Interview with Cinematographer, Rodrigo Prieto

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

You have quite an extensive resume having worked as a Cinematographer on many amazing films including “Amores Perros”, “Frida’, “25th Hour”, “21 Grams”, “Alexander”, “Brokeback Mountain”, “Babel”, “Se, jie”/”Lust, Caution”,  “Broken Embraces” and the current project nearing completion in Barcelona, “Biutiful”.

1.  As a DP you work closely with the Director and the Production Designer to achieve the cinematic look of the film.  Tell us about how you decide which type of film stock to use, which type of camera, the lighting style to complement the way the Director and Production Designer want the movie to look.

When I first read a script, I try not to think of the way it could be photographed. I prefer reading simply to feel how I connect with the story and the characters, and what emotions I experience as the story progresses. On a second reading, I start thinking more as a Cinematographer, and specific visual ideas start popping into my mind. I then do some research, which usually entails looking at many photography and art books to find examples of framing, texture, color and lighting that I think could be relevant to specific scenes in the storyline. I present these images to the Director, and listen to whatever feedback I can get. This is my way of starting to understand more clearly what the Director is envisioning, and what he/she responds to. This, plus the references the Director and Production Designer bring to the table becomes the basis for the visual language for the film. I then proceed to test different film stocks, lenses, cameras, lighting set-ups, colors, and anything that I can think of that can enhance the storytelling through the images we produce. This is a phase of filmmaking that I enjoy very much, as it is a time of discovery and experimentation. Of course this continues during the shoot of the film, but when I am shooting tests, I am truly free to stretch the boundaries of the concepts we come up with to see what can work and what does not.

2.  You have worked closely with Alejandro Inarritu on many projects, including “Amores Perros”, “21 Grams”, “Babel”, and currently, “Biutiful”.  What is it like to work with him?  What is his visual style?  Does he allow you freedom to follow your own vision, to handle most of your own visual elements?

Alejandro is a very complete director. By this I mean that he truly understands the medium and knows how to use the elements at his disposal to narrate his films: the performances, the sound, the music, the editing, the production design, and of course, the cinematography. He has an amazing sense of visuals and the language of the camera, and I feel very fortunate to be able to share with him my ideas to find the best way to engage the audience in what he is trying to communicate. We started working together some years before Amores Perros on TV commercials, and since then we developed a creative partnership where we both sit down and share our ideas on how to shoot any given scene, bouncing them off each other. We basically shotlist as much of the film as we can in preproduction and then adapt to the situation on the set. The camerawork on his films is very intuitive, and that is why I do the operating, so I can react to the performances and the rhythm of the scene as we go. He allows me complete freedom to use my instincts with the camera, adjusting for new takes whenever necessary. In terms of lighting, we usually talk about the mood and ambience each scene will require, and I work on achieving it while allowing room for the actors to feel free to move as their emotions dictate. I know that if I do the most perfect and amazing lighting, but it cramps the actors in any way, the scene will not be successful, and the movie suffers.

3.  I was in particularly impressed with your work on Ang Lee’s “Se, Jie”, or “Lust, Caution”.  Along with the lighting, the set and costume design were very tasteful, and complemented one another. Please share what it was like to work side by side withAng Lee. Again did he offer you freedom, or was it a collaborative effort?

I felt very honored that Ang would asked me to photograph “Lust, Caution” since it meant having to deal with his cinematographer not speaking the language everyone else is using.  This was a big challenge, but in the end, visual language is universal, and Ang made an effort to keep me informed on everything that was going on. I also had a personal interpreter, and most of my crew, who were from Hong Kong, spoke engilsh.
I had worked with Ang before on “Brokeback Mountain”, but this was a very different experience. Ang seemed much more intense on “Lust, Caution” than on “Brokeback”. I understand that “Brokeback” was a film that he wanted to do to wind down and recuperate from the nightmare he went through in “The Hulk”. So he made relatively few takes, and the hours were reasonable each day. In China, in contrast, we tipically worked at least 14 hours each day, six days a week, and on the seventh day we would see rushes, and sometimes scout. Needless to say, it was exhausting, but exhilarating at the same time. Ang is very perticular about camera placement and lens choice, so he is very hands-on in this respect. My input is more focused on lighting, film stocks and filtration. I do operate the camera as well, but he will ask me to do very specific things, so it is a very different approach to Alejandro, but I find the chalenge very stimulating as well.

4.  Who inspired you?  How did you get started?  Do you like George Hurrell?

I was into filmmaking since a very young age. I started out when I was 10 years old by making Super 8 films of monsters and Science Fiction with my older brother, Antonio. We would make stop motion films of clay monsters inspired on Ray Harrihousen’s work on films like “Jason and The Argonauts” and “Clash of the Titans.” That evolved into eventually attending film school in Mexico City. I also worked for a fashion still photographer, Nadine Markova for a year, which sparked my interest in photography, and led me to chose cinematography as my field.
Do I like George Hurrel? His portrait work is unparalleled and his lighting is exquisite. I particularly like his portrait of Anna May Wong. I simply can’t understand how he could make hard light look so good on actors faces. On “Broken Embraces” which I recently completed with Pedro Almodóvar, I had a chance to explore lighting Penélope Crúz in a different styles, ranging from naturalism, to more glamorous “Hollywood” style, but I know that I could not come even close to the perfection of Hurell’s lighting.

5.  What advice do you offer those interested in becoming a DP?
The only advice I can give to aspiring cinematographers is shoot anything that comes your way. Just do it all with the same enthusiasm as if you were making Gone With the Wind. Someone will notice, and ask you to do something else, and little by little, the projects will grow in ambition and scope. But above all, enjoy the journey, always.

