ShallowFocus

joined 2 years ago
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/312675

This is my camera, we used it for B-cam on a commercial recently. I had to pull focus and zoom while rolling so I hooked up one of my Nucleus-M handles to the camera and used it like a Preston Microforce. Not the most optimal setup, but it worked for what we needed.

 

Gaffer Len Levine takes lighting design to another dimension for the hit sci-fi sequel.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by ShallowFocus@lemmy.world to c/cinematography@lemmy.world
 

Matthew Libatique, ASC, LPS trades stylization for simplicity in Darren Aronofsky’s poignant study of a damaged soul.

 

Four cinematographers help transform the frightful video game into a hit horror series.

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 1 points 2 years ago

Some interesting quotes from the article:

Asked about the unused light on the bus ceiling, Lubezki says, “Sometimes you panic because you’re used to doing things in a certain way. I’m a feature-film cinematographer, and I haven’t done documentaries in a while, so my instincts are to always try to make the image appealing. It took me a long time to go back to basics and say, ‘No, I don’t want this movie to look conventionally beautiful.’ This is a movie I couldn’t have done when I was younger. I don’t know if I’m going on the right path. The more I learn, the less lighting I want to do.” With a chuckle, he adds, “Maybe I’m getting lazy!”

Shot entirely handheld with very little traditional film lighting, Children of Men has a visual aesthetic that borders on documentary. Lubezki recalls that the genesis of this look started with a decision to avoid standard shot breakdowns. He explains that he and Cuarón have an aversion to traditional coverage, with “A-B-A-B” intercutting of opposing shots of two actors. “We decided to have every shot be a shot in itself and avoid the A-B-A-B of coverage, even though we couldn’t get away from doing it sometimes. The more I work this way, the more I realize that conventional coverage is what makes most movies feel the same. You go to see a comedy, a drama, or a horror movie, and they all somehow feel the same. It’s as if the cinematic language hasn’t really evolved that much. Many films just cover the dialogue without really exploring the visual dimension.”

One of the key decisions Lubezki made early on was to shoot Children of Men with as few movie lights as possible. “I didn’t want to light the movie, or at least I didn’t want it to feel lit. I want the viewer to feel as though the action is happening for real. I didn’t want to make anything pretty or beautiful unnecessarily. For example, I didn’t want to put a backlight on an actor [for beauty reasons]. Of course, I couldn’t get away with not lighting at all. When winter came, the locations we were using between buildings started getting dark very early, so some of our locations had to be built on a soundstage. I had to light them, but I did it in such a way that the light was always coming from a natural source, usually through windows.”

Lubezki filmed Children of Men on Kodak Vision2 Expression 500T 5229 because its low contrast allowed him to shoot in extreme situations without additional lighting. “When I did tests in the car, the interior was f2 and the outside was f16! Because I had decided not to light, using this stock was a way to solve the exposure problem. It’s so low-contrast that if you expose it correctly, you will have enough information to show what’s happening outside. Of course, in some scenes, you will never be able to see the clouds because the sky is blown out. With [Kodak Vision2 500T] 5218, when you don’t light faces they look a bit harsh. I wanted the mid-tones to be softer in the faces, and 5229 allows you to achieve that. It’s very similar to flashing the positive.” He adds, “The blacks in 5229 are not very rich, but you can crush them in the digital intermediate [DI].”

 

One of my favorite films by one of my favorite DP's.

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 1 points 2 years ago

I think I found it: BOYA BY-BM6060

Pretty cheap, not sure how great it is. The director brought it with him. It was more of a backup/b-roll mic since we used a lav for interviews.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/249015

Little messy cause I had to find places for all the sounds stuff to fit that we normally don't have to deal with, but it ended up working out pretty well.

 

Some photos from the article:

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

One of my favorite films of all time is "Her" (2013). The color palette, the soundtrack, the Neo-Los Angeles backdrop, and of course Hoyte van Hoytema's lighting and composition.

Another one of Hoyt's greats, Interstellar (2014), probably my favorite "space" movie of all time (tied up with 2001). The high contrast and highlights and his use of light/shadows in space. The use of practical lighting.

