa, due to its dynamicrange, you can reduce or increasecontrast while retaining the color thatyou were intending. Even in a tank,where you have a lot of control over thewater, the image may be very different
â˘|⢠Deep Focus â˘|â˘
day-to-day due to the chemistry orparticulate matter. On the openocean, there is no control. But havingthat range adjustment can help youget close to matching day-to-day andshot-to-shot even with variations inthe waterâs color. So I feel confidentwith the Alexa in that regard, and alsoin that the camera itself has beenincredibly reliable, which is vital forunderwater work. If a camera goesdown and you have to pull the hous-ing out of the water to put in areplacement, thatâs a lot of lost time.â The cinematographer relies oncustom watertight camera housingssupplied by Zuccarini Watershot, apartnership with Steve Ogles, whoseSan Diego-based company Watershotalso offers an array of support forâcustom and production waterproofenclosures, including tablets andsmartphones,â Zuccarini says. âOurprofessional motion-picture housingsare made of aluminum, carbon fiberand other composites, and we supportall the major film and digital systems.âAs he notes, variations in the Alexaline alone â from the XT to the Minito the Alexa 65 â can require newcustom housings or modifications foreach iteration, as they often haveslightly different controls or add-onmodules. âOne nice thing abouthaving a partner company that cansupport me is that even with newcameras being introduced every year,we can stay ahead of our needs. Zuccarini most recentlywrapped work on the upcomingfeature Deepwater Horizon, shot byEnrique Chediak, ASC. âI rememberthe first time I got paid to shoot. I wasworking with a biologist doing a studyon sharks, thinking it was my bigbreakthrough. I got that job in partbecause I could do the job, but also inpart because I would swim with thesharks. Finding that balance, betweenminimizing risk and maximizingreward, is always a big part of thiswork.â
â David E. Williams
some PL-mount, super-wide ZeissUltra Primes for certain shots, espe-cially to get the whole ship in framewhen the Essex was going down.Ultra Primes tend to look very sharpâ but underwater, the inherentdiffusion softens the lenses in a verycomplimentary way. âAnthony put me on a drycamera for the first week I was there[at Leavesden] â I think he wantedto infuse me with his coverageapproach,â Zuccarini continues. âOneof the things I observed was that foralmost every scene â after the masterand all this incredible coverage âAnthony would use a handheld-camera setup with a 21mm or 27mmlens, wide open, and shoot severalmore passes through the whole sceneright up in [Hemsworthâs] face. It waslike a moving master. So, once Istarted doing underwater work, Imade a point of trying to get right upinto Chrisâ face. In doing that, youforce yourself into the action a bit toget those gritty, personal moments.That coverage breaks the more tradi-tional feeling that a film like thismight otherwise have, making thestory and characters feel more imme-diate and contemporary.â A primary challenge was re-creating deep-water oceanic condi-tions in a studio tank. âI wish wecould have done the location portionof the shoot first; we would have hada better reference for the swells andwaves and wind and spray,â says DodMantle. âBut that wasnât possible, sowe had to rely more on instinct. I wasalways calling for it to be rougher, andRon was supportive of that. âThe sinking of the Essex cameto look quite apocalyptic once we gotthrough the DI,â the cinematogra-pher adds. âItâs not bad enough thatthe whale has ripped open the shipand that it starts sinking, but it alsocatches fire. And then these men areliterally in the middle of nowhere onthese three little boats. I get goose-bumps thinking about it.â In this sequence, Chris
Hemsworthâs character dives backdown into the already submergedvessel. âTo simulate the ship rockingback and forth, sinking while heâsgoing through it, we had thesepowerful water jets working on theboat, some blowing just water andsome water and air,â Zuccarinidescribes. âChris was swimmingthrough the hull of the Essex andgetting pushed and slammed intoparts of the set â while I was in frontof him, being pulled backwards whiletrying to control my movement andspeed with my fins. It was a dynamicsituation, and took a lot of coopera-tion between the special-effects[crew], grips and camera team tomake sure it was safe.â As the scene continues, theEssex explodes, littering the sea withburning whale oil and debris. âThething about fire on water is that justbelow the surface, youâre safe,â saysZuccarini. âBut if you break thesurface, youâre fried. Because we onlyhad a few possible takes, preparationwas important, but it came down toapplying past experience in dealingwith fire effects â how to exposeproperly â because you canât docomplete tests. But we were able toroll during rehearsal and make someadjustments with the light underwa-ter, and the Alexa has the latitude tohelp deal with it.â Location shooting largely tookplace on- and offshore of the islandsof La Gomera and Lanzarote in theCanary Islands chain off the coast ofSpain â not far from where Hustonand Morris shot portions of theirversion of Moby Dick some 50 yearsprior. Shooting with the full-size,seaworthy replica of the Essex inopen water, Dod Mantle relied oneverything from aerial photographyand jib arms to a telescoping cranewith gyro-stabilized three-axisremote head, but simpler approachesand techniques also added an unusualpower to these sequences. âTo emphasize the size of thesewhaling ships, we did some shooting
www.theasc.com January 2016 65
at water level with a floating camerarig as this 100-ton boat sails by atspeed,â Zuccarini says. âIâd be literallyinches from the boat with the lensjust slightly submerged and the hullscraping by. These were incrediblypowerful vessels in their day, and wewanted the audience to feel that.Given the speed and mass of thevessel and the mere inches we werefrom it, thatâs not a shot you could dosafely with a remote head at the endof a 30-foot telescoping crane, whichwould have a lot of its own inertiaand be subject to the movement ofthe barge itâs mounted on. You can
only get that feeling of proximity bybeing right there in the water.â While shooting aboard the shipand its smaller whaling skiffs, DodMantle employed a dedicated cameraand lighting boat featuring an 18KArrimax and an Arri M90 HMI forfill; the fixtures were powered by anonboard 125K generator that couldalso power video village and all othercamera, grip and electric needs. âFor me, the essence of thesescenes after the sinking of the Essexis to get the audience into the boatswith our surviving characters,â DodMantle says. âI was also trying to
suggest a certain point of view fromone of the characters, so the audiencewould have a more direct connectionand be able to empathize with thatcharacter later in the film. I didnâtwant to be too on-the-nose about it,though, because itâs quite an ensem-ble piece at that point and we donâtknow the fate of these men. Itâs thiskind of visual language â the shotsand compositions that lead the viewerand create mood â that I find muchmore interesting than exactly whatlens was used to shoot it or lamp wasused to light it. Thatâs where creativedecisions are made.â The waters around the CanaryIslands are âphotographically extraor-dinary,â notes Zuccarini. âThe area ofthese volcanic islands is dark, asopposed to the white sand you havein a typical coral reef; the sand here isbasically disintegrating basalt andother volcanic rock, so you have thisdark-gray bottom, which adds aprimal mood that was perfect for thisfilm. Shooting up toward the surface,you could see the ships and boats, butyou didnât have that cheery, tropicalfeeling you might have had if we wereshooting in the Caribbean â wedidnât have a bright bounce fill from awhite sand bottom. This was a perfectplace from an underwater stand-point.â These conditions also inspiredHoward and Dod Mantle. âForinstance,â Zuccarini recalls, âRonasked, âWhy donât we try an anglefrom below the ship, the way thewhale would see it, from 100 feetdown?â And then he asked, âCouldyou also swim the camera up from100 feet down, toward the ship?â Sowe designed that shot, which meantnot only dealing with the photo-graphic needs â focus, exposure,composition and such â but thetiming of the ascent and the move-ment of the full-size whaling shipunder sail, which was a logisticalchallenge.â To accomplish this whale-POV
66 January 2016 American Cinematographer
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Top: Scenes of the Essex crew marooned on a rocky isle were shot onshore in the Canary Islands chainoff the coast of Spain. Bottom: The crew shoots aboard one of the skiffs using a camera crane placed on
a production-constructed dock platform.
shot, Zuccariniâs underwater assis-tant, Peter Manno, was positioned100' beneath the waterâs surface withan Alexa, to which a buoyancy blad-der was attached. Zuccarini wouldthen free-dive down from the surfaceto take the unit to operate. At the callof action, with the ship underway, he
would gradually inflate the bladderwith air, rising up with it at increas-ing speed to âcrashâ into the bottomof the craft just as the whale would. âNow, this is not the kind ofshot that you design while in astudio,â Zuccarini notes. âThere, itwould almost automatically be an
effects shot. And you also could notdo this using scuba gear due to therapid ascent, which would kill you. Ithad to be a free-dive shot. But onceyouâre out on the ocean, and everyonecan see the potential of what can bedone out there, the opportunities totry amazing shots can happen.â The Canon EOS-1D C wascalled into service for a scene inwhich the Essex survivors wash up onthe shore of a rocky isle. âTheyâregoing ashore in the archipelago, rightthere in the surf zone,â Zuccarinirecounts. âI was able to go into thosewaves with [Hemsworth], handhold-ing that EOS-1D C, duck diving toavoid the big ones, but getting inthere close to the rocks and making itfeel real. It was hazardous, and Icould not have done it with a biggercamera. Ron and Anthony were trulywilling to embrace getting thatcamera in there, and Chris was super-comfortable in the water, which was
ďż˝ Savage Sea
Shooting in awater tank,
Zuccarini gets anunderwater angle
for one of thewhale-chasing
action sequences.
68
great â we didnât have to use a stuntperson and we could capture hisperformance.â Well after principal photogra-phy wrapped, âthere were a few daysof pickups that I just absolutely couldnot do,â Dod Mantle notes, âso it wasthe most obvious thing to suggestthat Sal Totino [ASC, AIC] cover forme, given that heâs done so manyother pictures with Ron and works soclosely with him. They were quitecomplicated scenes in terms of light-ing, so he had a chance to reviewwhat weâd done and he paid us thebiggest compliment by saying the linebetween studio and location work wasabsolutely seamless. Thatâs perhapsthe biggest compliment one can getfrom another cinematographer!â Dod Mantle oversaw the digitalintermediate at Technicolor Londonwith Jean-ClĂŠment Soret, whoworked with FilmlLight Baselight fora final 2K master. âThe DI process
was a matter of putting color backinto the footage after the visual-effects work had been done,â DodMantle says, noting that visual-effects supervisor Jody Johnson keptin close communication throughoutthe lengthy post schedule. âSo, forinstance, in our storm scene, I put alot of tungsten back into the clothesand the shipâs sails so it wasnât thiscrisp white and cold marine blue.And I encouraged Jody to put moreof our saturation back into the imagesâ the filmâs palette was alwaysaggressively saturated. Itâs extro-verted, and brave in a way. And Ihope audiences see that. âCollaborating with Ron issuch a positive experience because henever pushes,â the cinematographerconcludes. âInstead, he brings you onthis ride â this extraordinary, physi-cally difficult, challenging journey âand Iâm so glad I was able to take itwith him.â
âThis was a journey,â Howardadds, âand a special one for me, likeBackdraft and Apollo 13 and Rushâ one of the most difficult, yetmeaningful. These men were theastronauts of their time, working withcutting-edge technology and riskingtheir lives to fuel what was then a verymodern world. They were findingtheir fortunes, and I think wecaptured that feeling.â ďż˝
TECHNICAL SPECS
1.85:1
Digital Capture
Arri Alexa XT; Canon Cinema EOS-1D C,C300, C500; Indiecam IndieGS2K
Panavision Primo, Arri/Zeiss Ultra Prime, Kowa
69
70 January 2016 American Cinematographer
BattleTested
Cinematographer Adam Arkapaw crafts a bold
look for director Justin Kurzelâsinterpretation of Shakespeareâs
Macbeth.
