APRIL 2009: $5.95 Canada $6.95
APRIL 2009: $5.95 Canada $6.95
APRIL 2009: $5.95 Canada $6.95
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
J O U R N A L
O F
F I L M
&
D I G I T A L
P R O D U C T I O N
T E C H N I Q U E S
S I N C E
1 9 2 0
AMERICAN CINEMATOGRAPHER APRIL 2009 WATCHMEN, KNOWING, THE ROBE, SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL VOL. 90 NO. 4
APRIL 2009
$5.95
Canada $6.95
TO SUBSCRIBE BY PHONE:
New!
New!
All in one:
Variable Spot & Flood
All in one:
Variable Color Temperature
5600K Daylight
Balanced
4200K
3200K Tungsten
Balanced
Variable
color dial
W W W. L I T E PA N E L S . C O M
NAB #
C6817
On Our Cover: Relentless vigilante Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley) hunts for the killer of an ex-superhero in Watchmen, shot by Larry Fong. (Unit photography by Clay Enos, courtesy of Warner Bros.)
Features 28
44
54
62
Departments
8
10
16
78
82
92
94
94
96
98
100
Watchmakers
Larry Fong films the unfilmable superhero
saga Watchmen
An Epic Endeavor
44
54
Editors Note
Short Takes: Patiences
Production Slate: Hunger
Crank High Voltage
Post Focus: Autodesk Updates Lustre
62
V i s i t u s o n l i n e a t w w w. t h e a s c . c o m
A p r i l
2 0 0 9
V o l .
9 0 ,
N o .
The International Journal of Film & Digital Production Techniques Since 1920
Visit us online at
www.theasc.com
EDITORIAL
Tripod Killer
1. No matter how inhospitable the location,
the Cinesaddle is easy to use; to set it up
just put it down.
2. Small Compact Portable. Weighs less
than two pounds.
ART DEPARTMENT
CREATIVE DIRECTOR Marion Gore
DESIGN ASSOCIATE Erik M. Gonzalez
ADVERTISING
ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Angie Gollmann
www.cinekinetic.com
Cinekinetic USA
345 W. 85th Street
New York, NY 10024
Telephone: (212) 202-0675
Email: [email protected]
4
American Cinematographer (ISSN 0002-7928), established 1920 and in its 88th year of publication, is published
monthly in Hollywood by ASC Holding Corp., 1782 N. Orange Dr., Hollywood, CA 90028, U.S.A.,
(800) 448-0145, (323) 969-4333, Fax (323) 876-4973, direct line for subscription inquiries (323) 969-4344.
Subscriptions: U.S. $50; Canada/Mexico $70; all other foreign countries $95 a year (remit international
Money Order or other exchange payable in U.S. $). Advertising: Rate card upon request from Hollywood
office. Article Reprints: Requests for high-quality article reprints should be made to McNeil Group at (800)
394-5157 ext. 26. Copyright 2007 ASC Holding Corp. (All rights reserved.) Periodicals
postage paid at Los Angeles, CA and at additional mailing offices. Printed in the USA.
POSTMASTER: Send address change to American Cinematographer, P.O. Box 2230, Hollywood, CA 90078.
WWW.VIDEOFAX.COM
25
Years
1984-2009
WWW.BANDPRO.COM
BURBANK 818-841-9655
MUNICH + 49 89 94 54 84 90
TEL AVIV + 972 3 562 1631
NEW YORK 212-227-8577
Intelligent Products,
Saving Time and Money
Production through Post
Cooke Close
Thurmaston, Leicester, UK
T: +44 (0)116 264 0700
F: +44 (0)116 264 0707
E: [email protected]
www.cookeoptics.com
OFFICERS - 2008/2009
Daryn Okada
President
Michael Goi
Vice President
Richard Crudo
Vice President
Owen Roizman
Vice President
Victor J. Kemper
Treasurer
Isidore Mankofsky
Secretary
John Hora
Sergeant At Arms
[email protected]
Seattle: 206-467-8666
Toll Free: 877-467-8666
Curtis Clark
Richard Crudo
Caleb Deschanel
John C. Flinn III
William A. Fraker
Michael Goi
John Hora
Victor J. Kemper
Stephen Lighthill
Daryn Okada
Robert Primes
Owen Roizman
Nancy Schreiber
Dante Spinotti
Kees Van Oostrum
ALTERNATES
Matthew Leonetti
Steven Fierberg
James Chressanthis
Michael D. OShea
Sol Negrin
MUSEUM CURATOR
Steve Gainer
BT-LH2550
0.8
D-Cinema
Adobe
0.6
EBU
0.4
0.2
0.0
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
when it counts
2009 Panasonic Broadcast
Editors Note
atchmen is one of the most hotly anticipated films of
2009, but its journey to the screen has not been easy.
Fans of the groundbreaking graphic novel have been
awaiting a movie version for years, and several high-profile
directors passed on the project after deeming the source
material unfilmable. Finally, flush with confidence after the
success of his action epic 300, Zach Snyder valiantly agreed
to take on the challenge, despite daunting odds that might
make even a Spartan warrior cringe.
Snyder asked 300 cinematographer Larry Fong to rejoin
him on the creative battlefield, along with production designer Alex McDowell and
visual-effects supervisor John D.J. DesJardin. Fong was given just over two months to
prep for the massive show, which eventually required roughly 100 shooting days on
about 150 sets. Before anything was built, my crew and I would study the conceptual
drawings, paintings and blueprints, and Alex was really thoughtful about getting my
input on any lighting that would be built into the sets, says Fong. He and his key collaborators lay out the behind-the-scenes saga for associate editor Jon Witmer, a selfconfessed graphic-novel bergeek, who pursued the Watchmen principals with an
intensity that might impress even Rorschach, the tales most relentless vigilante
(Watchmakers, page 28).