“Tribeca Film Festival/ April 22 to May 3, 2009”

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

Although there is a significant decrease in entries this year as opposed to last, the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival kicks off with a salubrious New York flair with Woody Allen’s, “Whatever Works”, starring Larry David, on Wed April 22, 2009, and Spike Lee’s Sports Documentary, “Kobe Doin’ Work” on Saturday, April 25th!!!

Other popular stars and directors appearing at the festival include the following:

Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna in Carlos Cuaron’s, “Rudo y Cursi”.

Films with Israeli content, “Rachel” by Director, Simone Bitton, “Salt of this Sea”, by Annemarie Jacir, and “Seven Minutes in Heaven” by Omri Givon,

Musically inclined films, Academy Award winner for Best Foreign Language film, “Departures”, by Kundo Keyama,  “Burning Down The House: The Story of CBGB”, by Mandy Stern,  “P-Star Rising” by Director Gabriel Noble, “Blank City” by Director Celine Danhler, “Soundtrack for a Revolution”, and “Soul Power” with clips from James Brown and Muhammad Ali,

Sexually Explicit Films: Steven Soderbergh’s,  “The Girlfriend Experience”, and George Clooney produced, “Playground”.

Drama and Documentaries:  “About Elly” by Asghar Farhadi, “Garapa”, by Jose Padilha, and “Transcendent Man” by Barry Ptolemy, will also be shown.

Plan accordingly, as the festival is well under way with ticket packages having already gone on sale, film guides downloaded, and  press screenings being shown daily.

20th Anniversary of “Do The Right Thing”

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

Writer, Director, and Actor, Mr Spike Lee, known for his revolutionary work that have left audiences worldwide  to think critically, and who epitomizes the definition of the words “social change’,  was awarded last night at “Walter Reed Cinema” at “Lincoln Center” by “Image Nation”. Spike reflected back on his education, and paid homage to his classmates from  “Howard” and “NYU Film School”, admitting that “Do the Right Thing” was the first time he felt confident as a director.

“Stand Up For Heroes”

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

American news anchor, Bob Woodruff, was wounded and nearly killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq back on January 29, 2006, when shrapnel ripped into his skull causing a TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury). After spending five months in a coma, with the exception of suffering from expressive aphasia, or the ability to understand a word but not always the ability to be able to say it, he has made a full recovery. The Bob Woodruff Foundation or http://www.remind.org, raises awareness and money for military members with PTSD/TBI’s and other cognitive impairments and rehabilitation needs.

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“Independent Film Week: 9/14-9/19″

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

From Sunday, September 14th through Friday, September 19th, “The Event Space” at “F.I.T.” located at 122 W. 26th Street between 6th and 7th Ave, along with Chelsea Cinemas, located at 260 West 23rd St. at 8th Avenue will be hosting the 30th “Independent Filmmaker Conference” offering social networking and panel discussions, showcases, and special events and conversations with the film industries finest and well respected leaders. Panel discussions include, “Making Your First Feature”, “Filmmaking 2.0”, “The Global Marketplace”, “Alternative Distribution”, “The Truth About Non-Fiction”, and “Film and Philanthropy”. http://www.filmmakerconference.com/

Throughout the past 30 years, the “Independent Filmmaker Conference” has supported the production of 7,000 independent films, and assisted 20,000 filmmakers in their endeavours, with success stories including, “Frozen River”, “Maria Full of Grace”, “Freeheld”, “Clerks”, “Half Nelson”, and “Roger and Me”. A few of this years features in the “Spotlight on Documentaries”/”Works-in-Progress” category include: “Sidney Lumet: The Moral Lens”, “Borderline”, “Cooking Lessons”, “Fallout”, “Cuba: The Rest I Make Up”, and “She Wants to be a Matador”. The “Emerging Narrative-Screenplays” category consists of, “808”, “The Adventures of Mom and Dad”, “Between Two Worlds” and the Winner of the Creative Excellence Award at the “Slamdance Film Festival”, “Child in the Dark”, while the International Coproduction Market, referred to as “No Borders” showcases Italian Work In Progress, “The Flowers of Kirkuk”, Australian Romantic Comedy, “Almost French”, and an Argentinian Romantic Comedy “Medianeras”, along with many others. Barry Jenkin’s, who is one of Filmmaker Magazine’s, “25 New Faces of Independent Film”, will display his latest featureMedicine for Melancholy this Monday evening. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1133989/

Interview with Michelle Byrd, the Executive Director of “The Independent Filmmaker Conference”:

SA- “Tell us about the mission of “The Independent Filmmaker Conference”?
MB-“IFC’s mission is to connect with one another, to advocate for independent filmmakers by utilizing resources, facilitating the development, financing, and distribution of submitted projects.”

SA- “What makes the Conference unique, what sets it apart from other film forums?”
MB- “It is not a film festival where completed projects can be viewed, it is a forum to aide over 2,000 participants projects to the next stage of development, by setting up 1:1 meetings with potential partners, finding financing, sales and distribution.” Project forum meetings consist of four areas, “Emerging Narrative”, “No Borders”, “Spotlight on Docs”, and “Meet the Programmers”.

SA- “Which companies will be in attendance?”
MB- “4th Row Films”, “ACE-Ateliers du Cinema Europeen”, “Ambush Entertainment”, “Creative Artists Agency”, “Fortissimo Films”, Madman Cinema”, “Memento Films International”, “Mirimax”, “New Line Cinema”, “Overture Films”, “Sundance Institute”, “Telefilm Canada”. “We think long and hard on who is interested in supporting Indie Films.”

“Werner Herzog in conversation with Jonathan Demme”

August 15, 2010 § Leave a comment

Alain Robert, a Frenchman who apparently has climbed more than 70 skyscrapers around the world, and follower, both scaled the 52-story “New York Times” office building today in order to raise awareness for global warming.

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