By Benjamin B
â˘|â˘
www.theasc.com January 2016 71
All
imag
es c
ourt
esy
of S
tudi
ocan
al.
O ffering an original take onWilliam Shakespeareâs Scottishplay and featuring powerful visu-als from cinematographer Adam
Arkapaw, director Justin KurzelâsMacbeth premiered during the CannesFilm Festival as part of the prestigiousOfficial Competition. The filmâs directorand cinematographer have workedtogether regularly since their timetogether at the Victorian College of theArts in Australia, collaborating oncommercials as well as the feature TheSnowtown Murders. Arkapaw also shot the distinctiveAustralian features Animal Kingdom (ACOct. â10) and Lore (AC March â13). Thecinematographer has received Emmysfor his work on the series Top of the Lakeand the first season of True Detective. ACreached Arkapaw in London, where, atpress time, he was shooting Kurzelâsthird feature, Assassinâs Creed.
American Cinematographer:How did it feel to shoot such a classicstory? Adam Arkapaw: My dad was anEnglish teacher in Australia. I neverreally understood how great literaturewas, or why my dad loved it, until highschool when my dad took me away for
Opposite: Thetitular hero(MichaelFassbender) steelshimself for battlein the openingsequence ofMacbeth. Thispage, top:Macbeth becomesking, with his wife(Marion Cotillard)by his side.Middle: Macbethâsascension to thethrone comes afterheâs murderedKing Duncan(David Thewlis,left). Bottom:CinematographerAdam Arkapawutilized an Easyrigfor handheldshooting.
72 January 2016 American Cinematographer
two weeks to study Macbeth. He showedme the art behind the words, and thevarious meanings that could be deducedfrom the text. It was an inspiring andeye-opening experience for me as ateenager â the genesis of my love ofliterature and storytelling. So, manyyears later, it was really meaningful tohave an opportunity as a cinematogra-pher to give back to this play. Why did you and Justin Kurzelchoose to shoot digitally? Arkapaw: The obvious choicewould have been to use film because itâsa period piece, but we wanted the movieto look more contemporary. We didnâtwant it to feel nostalgic. So we shot withthe Arri Alexa XT Plus in ArriRaw. Why did you choose to shoot inanamorphic? Arkapaw: The aberrations ofanamorphic help create an expressionis-tic and painterly effect. And they alsoplay against the sharpness of [digitalcapture]. Anamorphic sits the aestheticsomewhere in between a softer film lookand a harder digital look. We mostlyused Panavision C Series [lenses], andalso the E Series. We also carried aPanavision ATZ 70-200mm [T3.5]zoom and an Angenieux [Optimo] 48-580mm [T5.6] zoom. The anamorphic look varieswith the T-stop. Many old-timersliked to shoot between T4 and 5.6. Arkapaw: At that stop, you [nolonger see] the aberrations. I was morebetween T2.8 and 4 â wide open is abit much for me. Itâs also about depth offield. In general, I like having somedepth so you can enjoy the texturesbehind the actors; I like to see the designin the background of shots. However, Iwill draw out the actor from the back-ground for a powerful close-up when itâsthe right time to do it. How did you and Kurzel definethe vivid looks of Macbeth? Did youtalk about looks ahead of time, or didyou propose things on set? Arkapaw: Justin and I met in filmschool, and weâve known each other for12 years. Weâve probably done 20commercials together, as well as his two
ďż˝ Battle Tested
The filmmakers shot with multiple Arri Alexa XT Plus cameras, as well as a Vision ResearchPhantom Flex, to capture the battle. âThe obvious choice would have been to use film because
itâs a period piece, but we wanted the movie to look more contemporary,â says Arkapaw.
74 January 2016 American Cinematographer
features. So over time we have devel-oped a lot of trust in each other, and wedefinitely have a shorthand. I knowwhat he likes and doesnât like. Heâs verytrusting with me about coverage, light-ing and color, to the point where I donâtreally need to run a lot of what Iâmgoing to do by him. On occasion, if hewas expecting something else, he mightsay, âWhy donât we try this or that?âOtherwise, I just know him so well fromour shared aesthetic and long historythat he trusts me to do what I think isbest.
One of Kurzelâs key decisionswas to shoot almost entirely on loca-tion in Scotland, sometimes in verydifficult conditions. Arkapaw: Yeah, even the localsthought we were crazy! They would stayat home and we would trek in. A lot ofexteriors were hour-long walk-ins, oftenon mountaintops. It was super windy, upto 40 miles an hour. My memory ofScotland is having three layers of water-proof jackets on, with my hood on andmy back to the wind, and just watchinghail come sideways across my body.
Because we were up in the moun-tains, you could see the storms coming.Youâd say, âOh, that looks like itâs 20minutes away. Letâs quickly get a shotoff.â You would shoot something andthen youâd pull your hood up and waitanother 20 minutes until the hail hadgone through, then go, âThat otherstorm looks like itâs half an hour away.Weâll get another shot off.â You donât sense that extremeweather on the screen. Arkapaw: That was a commentfrom Olly Tellett, my first AC. He said,âI love the film, I love how it looks, butyou canât see how hard it was. I wish itlooked harder, because it was!â One of Kurzelâs originalpremises for the film is that Macbeth[played by Michael Fassbender]suffers from post-traumatic stressdisorder. How did you represent that? Arkapaw:When I was 23, I did adocumentary in the Middle East and Imet some guys in Israel who had beenin the army and were dischargedbecause they suffered from PTSD. Iasked them to describe it. They told meitâs as if every moment lasts an eternity,everything is in slow motion, that itâsalmost like a banality, a stillness that youcanât escape â which is terrible. Thatâswhat we explored as Macbeth crashesinto his madness. Thereâs a moment like thatduring the battle in the beginning,when Macbeth is immobile and every-one around him is moving in slowmotion. Arkapaw: That battle wentthrough different versions. At first wewere scheduled to have 10 days to shootit, which became six, which becamethree! [Laughs.] So we had to simplifyit, but sometimes restrictions can be thebest thing for your movie. Art is made of constraints? Arkapaw: Yes, that was sort ofthe main slogan in my film school.Chris McGill, the head lecturer, used toquote T.S. Eliot: âWhen forced to workwithin a strict framework, the imagina-tion is taxed to its utmost â and willproduce its richest ideas.â
Arkapaw complemented the filmâs candle- and firelit scenes with Showtec Sunstrips, whichincorporate a DMX chase system to create an effect he describes as âthe best Iâve come across.â
ďż˝ Battle Tested
ďż˝
76 January 2016 American Cinematographer
We had to simplify the battle toone charge, where Macbeth wentthrough a number of kills, saw thewitches and then had a second run. Wecross-shot it running with him fromthree different angles, and we also had a[Vision Research] Phantom Flexcamera, which gave us about 10 secondsto keep [per take]. We used ouranamorphic lenses on it. What frame rate did the
Phantom record? Arkapaw: I think we shot at 800fps, but some of it was sped up to about400 fps in the film. We didnât have a lotof extras â I think we had about ahundred â and the Phantom helped usin the wide shots of people charging. Ifwe had shot them charging in real time,youâd quickly realize that there werenâtany other people behind them! When shooting the battle, were
you thinking at all about John Toll,ASCâs work in Mel GibsonâsBraveheart [AC June â96]? Arkapaw: It was a touch pointfor me, yeah. Braveheart is a beautifulpicture. Itâs pretty timeless. One thing that distinguishesthis film is the phenomenal amount ofsmoke in the outdoor battles, espe-cially the final one. Arkapaw: When we startedprepping, Justin was saying, âI want to besurrounded by smoke.â I thought thatwas a bit ambitious out in the open. Butwe had the right effects supervisor,Mike Kelt, who surrounded the set withthese huge, very long smoke tubes. Thesmoke was always 360 degrees aroundus. There were also eight guys runningaround with different types of smokemachines, adding more smoke theentire time. We did a little testing in prepro-duction to see if the smoke would workout. I guess it wouldnât have worked if ithad been too windy, but we got lucky onthose shooting days. How many cameras did you useon the film? Arkapaw: We shot with twocameras about 50 percent of the time. Ioperated the A camera and Simon
ďż˝ Battle Tested
âAs the film progresses, we decided to be more classic with the cinematography,â Arkapawnotes. Here, a crane keeps the image stable as Macbeth rides for the castle.
Tindall operated the B camera. When Ioperate digital cameras, I never reallyuse the viewfinder, because the digitalimage looks so crappy that itâs a bitdepressing. So I look at the monitor; wecan also get a LUT on the monitor, anditâs nice to see what the image is goingto look like. I light off the little onboardmonitor as well. Given the colors on this movie, Iimagine that the LUT image couldlook quite different from the set. Arkapaw: Yeah. [Laughs.] Youâre pretty fearless in terms ofcolor variations. Arkapaw: Like I said earlier,thereâs so much scope for expressionwith Shakespeare. And in the case ofMacbeth, you really are getting insidethe characterâs head â heâs seeingapparitions. Once youâre inside some-oneâs head, itâs a dreamscape; there reallyare no boundaries to what you can do.So one liberty we decided we wouldtake was to not be restricted to match-ing every shot in a sequence. Yes â as we go from the soldiersfighting, to the witches, to Macbeth,the image goes from greenish, toyellowish, then magenta. Arkapaw: That was anothersubversion that we tried to do. Youmight expect the witches to be colder ormore macabre, but we wanted them tobe warmer. We tried to use the sun andflares to make the image sort of heav-enly â more angelic than witchy, Iguess. The battle shots arenât all match-ing, which evokes Macbethâs PTSD.We tried to be inside his mind and seeall the gruesome, traumatic things hewould have seen in battle. Being a greatcommander, he would have beenthrough many battles; in Justinâs inter-pretation, that took its toll and madehim descend into madness. Do you create these coloredlooks with LUTs youâve preparedahead of time? Arkapaw: Yes, I like to create arange of LUTs in preproduction â arange from cold to warm, and a fewLUTs for specific scenes. For example,
78 January 2016 American Cinematographer
when Lady Macbeth [MarionCotillard] goes back to Inverness, I useda specific LUT where the mid-tones arereally lifted and thereâs a cyan wash intothe shadows, so the scene has a moreheavenly look than the rest of the film.And the climactic fight with Macduff[Sean Harris] also has a particular LUT. That final orange, smoke-filledduel has a dreamy, almost hallucina-tory ambience. Arkapaw: Itâs a great way to endthe film, a crescendo. The wood is set onfire and that motivated the whole colorspectrum, leading us to this warm glow.We came at it a few times from scratchto find the right levels of orange, yellowand red.
