Roger Deakins

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  • in reply to: Camera Knowledge #173957
    Roger Deakins
    Keymaster

      Most certainly! Exposure is obviously important, just as is knowing how depth of field works or the inverse square law, but is it really ‘fundamental’. When  you ‘know’ all these techniques what is left? What makes an image resonate? What makes an image reveal more than a word on a page?

      in reply to: Tarkovsky Film -Stalker #173955
      Roger Deakins
      Keymaster

        Maybe I have only see ‘Stalker’ 20 times. The most memorable screening I ever attended was in Brisbane where they showed a pristine new print struck off the original negative.

        What Tarkovsky could do was create something that was more than the sum of it’s parts. ‘Stalker’ becomes a reflection, not to put too finer point on it, on human existence but, unlike most contemporary products, it is not manipulative or showy and it doesn’t shout out how clever it is or tell you exactly what to think. I don’t see the look of the film as either beautiful or as ugly. It just feels true, at one with all the other elements that combine to create the whole. A brilliant marvel of a film.

        I don’t know if you have seen Tarkovsky’s first film, ‘Ivan’s Childhood’. That too is an exercise in ‘more than the sum of its parts’. In his book, ‘Sculpting in Time’, Tarkovsky talks about the scenes that he was advised to shoot in a certain way and that he, too late, considered a mistake. For him the scenes didn’t feel ‘true’. Watch it and see how much of a perfectionist he must have been!

        in reply to: Camera Knowledge #173948
        Roger Deakins
        Keymaster

          I wonder what ‘the fundamentals of photography and lighting’ actually are? The more I do the less I seem to understand. I don’t mean technically, for that I can read a book or ask someone far more proficient than myself, but what really are ‘the fundamentals’?

          in reply to: Am I crazy for not feeling modern 35mm film? #173462
          Roger Deakins
          Keymaster

            In the past I have certainly pushed film to get more grain. I disagree that it is the imperfections that are missing in today’s work. To me there is a lack of risk taking and of pushing the possibilities of film (by which I mean film as opposed to film or digital capture).

            in reply to: Sensor size & Focal Length + Depth of field #173458
            Roger Deakins
            Keymaster

              For ‘1917’ we did shoot on a 40mm on the Alexa LF. To me this lens length was equivalent to between a 35mm and a 32mm on a standard format but that seems debatable. Some suggest that a 40mm is equivalent to a 27mm on an academy format. This doesn’t feel right to me and I only really am interested in what feels right. On ‘Empire of Light’ my favored range on lenses was between 32mm and 65mm but I sometimes shot much wider than that as well as longer. I was just judging by eye as I set a shot. Best not to get obsessed with numbers!

              in reply to: Blade Runner 2049 #173455
              Roger Deakins
              Keymaster

                The scene in Wallace’s Office was lit in a quite different way to those shot for the far more red ‘Las Vegas’ sequences. For the former I was using direct sources both for the reflections off the water, which were achieved using 10K Fresnels, and the circular ‘chase’ of 300 watt Fresnel lamps that was lighting the characters. For this scene I wanted something a little more ‘golden’ and clean. For the Vegas sequences I was using a filter on the lens. This filter was specifically made by Tiffen for the shoot, a deep amber that was not available ‘off the shelf’.

                in reply to: Opening montage of Jessie James #172325
                Roger Deakins
                Keymaster

                  The particular shot you refer to was made using swing and tilt lens. This was used a number of times for the montage shots and elsewhere, such as for the shots of the rocking chair.

                  The montage was mostly shot during pre production whilst others were made during the main body of the shoot when something interesting occurred to us.

                  in reply to: The Goldfinch – Theo in his garage box #172323
                  Roger Deakins
                  Keymaster

                    This storage room was a small set and it was lit using a 4′ x 2 tube florescent overhead. I tried to control the spread of the light with silver wrap and I also used 2′ x 2′ silver stipple reflectors to get a little bit of light into Theo’s eyes on certain shots. There was no deliberate intent to change the color or the softness of the light from one scene to another. I think that was simply a case of returning to the same small set many weeks after our first visit.

                    in reply to: How to get this kind of look on digital? #171779
                    Roger Deakins
                    Keymaster

                      That makes sense.

                      in reply to: Shower in Empire of Light #171725
                      Roger Deakins
                      Keymaster

                        Pure coincidence!

                        in reply to: Skyfall lighting question and Sicario camera question #171715
                        Roger Deakins
                        Keymaster

                          The T12 created the sunlight effect and the 2Ks were set to bounce soft light into the corridor and the room. There were no lights inside the set.

                          I was shooting the opening scene of ‘Sicario’ on set and a deeper stop, with more depth of field, would, in my opinion, felt more like it was shot on location.

                          in reply to: Lasers with Alexa LF #171713
                          Roger Deakins
                          Keymaster

                            I don’t know the exact make of laser but it can be done. I have tested lasers with a standard Alexa so an LF should be no different. Any laser should give a beam in a haze if it is set correctly.

                            in reply to: How to get this kind of look on digital? #171710
                            Roger Deakins
                            Keymaster

                              That looks like a digital image captured using a relatively low res camera and overexposed.

                              in reply to: The Big Lebowski – Sim-Trav?? #171707
                              Roger Deakins
                              Keymaster

                                Yes, the scene was shot on stage with a dollies tracking various lights that were snooted down and on dimmers.

                                in reply to: Shooting film in 2022 #170798
                                Roger Deakins
                                Keymaster

                                  I don’t think I would do things very differently on ‘Sicario’ or that any films I have shot would have looked substantially different if they had been shot on film. I know I would have used a little more light for the night scenes but that would have been just using slightly brighter bulbs or units in the same places. I would always allow myself a thick negative for dusk work so I would have underexposed some and printed down some which is not necessary shooting with the Alexa. There is a similar extended ‘magic hour’ sequence in ‘No Country for Old Men’, which was shot on film. Certainly that was difficult but it was also more complex than the sequence in “Sicario’.

                                  It was true that film used to handle highlights better than digital but that certainly isn’t the case with the higher end cameras today.

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