Of course it's hard to mention Interstellar without mentioning its predecessor, "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968). Stanley Kubrick was so revolutionary in how he was able to capture science fiction in 1968, so well that some people actually believe he helped fake the moon landing. Geoffrey Unsworth and John Alcott created the meta for science fiction space visuals.

We can't not mention the great Roger Deakins (who I seem to almost meet every week, I missed his book signing and his appearance at CineGear). Everything he has made is top tier. An all-around great movie I love of his is "No Country For Old Men" (2007). He's a master of lighting faces and creating a perfect balance between style and reality.

The same year (and filmed just next door to No Country For Old Men) was "There Will Be Blood" (2007). On top of the incredible performances, writing, and directing, Robert Elswit won the Best Cinematography that year for a reason.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/213831

A and B cam builds for a 3 day series of national commercials I worked on recently.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/212952

I noticed I wasn't able to find my community on your communities search, because no one on your instance has searched it yet. I'd appreciate if someone could give my instance a search just to federate it on your instance :) And of course, sub if you're interested in cinematography, movies, behind the scenes, etc.

!cinematography@lemmy.world

If you happen to be a 1st Assistant Camera in the film industry, I've also made a community for us focus pullers (but all camera department are welcome)

!focuspuller@lemmy.world

Thanks for reading :)

 

I noticed I wasn't able to find my community on your communities search, because no one on your instance has searched it yet. I'd appreciate if someone could give my instance a search just to federate it on your instance :) And of course, sub if you're interested in cinematography, movies, behind the scenes, etc.

!cinematography@lemmy.world

If you happen to be a 1st Assistant Camera in the film industry, I've also made a community for us focus pullers (but all camera department are welcome)

!focuspuller@lemmy.world

Thanks for reading :)

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/212596

My back left tire exploded on the freeway on the way to this gig and I had to get towed to the dealership then Uber to set. I was 2 hours late but made it just before they started shooting.

He's a funny dude, super chill. This was right before his unfortunate loss recently.

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 3 points 2 years ago

Yeah, it has definitely slowed down a lot recently. This was a non-union feature we shot about 2 months ago, but nearly everyone on the crew was union because none of the normal shows were starting back up, even months before the strike (because the studios knew it was coming) so the union folks were taking whatever they could get. Though this project was a lot of fun and has some very notable talent. We're actually shooting another week of pickup shots this month to finish it off.

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

That is Paramount Ranch, not too far away. Though I did find out that Melody Ranch did suffer a major fire in 1962 that burnt down much of this street you're seeing. When we were there it felt very old and authentic. We spent about a week filming in the same saloon that was used in Django Unchained when Christoph Waltz's character shoots the town sheriff towards the beginning of the movie. We also had a lot of live animals like horses, oxen, and chickens.

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It took four of us to carry this up the mountain by hand, on a narrow path with soft loose dirt. Was a rough day but once it was up there it lived up there for the rest of the production. This was our fake sun/moon light

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

Yep, shooting content for a brand's social media. We just flipped a Red Komodo on it's side, and since the image was sideways on all our wireless monitors, I flipped them 90 degrees so I could see it normally when I pulled focus (that's what the wooden-looking device with the knob in the blue holder is, my wireless focus pulling hand unit Nucleus-M).

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Lol, in reality there was about 30 minutes of freaking out and then an hour of waiting for them to dry and praying for the best. It all worked out but I guess it'd be a better story if it hadn't haha!

Edit: Here's another story from the same shoot I just commented in my community:

"The producers/director/DP were all from New York and came out to Los Angeles to get crew and film this, so they were kinda out of there element. This shoot was 5 overnights in a row, and one night we were filming on an active bridge/road in LA. They assumed that the weather was always nice in California so didn’t check ahead or prepare, and suddenly we had a lightning/thunder storm starting in the distance. We had a giant Condor crane with lights up over the bridge, and as the lighting strikes got closer the Gaffer got spooked and brought the condor down. Within an hour, it was pouring rain and they didn’t have any pop-up tents so we had to rush to throw all the gear in different cars and get out of the rain. We wrapped early that night (early on an overnight means 4AM instead of 6AM).

I found out later that a woman and her dog died that night in LA from being struck by lightning. Shit can go wrong very quickly, especially when you’re not working with professionals."

[–] ShallowFocus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

Give it a shot now, I made it public on imgur and I think that fixed it!

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