Approximately how manydifferent LUTs did you use on thefilm? Arkapaw: Iâd say about 10. Inaddition to the LUTs for specificscenes, Iâll do a high-contrast and low-contrast LUT with cool, neutral orwarm looks. The high contrast is for thesun, and the low contrast for the clouds.Then I will flick through the LUTsbefore I shoot the scene, and find theone that feels just right with the designand the performance. I definitely like to go for a look asmuch as possible when Iâm shooting. Iprefer to go even too far on set ratherthan to try to be subtle about it, becausethen, when you get to the grade, the
idea is already burned into the directorâshead. Once the director gets used to thefootage in the editing room, you cannever really do anything too extravagantin the DI. How did you create these LUTs? Arkapaw: I made the 3D LUTswith colorist Greg Fisher at Company 3in London using [Blackmagic DesignâsDaVinci] Resolve. We tried a few differ-ent versions of the LUTs before wesettled on our favorite [options]; we shottests out at our location to test themunder various lighting conditions. I didthe final grade at Goldcrest in Londonwith Adam Glasman; the final deliver-able was a 2K DCP. Thereâs a real mixture of hand-held and dolly shots in the movie. Arkapaw: For handheld, Iâm a bigfan of the Easyrig. I like how it spreadsthe weight for your body. I often like toshoot from below the eye line; if youâreshooting handheld, youâre crouchingdown all day long, but with the Easyrigyou can change the height very easilyduring the shot. In some of the scenes Iwas actually running around with theEasyrig and swinging the camera about.I have a lot of fun doing that. As the film progresses, we decidedto be more classic with the cinematogra-phy. In the beginning Macbethâs life isquite vibrant, and he is a great comman-der, so we gave the camerawork a lot oflife and vitality. Then, as he gets crazier,the camera becomes more lifeless, eitherstatic or just slow dolly moves, almost asif he couldnât escape this sort of stillness. In some scenes, we might startwith a wide shot that would clearly fitthe whole action, letting the actors dowhat they wanted. Once Justin had atake that he was happy with, I couldfigure out how to cover the closer shots,knowing where [the actors] had moved. A key scene takes place in a smallcandlelit church, where Lady Macbethseduces her husband and plots themurder of King Duncan [DavidThewlis]. How did you light that nightinterior? Arkapaw: It was a small space, sowe created a wedge light. We started
Top: Macbethisolates himself ashe descends intomadness. Director
Justin Kurzelposited that the
character sufferedfrom PTSD afterexperiencing thehorrors of warand committingmurder. Bottom:Lady Macbeth
tries to keep herhusbandâs rulefrom crumbling.
ďż˝ Battle Tested
with an 8-by-4 poly up against a wall,and then placed a light on the ground ata 45-degree angle pointed into the poly.Then we draped a Grid Cloth from thetop of the poly to the ground, surround-ing the light. This creates a compactsource in the shape of a wedge. What was the fixture inside thewedge to simulate candlelight? Arkapaw: We used [Showtec]Sunstrips. My gaffer, Lee Walters, hadjust come off Fury [AC Dec. â14], wherehe used them for firelight at night.Theyâre strips of 10 little tungsten bulbs,the same that are used as spots inpeopleâs homes. We put together panelswith five Sunstrips, so youâve got about50 of those hard little lights. Someonehas done a very clever job of putting aDMX chase system into the Sunstrips,so all the little globes are glowing onand off. It looks pretty convincing, thebest Iâve come across. So we usedSunstrips for all of our firelight andcandle scenes. How did you balance theSunstrip wedge with the real candlesin the church? Arkapaw: I was using the candlesas fill, so I would just walk around andlight them or blow them out dependingon how much I needed. I did explore just using candles, asa lot of classic films have done, but forme the candlelight is just a little tooorange. Also, candlelight is quite hard,unless you have dozens of them. So Iprefer to have just one key light andthen let the candles do the rest of thework. And that means that the candlesdetermine your T-stop? Arkapaw: Yes. Can you talk about the banquetwhere King Macbeth sees Banquo[Paddy Considine], the ghost of theman he had murdered? Arkapaw: Thatâs my favoritescene. Macbeth is coming apart in sucha public place. I love how Banquo fitsinto the scene. Instead of doing some-thing really ghostly, heâs still sort of real. The scene has a faded look to it. Arkapaw:Thereâs a sepia tone. It
looks like an old Japanese samurai film.[Laughs.] I underexposed so far thatmy DIT, Peter Marsden, wonderedabout the dark areas. He said, âI donâtknow if thereâs anything in there,â whichwas sort of scary. But I love that look on[digital], when you expose it under andthen you have to crank it up, having tolift the shadows. You increase thecontrast, because you end up stretching
the file a lot when you push the high-lights. I think itâs a really interestinglook, similar to paintings when they agea lot. Which painters were you influ-enced by? Arkapaw: With a film like this,which is quite macabre, I think ofRembrandt and Caravaggio. How did you light the banquet?
Arkapaw: We put LEDs up in thearches on the back walls to bring out thearchitecture. We had four tungstenballoons overhead, but we had to keeptheir level very low so that the highlightsin the background and the candles in theroom stood out enough. Thatâs how theunderexposure worked out. We ran the whole scene throughfrom a number of angles. We just startedto dolly with a stabilized head â some-thing I love to do â which freed us totake the camera anywhere on the set, andluckily the floor was flat enough for thestabilized head to take out all the bumps.Because the scene is really centered onMichael Fassbenderâs performance, westarted on a tight shot of Michael, and heplayed it through, doing eight-minutetakes of the whole scene. As the takeswent on, we figured out a shot thatcovered his whole performance. It wasreally fun to choreograph, figuring outhow to work the dolly around and fit inall the places in the room.
ďż˝ Battle Tested
Cast and crewprepare for
action on âTheScottish Film.â
80
So you then added a continuoustake of Lady Macbeth, and so on? Arkapaw: Yes, we added in theother pieces. We repositioned thecamera for the cuts we needed but triedto let the whole thing flow. The shot ofMichael was the spine of the scene, andwe just figured out what the pieces thatsupported that needed to be. Something I pride myself on isallowing the actors to get in the flow,rather than breaking [a scene] up intolots of coverage. Starts and stops make itso hard for actors to get in the flow. It sounds like Justin Kurzelâsapproach also favored the actorsâprocesses. Arkapaw: With Shakespeare,you can take the interpretation so manydifferent places. Instead of plotting outscenes with pen and paper, Justin wasreally keen to explore it on set with theperformance. So he could do 10 takes ofa scene, and every take would bemarkedly different. Iâve never been
more excited or inspired on set, becauseyou never really knew what Michael orMarion would bring to it. It was sointeresting and inspiring to see therange of interpretation thatâs possiblewith such a great piece of literature. Itâs great to see that JustinKurzel also allowed you all this free-dom to create, and you certainlywerenât afraid to go to extreme placesin terms of colors and looks. Arkapaw: Justin definitelyinspires that freedom. He likes tosubvert the general rules and createsomething new. He wants to beprovocative, and heâs not afraid to takerisks. Justin would prefer to make amovie that people either love or hate,rather than a movie everyone thinks isokay. ďż˝
TECHNICAL SPECS
2.39:1
Digital Capture
Arri Alexa XT Plus, Vision Research Phantom Flex
Panavision C Series, E Series, ATZ;Angenieux Optimo
81
Adapted from David Ebershoff âs novel, the feature TheDanish Girl presents a fictionalized version of Lili Elbeâsremarkable life story. The film opens in Copenhagen inthe 1920s, when Lili Elbe is still known as the landscape
painter Einar Wegener (played by Eddie Redmayne).Although born with male physical attributes, Einar begins tofeel more comfortable dressed and presented as a woman,dubbed âLiliâ by ballerina friend Ulla Paulson (AmberHeard). Although Einarâs wife and fellow painter, Gerda(Alicia Vikander), initializes this role-play when she asks herhusband to pose as a woman for one of her paintings, she is
Leading Lady
82 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Danny Cohen, BSC reteams withdirector Tom Hooper to tell the
story of transgender pioneer Lili Elbe in The Danish Girl.
By Mark Dillon
â˘|â˘
www.theasc.com January 2016 83
hurt when Lili decides to permanentlyabandon her previous male identity.Gerda seeks solace from Einarâs child-hood friend, art dealer Hans Axgil(Matthias Schoenaerts), but when Liliembarks on groundbreaking anddangerous gender-reassignment surg-eries under Dresden physician KurtWarnekros (Sebastian Koch), Gerdareturns to Liliâs side. The project underwent a longgestation before Tom Hooper finallysigned on to direct, and while the inti-mate film may seem small-scale follow-ing Hooperâs lavish adaptation of LesMisĂŠrables (AC Jan. â13), its timing isuncanny in the year of Caitlyn Jennerand as transgender issues have come tothe fore. Hooper again teamed withdirector of photography Danny Cohen,BSC, who has shot the vast majority ofthe directorâs projects since the 2006telefilm Longford; the cinematographerreceived Oscar, BAFTA, ASC andCamerimage nominations for his workon Hooperâs The Kingâs Speech (ACDec.â10). âTomâs got a fantastic eye,âCohen says from his home in London.âHe knows exactly what he likes, whichmakes things simpler. Whether youhave a frame that is or isnât working for
him, heâll tell you. The more ideas andoptions, the better, because you canthrow stuff away and you donât standaround scratching your head.â Their schedule on The DanishGirl was tight. The cameras rolled inFebruary 2015, starting in LondonâsElstree Film Studios followed by loca-tion work around the city. Cohen then
took full advantage of urban and naturallandscapes over several weeks inBrussels and Copenhagen, and a day inNorway. There was also a second-unitday of pickups in Dresden beforephotography wrapped in April. The production met its goal topremiere in September at the VeniceInternational Film Festival, followed aU
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Opposite: Danish painter Einar Wegener (Eddie Redmayne) transforms into Lili Elbe, embarking on ajourney of self-discovery and becoming a transgender pioneer in The Danish Girl. This page, top: Einar
models for his wife and fellow painter, Gerda (Alicia Vikander). Bottom: Cinematographer Danny Cohen, BSC positions the camera for a close-up of Redmayne.
84 January 2016 American Cinematographer
week later by a screening at the TorontoInternational Film Festival. Cohen hadthree more titles showing at the latterevent: director Rufus Norrisâ murderousmusical, London Road; Stephen FrearsâLance Armstrong biopic, The Program;and Lenny Abrahamsonâs Room, whichnabbed TIFFâs Peopleâs Choice Award.âItâs pretty staggering,â Cohen acknowl-edges, reflecting on his recent output. Coming straight off principalphotography for Room, Cohen had acondensed three weeks of preproductionfor The Danish Girl. He recalls finding afew precious moments to brainstormwith Hooper, and looking mainly at thepaintings of Danish artist VilhelmHammershøi, a contemporary of theWegeners whose work was featured in a2008 exhibition at Londonâs RoyalAcademy. The catalog from that exhibi-tion served as a major reference guide.âHammershøiâs palette is a very specificrange of blue and gray,â Hoopercomments in the filmâs productionnotes. âOnce youâre into his world itâsamazing how rich it is; you find beautywithin constraint.â Cohen adds, âHe painted peoplein rooms, often from a back or side viewâ never flat-on. He was doing stuffthat was not the currency of that time.We could see how his paintings couldinstantly turn into film sets.â Indeed, the Copenhagen apart-
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Top: TheWegenersâ
Copenhagenapartment set
was designed toevoke the
paintings ofDanish artist
VilhelmHammershøi.Middle: Einar
works on one ofhis landscape
paintings.Bottom: Director
Tom Hooperdiscusses a scenewith Redmayne.
86 January 2016 American Cinematographer
ment/studio where Einar and Gerdalive, constructed at Elstree, looks as if itcould have been lifted right out ofHammershøiâs 1904 work Interior WithYoung Woman From Behind. âProductiondesigner Eve Stewart did an amazingjob putting that together,â says Cohen.âWe were trying to pull out features ofHammershøiâs paintings: lots of door-ways, how different rooms contrastagainst each other, and where thewindows are in relation to the door.â Cohen also worked closely withcostume designer Paco Delgado. âPacohad a lot of fun with those amazingperiod costumes,â the cinematographerrecalls. âHe was always offeringcontrasting textures. It was a big, roundconversation among Paco, Eve and me.We didnât want the costumes to fitawkwardly against the walls. We wantedit to look spot-on.â Additionally, there is an arc to the
color palette as Einar transitions to Lili;Gerdaâs career takes off with Lili as herfemale model; and the couple moves toParis, where Lili blooms into her trueself. While their Copenhagen apart-ment is stark and limited in its colorrange, their French flat is filled withbric-Ă -brac and introduces a warmmĂŠlange of brown, red, yellow, gold,mauve, pink and orange. The Danish Girl marks the firstdigital collaboration between Hooperand Cohen, a fact the cinematographerchalks up to the budget. Cohen shotThe Program and London Road on RedEpic Mysterium-X cameras, and thenemployed Epic Dragons on Room. Heopted to stick with the latter for TheDanish Girl. âThe Dragon gives morelatitude,â he explains. âIf you have some-thing exposed in the foreground and thebackground is bright, the highlightsdonât overexpose. You keep more infor-
mation. Also, the way the Dragon dealswith skin tones is more sophisticated. Itfelt right because we wanted to get a lotof detail in Eddieâs and Aliciaâs skin andfacial expressions.â For optimal resolution, the film-makers shot mostly in 6K full-frame(6144x3160) resolution, but droppeddown to 5.5K or 5K for coverage onwider lenses. Knowing they wouldconform at a lower resolution, however,they framed for a 1.85:1 extraction at93.29 percent of the full-frame 6K(1.94:1) image. âThis gave the operatorsadditional âlook-aroundâ at the edge offrame and gave plenty of scope for anyimage stabilization and/or reframing inpost,â explains digital-imaging techni-cian Anthony Bagley. The Redcode rawfootage was recorded to 512GBRedMag 1.8" Mini SSDs. During prep, Cohen and Hooperused costume and makeup tests with
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Left, top and bottom: Einar has an epiphany as hemodels a womanâs dress. Above: Einar
accompanies Gerda through a dance companyâscostume storage.
88 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Redmayne, Vikander and Heard toformulate a look-up table with digitalcolorist Adam Glasman at LondonâsGoldcrest Films. This involved adjust-ing the Dragoncolor/Redgamma 4 colorspace for a distinct dailies look. Cohen also tested an array oflenses but ended up shooting primarilywith Arri/Zeiss Master Primes, whichhe felt best rendered the sets andRedmayneâs evolving look. To achieve ashallow depth of field, Hooper insistedon shooting at T1.3 with the MasterPrimes; this is used to great effect in ascene in which Gerda, on deadline for aportrait, innocently asks Einar to modela dress for her. It is then that Einar hasan epiphany, realizing how right he feelsin womenâs clothing. The camera is tighton his hands caressing the dress, withthe rest of the frame soft. âThe subject pops out from thebackground in an interesting way,â
Cohen says of the scene. âThereâs reallyone spot to look at. It brings moretexture to the image and becomes moresensuous.â This soft look made diffusionfilters unnecessary, but 0.3 or 0.6 NDfilters were used occasionally to keep thelenses wide open. Additionally, aLensbabywould occasionally be used forthis kind of selective focus. The movie was shot with twocameras, which is how Cohen oftenworks. Iain Mackay, a London Roadcollaborator, operated the A camerawhile Cohen manned the B camera,with a second monitor on his camerathat allowed him to see Mackayâs frame.First ACs Adam Coles and John Evanstraded off on the A and B cameras.Because of the small margin for errorand the proximity of the cameras fromone another, they often pulled focusremotely while watching 9" TVLogicHD monitors. Coles recalls that shoot-
ing wide open âwas very difficult, espe-cially in the digital world, but as long aswe knew Tom had all the moments hewanted, we were able to move on to thenext shot.â The filmmakers didnât want tothrow all their backgrounds out of focus,however, and so they frequently reliedon wider 18mm, 21mm, 27mm and32mm lenses. âIf you stay wider, theviewer will feel thereâs more going onthan just the actor plumb center in theframe,â Cohen explains. âThereâs awhole world you can relate to. Eve andPaco do amazing stuff, so if you put up a150mm and the backgroundâs mush,youâre throwing away the work of the artand costume departments.â That said, there are long-lensmoments, such as when Lili mysteri-ously leaves the Paris apartment and ananxious Gerda runs out to the balcony towatch her go. The crew shot from
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Lights rigged outside the windows providedillumination for interiors in the Wegenersâ
Paris-apartment set.
90 January 2016 American Cinematographer
ground level, looking up at and focusingon Vikander, with the building softbehind her. Such long-lens locationshots were done with Nikon Nikkortelephoto lenses, including a 200mm(T2), while an Angenieux Optimo 24-290mm (T2.8) zoom proved handy forquick reframing of crowd scenes, forexample when Lili, in her new identity,visits a Copenhagen market. Cohen relates that Hooperparticularly likes the Arri/Zeiss Ultra
Prime 8R 8mm rectilinear lens, whichwas used for shooting across aCopenhagen street as Gerda, graspingher portfolio, anxiously walks to agallery for an interview; the lenscaptured the scope of the buildingbehind her. Elsewhere, a 12mm MasterPrime was used to register an old, sooty,textured 30'x200' wall on a street Lilipasses on her way to a peep show â notto be aroused, but to mimic theperformer. âThe 12mm is not as wide as
the rectilinear, but it distorts more,âCohen explains. âThe design of therectilinear is amazing. It doesnât barrelthe edges as much as you would expect.The 12mm feels slightly fisheye incomparison. These quirks of differentlenses make things interesting.â Throughout the shoot, thecameras mostly lived on dollies, withsome Steadicam work by Mackay. âWewere going to do more Steadicam butended up moving the camera moresubtly,â Cohen explains. NotableSteadicam moments include intercutshots of Einar and Gerda playfullywalking through a dance companyâscostume storage, searching for clothesthat would suit Lili. Darker in tone andrequiring several takes was a long shot ina Paris park (actually filmed in Brussels)in which a partially made-up Lili isbrutally attacked by a pair of disapprov-ing loiterers. Technocranes were alsoused on several days, but interior over-head shots, such as Lili on an operatingtable being anesthetized prior tosurgery, were accomplished with a jibarm. When on the dolly, the camerawas optimally kept high on Redmayne.âIt really worked in terms of Eddieâs
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Top: Lili models for Gerdaâs painting. Bottom: Gerda is hurt by Liliâs decision to permanently abandon her male identity.
92 January 2016 American Cinematographer
bone structure and his look if the camerawas slightly above his eye line,â Cohennotes. âFor much of the film we weretrying to get one or two inches abovehim. If we had worked at a morecomfortable height, we would havemissed a trick.â Redmayneâs face is the movieâscentral image, and the filmmakersâprimary challenge was making theactorâs subtle transition from male tofemale convincing. Says Cohenâs long-time gaffer Paul McGeachan, âWhenEddie was Einar, we lit him like youwould a man. But when he became Lili,we used big, soft sources and concen-trated more on eye lights, as you wouldwith a leading lady.â Big, soft sources were ideal as thecrew often had to light two âleadingladiesâ at the same time, with onecamera in close on Vikander and theother on Redmayne as Lili. Backlightwas mostly avoided, and, depending onthe size of the set, sources included twoor three 5' 1K Dedoflex Octodomes,650-watt Lowel Rifa lights, 1Ks or 2Ksdirected through an 8'x8' Grid Cloth,and a 2K or 5K bouncing off polywrapped in muslin. Lights were oftenpositioned low to avoid dark eyes, andChinese lanterns provided additionaleye light. The crew had to light theWegenersâ apartment interiors to appearconsistent with the exteriors they wouldlater shoot in Copenhagen, where thesunshine would be limited and the lighthas what McGeachan describes as aâblue-grayâ hue, just like the set design.âWe didnât know what the skies weregoing to be like, but I was in touch withour local crew in Denmark,â the gafferrecalls. âThey told us where the lightwould normally be at certain times, butyou can never legislate it. It can easilychange, but they mostly were right.â To allow the filmmakers to simu-late various positions and levels ofdaylight, the apartment set had numer-ous lights â including a couple of 24KDinos, 20K Molebeams and 10Ks âpre-rigged outside the main windowand run through dimmers that could be
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Top: Hans Axgil(Matthias
Schoenaerts) andGerda
accompany Einarto the train
station. Middle:Lili arrives at theDresden clinic ofKurt Warnekros(Sebastian Koch)
for a series ofoperations.Bottom: Lili
begins her newjourney.
controlled by a handheld device. âA lotof the time we bounced three 20KFresnels into 30-foot-by-12-foot whitemuslin,â McGeachan adds. On occa-sion, a clear-glass 10K would also bebrought in to throw more light on thewalls. One reason Hooper wanted a1.85:1 aspect ratio was so the tallerframe would show ceilings. âWhat givesaway a set is not seeing the ceiling, andlight coming from where the ceilingshould be,â Cohen elaborates. âYou endup with a lot of unmotivated light, and itlooks stagey. Tom got the carpenters tonail down the ceilings, and we werenâtallowed to lift them off. That meant allthe light had to feel like it was comingfrom the real world â the windows or adoor.â Lili makes her public debut at anartistsâ ball, which was staged inCopenhagenâs historic CharlottenborgPalace. The sun poured in from one sideof the building, and the crew wasrestricted from placing lights on craneson the busy street that ran along theother side. So, to control the sun on thewindows and allow for Arri M90 HMIsto be bounced from underneath, thecrew positioned five 12'x12' windbags at45 degrees, scaffolded onto Condors.Inside, actors were lit with bounced 2Ks,5Ks and Octodomes, and highlightswere provided by a pair of wall-mountedfive-lamp practical fixtures at one end ofthe ballroom. After arriving in Dresden for herprocedure, Lili walks up the steps insidethe hospital. The camera assumes herpoint of view, revealing nurses seated atthe end of a bright, massive corridor,where her destiny awaits. The scene wasshot in Copenhagenâs City Hall, wherethe back wall provided four practicallamps. The cavernous location also had acouple of balcony levels where the crewcould place fixtures out of shot. âWe hadeight [Arri] M40s and a 6K up high,bouncing off silver foamcore and acouple of poly [boards],â explainsMcGeachan. âSome square sections ofthe floor were made of thick glass thatwe up-lit, again with M40s bounced off
poly, from the level underneath.â DIT Bagley worked in an on- andnear-set lab, where Redmags would beoffloaded, checked and backed up toRAID storage for a working copy, andthen onto 4TB hard drives that werearchived to LTO-5 tapes. Images wereevaluated in Rec 709 using Sony PVMmonitors, and Bagley worked withBlackmagic Designâs DaVinci Resolvefor color management and transcoding,since it also would be used for grading.At the end of the day, Bagley providedCohen and Hooper with graded stillsfrom each setup via e-mail or iPaddownload. Footage was also transcodedto 1920x1080 DNxHD36 MXF fileswith adjustments burned-in for editingby Melanie Ann Oliver on an AvidMedia Composer. The cutting roomwas usually given the material on harddrive, and when the production wasshooting out of town, it would beuploaded using Aspera file-transfer soft-ware. The offline-graded files were
ďż˝ Leading Lady
Redmayne takes direction from Hooper.
94
synced and dailies were uploaded to Pix. âThe Dragonâs dynamic rangegives greater sensitivity in the highlights,but also provides noise in the shadows,which adds texture to the image,â Bagleynotes. âWe aimed to create a slightlymuted look for the dailies that tookadvantage of these factors without look-ing too crisp and âdigital,â while trying tosubtly emphasize the Hammershøi-esque nature of the framing and produc-tion design.â Cohen was on-hand for all threeweeks of the final grade â in whichGlasman worked with 2K DPX files â and Hooper joined for one week in August, shortly before the movieâsfestival bows. âThe intention was tocreate a gentle, subtle grade, particularlyin the Danish scenes modeled onHammershøi paintings,â Glasmanexplains. âThe extra color in the Parisscenes was built into the lighting andproduction design, but I added satura-tion. Also, I had to be careful with the
skin tones of the two leads. Eddie haspaler skin than Alicia. As Liliâs healthdeteriorates, this contrast became toomuch and required correcting.â Looking back over his busy slate,Cohen is particularly excited that theperiod movie The Danish Girl came onthe heels of Room, a claustrophobicmodern drama about a mother and sonin captivity. âIâm quite chuffed becausetheyâre completely different stories, looksand sensibilities,â he says. âBut when theaudience sits and watches them, theywonât care about all thatâs gone on toactually put those images on the screen.Itâs the stories and the quality of thefilms they will focus on.â ďż˝
TECHNICAL SPECS 1.85:1
Digital Capture
Red Epic Dragon
Arri/Zeiss Master Prime, Ultra Prime; Nikon Nikkor; Angenieux Optimo; Lensbaby
95
96 January 2016 American Cinematographer
HPA Honors Silverman, Achievements in Post By Neil Matsumoto
The Hollywood Post Alliance was born in 2002 when ASCassociate and then LaserPacific President Leon Silverman helpedbring together influential members of the postproductioncommunity to form a trade association. In 2006, the groupcreated the HPA Awards, whose main aim continues to be topromote creativity in post and to recognize talent, innovationand engineering accomplishments in the professional commu-nity. Now in its 10th year, the HPA Awards took place on Nov. 12at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles. With more than 80 industry experts serving as judges, theHPA recognized 12 craft categories â including color grading,editing, sound, and visual effects â for feature film, televisionand commercial work. There were also special awards for Engi-neering Excellence, a Judges Award for Creativity and Innova-tion, and the HPA Lifetime Achievement Award. The award for Outstanding Visual Effects for a featurefilm was given to The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies andthe Weta Digital team of Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton,R. Christopher White and Matt Aitken. For television, the awardwas given to the Fire and Blood Productions team of Joe Bauer,Steve Kullback, Derek Spears, Eric Carney and Jabbar Raisani, forGame of Thrones, âThe Dance of Dragons.â For commercials,the award went to the Method Studios team of Benjamin Walsh,
Brian Burke, Ian Holland and Brandon Nelson, for their work onGame of War, âDecisions.â Jeffrey Jur, ASC and Salvatore Totino, ASC, AIC presentedthe awards for Outstanding Color Grading. âEverybody in thisroom thinks the colorist fixes, repairs, and takes all the credit forour work,â said Totino to an amused audience. âAnd they do.But tonight weâre here to celebrate you, since you deserve it.âThe color-grading award for commercials went to Company 3âsTom Poole, for Lincoln, âIntro,â and the award for televisionwent to Technicolor-PostWorks NYâs John Crowley, for Board-walk Empire, âGolden Days for Boys and Girls.â In accepting the award for Outstanding Color Gradingfor his work on Birdman (AC Dec. â14), ASC associate Steven J.Scott, Technicolorâs vice president of theatrical imaging andsupervising finishing artist, gave credit to the filmâs cinematog-rapher, Emmanuel Lubezki, ASC, AMC. âLetâs face it, heâs theonly reason Iâm here,â said Scott. âHis work is endlessly inspir-ing and challenging. He makes me uncomfortable and unsure,and I learn the most that way. My great satisfaction is to helphim explore where he wants to go.â Before presenting the HPA Judges Award for Creativityand Innovation, ASC President Richard Crudo took a moment topay tribute to his co-presenter, ASC associate Beverly Wood,who is retiring after 35 years of working in post at Deluxe andEFilm. âSpeaking from my own tribe, I assure you cinematogra-phers have never had a better friend and advocate by their
Post Focus
Phot
os b
y R
yan
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ourt
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of C
aptu
re I
mag
ing.
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ASC associatemember and
Hollywood PostAlliance
President LeonSilverman
accepts theLifetime
Achievementaward during
the 10th annualHPA Awards.
side,â said Crudo. âBev, thank you for allyouâve done, and we already miss you.â The Judges Award for Creativityand Innovation was given to ESPN for thecreation of the ESPN Digital Center 2,which is considered to be the first large-scale, IP-based production facility of itskind. Accepting the award, JonathanPannaman, ESPNâs vice president ofcontent and production systems, said,âWe decided to do the engineering ofthis facility in-house, and I want to thankall of the staff members who wereinvolved. I especially want to thank seniormanagement, who we went to fairlyoften with hair-brained schemes, andthey continued to encourage us to trythem out.â The HPAâs Engineering ExcellenceAwards honor companies and individualsfor creating high-quality support for theprofessional industry in such areas ascontent production, finishing, distribu-tion and archiving. Awards were given toCanon, for the 4K Cine Zoom Lens;Dolby Laboratories, for the Dolby VisionProjector; Panasonic, for its 4K CameraImagers; Quantel, for the Pablo Rio 8K;and Sony Electronics, for the BVMX300Monitor. Additionally, Colorfrontreceived an honorable mention for Inter-active HFR Frame-Blending. Tom Cross, ACE took home the
Outstanding Editing award for a featurefor his work on Whiplash, which alsoearned Cross the 2015 Oscar for bestediting. For television, Kristin McCasey ofTherapy Studios won for Foo Fighters:Sonic Highways, âNashville,â and in thecommercials category, Doobie White âalso of Therapy Studios â won for GNPSeguros, âWorld Cup.â Outstanding Sound awards werepresented to Alan Murray, Tom Ozanich,John Reitz and Gregg Rudloff of WarnerBros. Post Production Services, for Amer-ican Sniper; Nello Torri and Alan Deckerof NBCUniversal StudioPost and CraigDellinger of Sony Sound Services, forHomeland, âReduxâ; and Jon Clarke ofFactory, for The Syria Campaign, âInReverse.â After the technical awards had allbeen given, HPA board member SethHallen and ASC associate Michael Cioni,CEO of Light Iron, took the stage andpresented Silverman with the HPA Life-time Achievement Award. The award isgiven annually to an individual whosecontributions have had a significantimpact on postproduction. Indeed, Silver-man â the general manager of DigitalStudio for Walt Disney Studios and pres-ident of the HPA â is a towering figurein the era of digital post. Originally fromChicago, Silverman arrived in Los Ange-
97
Presenters Salvatore Totino, ASC, AIC and ASC associate member Beverly Wood pose withSilverman during the eveningâs festivities.
les and landed a job at Compact Videoshortly after graduating from IndianaUniversity Bloomington with a bachelorâsdegree in telecommunications. For thenext 30 years, he was instrumental inreshaping the industry, having helpedwith the development of nonlinear edit-ing, digital compression, the launch ofhigh definition, and the growth of digitalmotion-picture finishing. In his time atDisney, he has received six Disney Inven-tor Awards for patent-pending inven-tions relating to theatrical motion-pictureworkflows. âItâs so great to see so many of myold and new colleagues here tonight,âsaid Silverman in accepting the award.âThere would be no way I would be herewithout your kindness, support, help andknowledge that you have generouslyshared with me along the way.â Withtypical humor, he also joked, âItâs kind oflike being at your own wake. Do I looknatural?â To cap off the ceremony, Silver-man led the crowd in singing âHappyBirthdayâ to his father, who was in atten-dance and celebrating his 86th birthday. ďż˝
98 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Top left: ASC associatemember Steven J. Scottaccepts the HPA awardfor Outstanding Color
Grading for his work onthe feature Birdman.
Top right: Tina Eckmanâ the senior key
accounts manager forBlackmagic Design, the
title sponsor of the 2015HPA Awards â greets
the eveningâs attendees.Middle: ASC associateMichael Cioni presents
the LifetimeAchievement award to
Silverman. Bottom:Wood and ASC
President Richard Crudopresented the JudgesAward for Creativity
and Innovation.
Convergent Design Launches Apollo Convergent Design has introduced the Apollo, a portable HDmulti-camera recorder/switcher. The Apollo can simultaneouslyrecord up to four HD video signals, along with a fifth channel ofeither a live-switch between the four or a quad-split reference view.The Apollo can also function as a four-channel live switcher whilesimultaneously recording the four isolated HD video signals. All cameras stay in perfect sync with matching time code. Asingle SSD contains all of the multi-camera media, dramaticallyreducing turnaround time forpost. Two SSD slots allowfor twice the record timeor mirror recording forsafety backup. The Apolloutilizes industry-standard2.5" SSD media, either manu-factured by Convergent Designor qualified third-party models. Using the new ApolloMedia Manager app, recordings canbe exported as separate Apple ProRes files or as a single multi-camera QuickTime file that drops directly into the timeline ofsupporting NLEs, such as Final Cut Pro X. Additional functions are planned for release in the first quar-ter of 2016, including two-channel 4K/UHD video recording,DNxHD recording, and cascade interconnect between up to threeApollos for up to 12 HD-channel or six 4K/UHD-channel simultane-ous recording. These and other functions will be made available viaa free firmware update. A remote keypad control unit will be offeredalong with a rack mount and other accessories. For additional information, visit www.convergent-design.com/apollo.
Keslow, Tilta Put Alexa Mini in Cage Keslow Camera has introduced the Tilta Cage, a custom-made, lightweight cage accessory manufactured by Tilta anddesigned for the Arri Alexa Mini camera. The cage can be config-ured as a lightweight cage that works with shoulder rigs, gimbalsystems, or in a traditional studio setup. The Tilta Cage boasts integrated electronics and up to 1012-volt power-output ports, allowing users to power accessoriesfrom modular junction boxes. The top plate and handle J-boxeseach incorporate two three-pin Fischer ports and one two-pin Lemoport, and the battery plate incorporates two three-pin Fisher andtwo two-pin Lemo ports. The battery plate also features a built-in HD-SDI distributionamp and a built-in adjustable-speed fan. Accommodating GoldMount or V-Mount battery plates, the plate is also adjustable front-
Sony Expands Camcorder Line Sony has expanded its line of large-sensor 4K technologieswith the introduction of the PXW-FS5 compact Super 35mmcamcorder. The new model fills a niche between cameras like SonyâsPXW-FS7 and the NEX-FS700, and complements Sonyâs consumera7R II and a7S II models. The PXW-FS5 is ergonomically designed for handheld shoot-ing. The lightweight body has excellent weight distribution for reli-ability and comfort. It can be used in an array of applications, includ-ing airborne on a drone. A one-touch rotatable grip allows forinstant switching between low- or high-angle shooting. Users canalso attach the 3.5" LCD panel to different positions on the handleor the compact camera body. Capable of 4K XAVC high-definition shooting, the cameraâsSuper35 Exmor CMOS sensor incorporates 11.6 million pixels and8.3 million effective pixels. The high sensitivity and large size of thesensor enable out-of-focus backgrounds, increased low-light sensi-tivity and lower image noise. The camera also boasts 14 stops of lati-tude, as well as high-frame-rate cache recording at 10-bit 4:2:2 FullHD and a high frame rate of up to 240 fps in 8-second bursts. The PXW-FS5 features built-in electronic variable-ND filters.The compact power zoom E lens PZ 18-105mm F4 G OSS(SELP18105G), provided in the PXW-FS5 kit model, enables zoomoperation with one hand. The PXW-FS5âs E-mount can take virtuallyany lens, such as SLR lenses via an adapter, as well as Sonyâs E-mountand A-mount lenses. The lightweight (1 pound, 13.2 ounce)cameraâs interfaces include 3G-SDI, 4K HDMI output, MI shoe, dualSD card slots, Wi-Fi and wired LAN terminal, supporting varioussystem configurations and enhanced network functions such as filetransfer and streaming transmission. A planned future firmwareupdate will provide raw output. For additional information, visit www.sony.com/fs5.
New Products & Services⢠SUBMISSION INFORMATION â˘
Please e-mail New Products/Services releases to [email protected] and include full contactinformation and product images. Photos must be
TIFF or JPEG files of at least 300dpi.
100 January 2016 American Cinematographer
to-back and side-to-side for ideal weightdistribution. The cage can be used with both on-board and/or block batteries, allowing forhot-swapping. Additionally, a quick-releasedovetail allows for easy transitioning from astudio to handheld setup. For additional information, visitwww.keslowcamera.com.
Band Pro Distributes IB/E Expander Band Pro is now distributing IB/EOpticsâ S35xFF Expander. The super 35 tofull-frame expander provides full sensorcoverage â even with Redâs 8K Weaponsensor â from any super 35mm lens. For additional information, visitwww.bandpro.com and www.ibe-optics.com.
Schneider-Kreuznach Adds E Mount for FF-Primes Schneider-Kreuznach recently un-veiled FF-Prime lenses with a Sony E mount.The E mount allows users to mount the full-frame lenses to cameras such as Sonyâs a7RII. FF-Primes â which have been on themarket since 2014 â could already be usedin combination with Nikonâs F mount,Canonâs EOS mount and PL mounts. âWith the FF-Prime lenses, we wantto provide a genuine optical alternative [for]professional filmmakers and cinematogra-
phers,â says Harald Barth, head of film andphoto at Jos. Schneider Optische WerkeGmbH. âWe are delighted that we canmeet the considerable demand for a combi-nation with a Sony E mount and thusexpand the scope for application.â With 4K resolution (4096x2304pixels), the lenses weredesigned specifi-cally for DSLRcameras withf u l l - f r a m esensors and forprofess iona lcine cameras.The homogeneousset comprises 25mm, 35mm, 50mm,75mm and 100mm focal lengths (all T2.1). For additional information, visitwww.schneiderkreuznach.com.
Rokinon Highlights Xeen Lenses Rokinon has introduced the Xeenprofessional-grade cine-lens system, whichoffers the professional optical quality,features, specifications and performancethat are expected of a cine-lens system, butwith a significantly lower price tag. The initial three Xeen lenses comprisea 24mm, 50mm and 85mm. All threefeature an aperture of T1.5 and full-framecoverage. They will be available in mounts
for Canon EF, Nikon F, Sony E, Micro FourThirds and PL. Additional focal lengths arescheduled to be introduced throughout2016. Xeen lenses are tightly color matchedand boast all-metal bodies. The entire rangefeatures a unified 114mm non-rotatingfront diameter; 40-degree iris rotation and200-degree focus rotation with large, easy-to-read markings and dual-calibrated right-and left-side distance and T-stop scales; and
Telecine &Color Grading
âJod is a true artist with a great passion for his craft.â
â John W. Simmons, ASC
Contact Jod @ [email protected]
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104 January 2016 American Cinematographer
unified focus and aperture gear positions.With proprietary X-Coating technology, thelenses also feature an 11-blade diaphragm.Additionally, the mounts can be shimmedand are interchangeable by a qualified tech-nician. All Xeen by Rokinon lenses arebacked by a three-year limited warranty. Formore information, visit www.rokinon.com.
Atomos Unleashes Ninja Assassin Atomos has introduced the NinjaAssassin, which extends the legacy of theAtomos Ninja line into the realm of 4K UHDand 1080 60p. The Ninja Assassin combinesprofessional 4K/HD recording; 325 ppi, 7"1920x1080 monitoring; and advancedplayback and editing in a compact, light-weight and affordable system designed forApple, Avid and Adobe workflows. The Ninja Assassin boasts the screensize, screen resolution, advanced recordingcapability and scopes of Atomosâ premiumShogun model, but forgoes the12G/6G/3G-SDI connectivity, raw recordingfunctionality, in-built conversion, genlockand balanced XLR audio connections. Witha 10-percent weight reduction compared tothe Shogun, the Ninja Assassin is ideallysuited for cameras such as the Sony a7s anda7R II, Canon XC10 and Panasonic GH4. The Ninja Assassin has HDMIfocused audio/video connections and shipswith a vibrant-red Armor Bumper forincreased protection. Other key featuresinclude anamorphic de-squeeze; easy-to-use professional monitoring tools, such asfocus peaking assist, 1:1 and 2:1 zoom,false color, zebra andwaveform/vectorscope; up to 8 seconds ofHD or 2-3 seconds of 4K pre-roll cacherecording; and 3D LUTs. Atomos is based in Australia withoffices in the USA, Japan, China and
Germany, and the company has a world-wide distribution partner network. For additional information, visitwww.atomos.com.
Miller Grows Fluid-Head Family Miller Fluid Heads has unveiled theCompass 23 Fluid Head, an affordable entrymodel into the 100mm ball-leveling range.The Compass 23 is designed for use withmedium-size large-sensor cameras andprovides users with theportability, rigidity andprofessional featuresthey need in a light-weight system. This latestaddition to theCompass line isdesigned for bare-bones rigging, withjust a camera and alens, as well as fullrigging withmonitors, wire-less mics, batter-ies and more. Toaccommodatedifferent setups,the Compass 23 isequipped with threeselectable positions ofhigh-performance drag (plus a zero position)and four counterbalance positions forpayloads between approximately 8 and 30pounds. The fluid head also features a120mm sliding camera plate with 60mmtravel for perfect balancing. The head incor-porates readily accessible controls, an illumi-nated bubble level, pan/tilt locks that utilizedisc brakes, and a replaceable tilt endrosette. For additional information, visitwww.millertripods.com.
Manfrotto Increases Support Offerings Manfrotto, a Vitec Group company,has introduced 24" and 39" camera slidersthat weigh only 4.8 and 6.17 pounds,respectively. The sliders offer a smooth andaccurate sliding movement thanks to theireight high-precision steel ball bearings andmachined surface. The coupling betweenthe rails and the carriage can be easily
adjusted, as well as the friction on thecarriage itself. Additionally, the sliders boastwheels made of PSU, a high-performancepolymer used for its fluidity and silence. The slidersâ friction system allows usersto adjust the feel of the tracking shot, andstandard attachments enable the sliders to becombined with accessories such as arms.Both sliders are available in kits that comewith flat-base Manfrotto 500 video heads. Manfrotto has also added to its rangeof accessories with the launch of a newseries of friction arms. The range comprisesfour arms available in two sizes: 5.5" and9". The arms offer updated featuresâ including an anti-rotation systemthat prevents theload fromrotating âand interchange-able adapters, including a 5â8" spigot, 3â8" andÂź" attachments, a hot-shoe attachment, andManfrottoâs anti-rotation adapter. Manufactured using high-qualityaluminum, the durable friction arms can carrya payload of up to 6.6 lbs. An ergonomicadjustable knob allows for maximum torquewhen securing the arm in place. All of thenew friction arms feature a 5-year warrantyupon registration on the Manfrotto website. For additional information, visitwww.manfrotto.us.
Benro Unveils Tripod Kits Benro has introduced the A573TBS7and A673TMBS8 Video Tripod Kits. The A573TBS7 marries the Benro S7head with the Benro BV series twin-leg tripodto deliver sturdy, agile and dependable perfor-mance. Equipped with a 65mm base with a3â8"-16 thread, the S7 flat-base head allowsusers to remove the 75mm half-ball adapterto mount the head separately on sliders, jibsor monopods. The S7 uses a 501-compatibleQR6 plate. Other features of the headinclude: pan-and-tilt lock, pan-and-tilt drag,four-step counterbalance and illuminatedbubble level. Excellent stability is achieved with the integrated 75mm metal ball. The eighth-generation two-stage/three-section
aluminum tripod features adouble-tandem leg design thatuses an adjustable, removablespreader, a metal 75mm bowl,oversized positive leg locksand dual-spike feet withpads, making this kitperfect for heavy loads. ďż˝ The A673TMBS8tripod kit combinesBenroâs S8 head andBV system twin-legtripod. The S8 is a professional fluidpan/tilt head designed to supportcameras weighing up to 17.6 pounds. TheS8 head features step-less, continuousadjustment of both pan and tilt drag; thisallows users to dial in the desired amount oftension for a given shot. It can pan a full 360degrees, and can tilt forward 90 degreesand backward 70 degrees. The head alsofeatures a four-step adjustable counterbal-ance system. The removable pan-bar handle canbe mounted for left- or right-handed oper-ation. Additionally, a second pan-barhandle, such as the BS04, can be purchasedfor zoom and focus remotes or two-handedoperation. The sliding quick-release platecan be positioned up to 1.5" forward and1.7" back of center, and the head also incor-porates an illuminated bubble level. For additional information, visitwww.benrousa.com.
Prosup Motorizes Tango Track Prosup has introduced the CameraCorps Q3 Mini Track, which is a motorizedversion of the popular Prosup Tango track.The result of a collaboration between theProsup and Camera Corps engineeringteams, the Mini Track was designed for usein sporting events, stadiums and studiosalike. The system boasts an extremely lowprofile and works in an underslung mode. The current version is designed towork with Camera Corpsâ Q3 remotecamera, although subsequent versions willsoon be available to work with other similarcameras. The track can be leveled on anysurface and is available in lengths from 10mto 40m. It offers speeds of up to 3m/s. For additional information, visitwww.prosup.tv.
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Video Devices Offers Precision Monitoring, Recording Video Devices â the video-productsbrand of Sound Devices, LLC â has intro-duced the Pix-E5 and Pix-E5H 4K recordingmonitors. The 5", 1920x1080-resolution,441-ppi Pix-E5 comes packed with a fullsuite of precision-monitoring tools, SDI andHDMI I/O, and the ability to record 4K andApple ProRes 4:4:4:4 XQ edit-ready files toaffordable USB-based SpeedDrives withmSATA solid-state drives. The Pix-E5Hfeatures HDMI-only inputs/outputs forcustomers who do not need SDI capabilities;the unit records a range of Apple ProRescodecs from Proxy to ProRes 4:2:2 HQ. Video Devices has also introduced
the SpeedDriverecording and file-delivery accessoryfor the Pix-ESeries. Whenconnected tothe rear of themonitor, the
SpeedDriveâs USB 3.0 interface auto-matically switches to a SATA interface torecord continuous, high-data-rate 4K video.As an added benefit, when a user is finishedrecording, no special card reader or dockingstation is needed; users can simply unplugthe SpeedDrive from the back of Pix-E andplug it into any USB computer port to trans-fer data at fast USB 3.0 rates. Two Speed-Drive options are available: a 240GB Speed-Drive (mSATA drive in the enclosure) or an
enclosure-only version that allows the userto choose any approved, third-party 128GBto 1TB mSATA drive. Additionally, Video Devices hasannounced firmware version 1.05 for thePix-E Series. With this latest firmwareupdate, the Pix-E Series recording fieldmonitors will feature several standard look-up tables, the ability to utilize custom LUTs,and support for HDMI recording triggers forPanasonic cameras. For additional information, visitwww.videodevices.com.
VER Acquires Aurora VER, a global provider of productionequipment and engineering support, hascompleted its acquisition of Aurora LightingHire Ltd., a U.K.-based lighting-rentalspecialist. The acquisition represents thelatest step in VERâs strategic plan to expandits lighting capabilities and equipmentinventory throughout the U.K. and Europe. âOver the next year, we will investsignificantly to expand the equipment offer-ing and other resources to support thetremendous demand for [Auroraâs] service,âsays Steve Hankin, CEO of VER. âThecombination of Auroraâs knowledge andquality service with VERâs broader productline will offer Auroraâs clients a truly one-of-a-kind resource.â
Chris Rigby, founding director ofAurora, adds, âI am delighted that Aurora isjoining forces with VER. Combining theresources and strengths of our companies hascreated an unbeatable team with a sharedpassion for service and an incredible range ofproduction solutions. I know this will be ahuge asset to myself and other lightingdesigners, both now and for the future.â Aurora will retain its name, staff andservices, with plans to move into a new state-of-the-art facility alongside VER. For additional information, visitwww.verrents.com and www.auroratv.co.uk. ďż˝
108 January 2016 American Cinematographer
Colorfront Introduces 2016 Lineup Colorfront, the Academy and Emmy Award-winning developer of high-performanceon-set dailies and transcoding systems, has introduced its 2016 product range. Transkoder2016 and On-Set Dailies 2016 incorporate Ultra High Definition (UHD) and High DynamicRange (HDR) workflows. Colorfront Transkoder and On-Set Dailies feature Colorfront Engine, the state-of-the-art, ACES-compliant, HDR-managed color pipeline, which enables on-set look creation andensures color fidelity of UHD HDR materials and metadata throughout the camera-to-postchain. Colorfront Engine supports the full dynamic range and color gamut of the latest digitalcamera formats, and mapping into industry-standard deliverables such as the latest IMF specsand AS-11 DPP and HEVC, at a variety of brightness, contrast and color ranges. The mastering toolset for Transkoder 2016 has been enhanced with new statistical-analysis tools for immediate HDR data graphing. Highlights include MaxCLL and MaxFALLcalculations, as well as HDR mastering tools with tone and gamut mapping for a variety oftarget color spaces. New to Transkoder 2016âs UHD toolset are unique tools to concurrentlygrade HDR and SDR UHD versions, cutting down the complexity, time and cost of deliveringmultiple masters at once. Additionally, On-Set Dailies 2016 introduces a multi-view capability,which allows concurrent, real-time playback and grading of all cameras and camera views. For additional information, visit www.colorfront.com.
110 January 2016 American Cinematographer
International Marketplace
www.theasc.com January 2016 111
ClassifiedsEQUIPMENT FOR SALE
4X5 85 Glass Filters, Diffusion, Polas etc. AGood Box Rental 818-763-8547
16,000+ USED PRODUCTION EQUIPMENT ITEMS www.ProVideoFilm.com www.UsedEquipmentNewsletter.com 888 869 9998
HOLLYWOOD STUDIO ANTIQUES www.CinemaAntiques.com BUY-SELL-TRADE
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CLASSIFIED AD RATES
All classifications are $4.50 per word.Words setin bold face or all capitals are $5.00 per word.First word of ad and advertiserâs name can be setin capitals without extra charge. No agencycommission or discounts on clas si fied advertis-ing.PAYMENT MUST AC COM PA NY ORDER. VISA,Mastercard, AmEx and Discover card are ac cept -ed. Send ad to Clas si fied Ad ver tis ing, Amer i -can Cin e ma tog ra pher, P.O. Box 2230,Hol ly wood, CA 90078. Or FAX (323) 876-4973.Dead line for payment and copy must be in theoffice by 15th of second month preceding pub li ca -tion. Sub ject mat ter is lim it ed to items and ser vic -es per tain ing to film mak ing and vid eo pro duc tion.Words used are sub ject to mag a zine style ab bre -vi a tion. Min i mum amount per ad: $45
Advertiserâs Index20th Century Fox Films 5, 9, 15
Adorama 39, 49Aerial Mob, LLC 79AJA Video Systems, Inc. 73Alan Gordon Enterprises 111Arri 25, 35Arri Rental 61ASC Master Class 106Aura Productions 102
B&H Photo-Video_Pro Audio 99Backstage Equipment, Inc. 93Blackmagic Design, Inc. 41
Carl Zeiss 85Cavision Enterprises 110Chapman/Leonard Studio Equip. 91Cine Gear Expo 103Cinelease, Inc. 59Cinematography Electronics 77Cinekinetic 110Convergent Design 89Cooke Optics 63Creative Industry Handbook 94CW Sonderoptic Gmbh 87
Digital Sputnik Lighting Systems 75
Eastman Kodak 64a-h, C4
Filmotechnic 97Fox Searchlight Pictures 17, 21
Hungarian Filmlab/MNF 77
Jod Soraci 102
Kino Flo 81Koerner Camera Systems 93
Lee Filters 52Lights! Action! Co. 110
Mac Tech LED 29Matthews Studio Equipment/MSE 93Mole-Richardson/Studio Depot 8Montana Film Festival 53
NAB 109NBC Universal 29Nevada Film Commission 51Nila, Inc. 51
Open Road Films 23Ovide Broadcast Systems 80
P+S Technik Feinmechanik Gmbh 110Panavision, Inc. 33Paralinx 43PED Denz 79Pille Filmgeraeteverleih Gmbh 110Pixar 13Powermills 110Pro8mm 110Professional Solutions 27
Red Digital Cinema C2-1
Samyâs Dv & Edit 31Schneider Optics 2Selected Tables 112Slamdance Film Festival 101Sony Pictures 69Sumolight C3Sundance Film Festival 105Super16, Inc. 111Swit 68, 95SXSW Film Festival 107
Technicolor 47Teradek, LLC 67TNS&F Productions 111
UCLA Health (MPTF) 45
Walt Disney Studios 7, 13Weinstein Company, The 11, 19Willyâs Widgets 110www.theasc.com 102, 110,111, 113
112
Barrett, Neihouse Accepted Into Society New active member MichaelBarrett, ASC was born in Riverside, Calif.He received a bachelorâs degree from theUniversity of California, Los Angeles, and amasterâs degree from Columbia University.He has since taught cinematography at bothschools and at the Los Angeles Film School.He received two ASC Award nominationsfor his work on the series CSI: Crime SceneInvestigation, and he won an ASC Awardfor the pilot episode of CSI: Miami. Mostrecently, Barrett shot the pilot for the seriesSupergirl. Barrett received a CamerimageGolden Frog nomination for his work on thefeature Bobby. His feature credits alsoinclude Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, You Donât MessWith the Zohan, Bedtime Stories,Zookeeper, About Last Night (2014), NoGood Deed, A Million Ways to Die in theWest, Ted and Ted 2. Born and raised in Paris, Ark., newactive member James Neihouse, ASCgraduated from the Brooks Institute ofPhotography. Within months of graduation,he worked with Imax co-founder and co-inventor Graeme Ferguson on the ImaxDome production Ocean, filming underwa-ter off the coast of Southern California.
Neihouse has since worked on more than30 Imax projects, including all of thecompanyâs collaborations with NASA. Overthe course of the NASA projects, he hastrained more than 25 shuttle and space-station crews on the intricacies of large-format filmmaking. His additional credits include TheEruption of Mount St. Helens!, Blue Planet,Mission to Mir, Michael Jordan to the Max,Ocean Oasis, Jane Goodallâs Wild Chim-panzees and NASCAR: The Imax Experi-ence. Neihouse has won two cinematogra-phy awards from the Giant Screen CinemaAssociation, for Space Station 3D andHubble 3D. In 2010, he and four collabora-tors were honored with an Advanced Imag-ing Society Gold Award for the develop-ment of the Imax 30-perf single-strip 65mm3D camera. Neihouse is also a member ofthe Academy of Motion Picture Arts andSciences.
Morano, Varese, Seale Speak at Clubhouse Reed Morano, ASC and CheccoVarese, ASC recently participated in sepa-rate âCoffee & Conversationâ events heldat the Societyâs Clubhouse in Hollywood,and John Seale, ASC, ACS participated ina âBreakfast Clubâ event. Morano
Clubhouse News
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discussed shooting and directing the featureMeadowland, and Varese was joined by hiswife, director Patricia Riggen, for a conver-sation about their collaboration on thefeature The 33 (AC Dec. â15). Sealescreened select scenes from his films andwent into detail about the production ofMad Max: Fury Road (AC June â15). Allthree events were moderated by ACcontributor David E. Williams.
Levy Teaches Maine Master Class Peter Levy, ASC recently instructedthe âDirector of Photography Master Classâas part of the Maine Media Workshops andCollegeâs 12-week Cinematography Inten-sive program. The master class, whichconstitutes a one-week portion of the cine-matography curriculum, was attended bystudents from all over the world.
Brown Receives Lifetime Award Associate member Garrett Brownrecently received the Charles F. Jenkins Life-time Achievement Award at the TelevisionAcademyâs 67th Engineering EmmyAwards, which were held at the LoewsHollywood Hotel. Also in attendance wereASC members Curtis Clark, Richard Crudo,Dean Cundey and Haskell Wexler. ďż˝
From left: Michael Barrett, ASC; James Neihouse, ASC; Society members Curtis Clark and Richard Crudo with associate members Garrett Brown and Mark Bender.
114 January 2016 American Cinematographer
www.theasc.com January 2016 115
Society member Charles Rosher Jr.died of lung cancer on Oct. 14 at his homein Beverly Hills, Calif. He was 80. Known to all as âChuck,â Rosherwas born on July 2, 1935, to Charles RosherSr. and Odette Guazone. The senior Rosherjoined the Static Club of America in 1915and, four years later, helped reorganize thegroup as the American Society of Cine-matographers. He was also a founder ofLocal 659, and he shared the first AcademyAward for cinematography with Karl Struss,ASC, for their work on F.W. MurnauâsSunrise. Rosher Jr. graduated from BeverlyHills High School and then began climbingthe ranks of the camera department. As afilm loader, his credits included RaintreeCounty, directed by Edward Dmytryk andshot by Robert Surtees, ASC; as an assistant,he worked on such features as The Adven-tures of Huckleberry Finn (1960), shot byTed McCord, ASC. Future ASC memberConrad Hall served as camera operator onthat production, and Rosher would go on tooperate for Hall on the features Incubus andThe Professionals (both 1966). Appearing in Visions of Light, theacclaimed documentary about cinematogra-phy, Rosher recalled his experiences shoot-ing for Hall. âIâve shot with Conrad where[he] would use so little light that youâd barelysee anything in a room,â he offered. âTherewas nothing safe â âsafeâ was never theword with him.â Rosherâs credits as an operator alsoincluded episodes of the popular televisionseries The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet,Mission: Impossible and Mannix. Addition-ally, he worked as an operator for futureASC member William A. Fraker at commer-cial company VPI Productions; when Frakerleft VPI to shoot a feature for Universal,Rosher was promoted to cinematographer.He shot numerous commercials for produc-tion companies based out of Los Angeles,New York and Chicago. His first feature credit as director ofphotography came with Adam at 6:00 a.m.,
directed by Robert Scheerer. More featuresquickly followed, including The BabyMaker, directed by James Bridges; PrettyMaids All in a Row, directed by RogerVadim; Time to Run, directed by James F.Collier; and Together Brothers, directed byWilliam A. Graham. In 1977, Rosher was welcomed intoASC membership after having beenproposed by Fraker and George J. Folsey,ASC. That same year saw the release of TheLate Show, which Rosher photographed fordirector Robert Benton and producerRobert Altman. Rosher and Altman thenreteamed for the features 3 Women and AWedding, both of which Altman directed.On the latter, Rosher hired future ASCmember â and current president of theInternational Cinematographers Guild âSteven Poster as his camera operator. âHewas a wonderful, sweet man,â Poster saidin a statement from ICG. âIt was a greathonor to work with him.â Rounding out the â70s, Rosher shotsuch projects as the true-crime drama TheOnion Field, for director Harold Becker; thehorror film Nightwing, for director Arthur
Charles Rosher Jr., ASC, 1935-2015In Memoriam
Hiller; and the classic football comedy Semi-Tough, for director Michael Ritchie. Thelatter starred Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristof-ferson, both of whom had played football incollege, and Rosherâs cinematographyfurther helped lend the game scenes a highlevel of credibility on the screen. The February 1981 issue of AmericanCinematographer featured Rosherâs workon the comedy Heartbeeps, which starredAndy Kaufman and Bernadette Peters asâcompanion-seriesâ robots who run awayfrom a factory and fall in love. Directed byAllan Arkush, the production presentedmore than its fair share of challenges bothon and off screen, including significant duskshooting, complicated makeup, an ill-timedactorsâ strike, and Kaufmanâs contractual 75minutes of daily meditation. At one point,Arkush reportedly fired a shotgun in orderto get Kaufman back to the set. Despite thechaos, when AC asked Rosher about themost challenging aspect of the shoot, hefocused on the photography. âFighting thesun constantly, and matching sunset light-ing, and getting an enormous sequenceshot in a very short time ⌠is definitely achallenge,â he offered. âBut itâs also veryfulfilling.â Rosherâs credits through the â80s andâ90s include the drama Independence Day(1983), for director Robert Mandel; thecomedies Young Lust, directed by GaryWeis, and Police Academy 6: City UnderSiege, directed by Peter Bonerz; and thetelefilm Runaway Father, directed by JohnNicolella. Rosher changed his membershipstatus with the ASC to âretiredâ in 2002.Some of his last credits before doing soinclude the feature Sunset Heat, whichreteamed him with Nicolella, and the tele-film Jake Lassiter: Justice on the Bayou, fordirector Peter Markle. Rosher is survived by his wife, Sharlyn; daughter, Jenna; and grandchildrenOlivia and Juliette.
â Jon D. Witmerďż˝
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116 January 2016 American Cinematographer
When you were a child, what film made the strongest impres-sion on you?When I was four or five I remember seeing 16mm prints of BattleshipPotemkin and Ivan the Terrible projected onto my uncleâs living-roomwall. I had no idea what I was watching, but Iâll never forget the powerof those images and how the wall in that room became a portal toanother reality.
Which cinematographers, past or present, do you most admire?Above all others is Gordon Willis, ASC, for his elegance, simplicity, brav-ery, precision and style. To this day, when in doubt, my mantra is: âWhatwould Gordy do?â I think Roger Deakins, ASC, BSC continues Gordyâslegacy today. Robert Yeoman, ASC and BrunoDelbonnel, ASC, AFC consistently do interestingwork. And who hasnât been influenced by thetwo great Hungarians, Laszlo [Kovacs, ASC] andVilmos [Zsigmond, ASC]?
What sparked your interest in photography?I was fortunate to grow up in a household wherethe arts and literature were both respected andpresent, and I was encouraged to pursue creativeoutlets. I didnât pick up a stills camera until I was17, but then I found that putting a frame around the real world was away of expressing myself. It very quickly became too expensive for ahobby, so I had to learn how to make it pay for itself.
Where did you train and/or study?After I dropped out of high school, I freelanced as an assistant camera-man until I got a job at the Australian Commonwealth Film Unit â nowknown as Film Australia â where I was one of two assistants servingseven cameramen. Don McAlpine, ASC, ACS was chief cameraman,and Dean Semler, ASC, ACS was a staff cameraman. Five years later Ileft there to shoot a documentary series in Africa â and Iâve beenattending the School of Hard Knocks ever since.
Who were your early teachers or mentors?Michael Edols, ACS taught me all he could about documentary andhandheld shooting while we were at the Commonwealth Film Unit, butsince then Iâve had to learn from my own mistakes and glean what Icould from the advice of others.
What are some of your key artistic influences?J.M.W. Turner, for making light liquid; Caravaggio, for defining light byits shadow; Matisse, for being fearless with color; and Andy Goldswor-thy, for showing us that beauty is ephemeral.
How did you get your first break in the business?In 1983, a French director, Henri Safran, plucked me from the world ofdocumentaries and music videos to shoot a very big-budget miniseries
about the Gallipoli Campaign and a young manâs life leading up to it.Over the next eight months he trained me in the skills required forshooting long-form drama and patiently tolerated my naĂŻvetĂŠ.
What has been your most satisfying moment on a project?When shooting Cutthroat Island in Malta, my Italian camera crewsuddenly all quit after one of them was sacked. On a Tuesday, I putin two desperate SOS phone calls to the U.S. and, by Thursday, 14 ofHollywoodâs finest camera people turned up at the location ready tohelp me finish the film. I got a little teary at the airport when I sawthem all arrive.
Have you made any memorable blunders?More with my mouth than with my photogra-phy.
What is the best professional adviceyouâve ever received?Donât get attached to anything â be preparedto turn on a dime at any time.
What recent books, films or artworks haveinspired you?
Watching my bonsais grow, some of the brave new work being doneon television, the way light falls in the natural world. Iâm currentlyreading about the chemistry of cooking.
Do you have any favorite genres, or genres you would like totry?Iâd like to shoot something bleak, noir-ish and existential â and aWestern, of course!
If you werenât a cinematographer, what might you be doinginstead?Maybe a landscape architect â I like the idea of sculpting a piece ofland and creating some beauty that lives and grows. I could havebeen a yacht jockey, too.
Which ASC cinematographers recommended you for member-ship?John Alonzo, Russell Carpenter, Peter James.
How has ASC membership impacted your life and career?Being a member is my proudest professional accomplishment. Walk-ing through the doors of the Clubhouse always fills me with an equalsense of pride and humility. Iâm aware of the great cinematographersand my heroes who have preceded me through those same doors,and I am reminded of the dignity of the artistic pursuits of our profes-sion. It recharges my batteries. ďż˝
Peter Levy, ASCClose-up
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