AC readers have been clamoring for more coverage of the Red One camera,
and we continue to oblige with this months feature on the thriller Knowing, shot by
Simon Duggan, ACS, one of the first cinematographers to employ the One on a highprofile feature. The impetus, he tells Australian correspondent Simon Gray (Sum of All
Fears, page 44), came from director Alex Proyas: Alex is an avid photographer and uses
a digital stills camera with the same type of chip as the Red, a CMOS, says Duggan.
He is very impressed with the quality of the images, and consequently, he suggested
we test the Red as an acquisition format.
Five of the best-shot entries from this years Sundance Film Festival are spotlighted in our annual roundup: Sin Nombre (shot by Adriano Goldman); An Education
(John de Borman, BSC); The September Issue (Bob Richman); Push: Based on the Novel
by Sapphire (Andrew Dunn, BSC); and Big River Man (John Maringouin). Witmer, New
York correspondent Pat Thomson and I braved Utahs freezing temperatures to see them
all on big screens (Sundance 2009: 5 That Thrived, page 62).
Students of film history will appreciate David Heurings piece detailing
the digital restoration of The Robe, the first motion picture released in the ultra-wide
CinemaScope format (An Epic Endeavor, page 54). 20th Century Fox and the Academy
Film Archive partnered with The Film Foundation to preserve this landmark film, which
has left a lasting impression on everyone who saw the original theatrical presentation.
Ill never forget going to see The Robe on its initial release, recalls director Martin
Scorsese, who aided the restoration by providing an original dye-transfer print from his
personal collection. I sat there, and the curtains kept opening wider and wider and
wider. None of us, not me or anyone else in the audience, was prepared for the experience, and it changed the movies forever.
Stephen Pizzello
Executive Editor
8
optimo rouge
e
d
i
w
Following the tremendous success of the Optimo Rouge 30-80 lens the first
in the Optimo DP series Thales Angenieux introduces the Optimo Rouge
16-42 Wide Angle Zoom. It features a wide angle position of 16mm (75.4
degrees), a fast aperture of T2.8, calibrated focus marks, no ramping or
breathing all in a lightweight, compact 4.2 lb package. The Optimo Rouge
16-42 Wide Angle Zoom delivers industry proven features with the performance,
functionality and ergonomics that DPs demand at a cost effective price. Only
from Thales Angenieux.
973.812.3858 [email protected] www.angenieux.com
images
Short Takes
A Cinematographer Directs Patiences
by Iain Stasukevich
10 April 2009
of the seasons. A woman (Davina Stewart) gets out of the car and enters the
cabin. She appears to be waiting for
someone, and she snaps a series of
Polaroids and stretches out on the bed
to pass the time. Eventually, she closes
up the cabin and leaves.
One of the things that stands out
about Patiences, a title that refers to the
European name for the game Solitaire,
is how it takes its time to unfold. There
is no dialogue, and even at a trim seven
minutes, the moments seem to stretch
out in a relaxed, sensual way. Every
action and every shot has a purpose. It
makes for a keenly visual experience;
this comes as no surprise because it
was directed by a cinematographer,
Peter Wunstorf, ASC, who also shot it.
Wunstorf met Patiences screenwriter Sylvia Petit at the Cannes Film
Festival in 1992, and while the two
stayed in touch, Petit wrote the script for
what would become Wunstorfs directorial debut. He recalls his first impression
of her script: I thought it was one of the
A woman
(Davina
Stewart) passes
the time while
awaiting a lover
in the short film
Patiences,
directed and
shot by Peter
Wunstorf, ASC.
Top left:
Stewart enjoys a
laugh with the
crew, including
co-production
designer/chief
lighting
technician Matt
Vest (in
doorway), whom
Wunstorf calls
my MVP. Top
right: Wunstorf
checks the light
on his subject.
Below: The
woman begins to
suspect she is
waiting in vain.
12 April 2009
including the adjacent apartment buildings, he let the windows blow out and
asked for sheer curtains to be hung in
them. Window-screen frames from
Home Depot a tip I learned from
Stephen Burum [ASC] were lined
with ND gels and used to cut down the
overexposure and bring out the texture
in the curtains.
Any time the camera was
pointed away from the windows, it was
either before sunrise or after sundown.
The windows were gelled with 85 to
warm the daylight coming in and make
it easier to match the tungsten lamps
set up inside. It was easy to re-create
that ambience with 500-ASA film,
notes Wunstorf. In the interest of efficiency, very low-wattage lamps were
used; only about 2K worth of lighting
was up at any given time, bouncing off
muslin or a ceiling or wall, or sometimes
directly through half or full gridcloth.
At one point, Wunstorf came up
with an idea for a poor mans space
light, utilizing a laundry hamper from
Ikea. The hamper has no color, its very
light and portable, and it can be
compressed into a flat disk about 18
inches in diameter. You can hang it from
a C-stand or stand it on the floor. Ikeas
a great resource, especially when youre
working with a small budget.
In the winter months, after Stewart was cast, Wunstorf was unable to
shoot around the snow-covered grounds
Right: Wunstorf
lines up a shot.
Below: A
laundry hamper
from Ikea serves
as a poor mans
space light.
Ikea is a great
resource,
especially when
youre working
with a small
budget, notes
Wunstorf.
14 April 2009
Production Slate
Willful Resistance and Amped-Up Action
Prisoner Bobby
Sands (Michael
Fassbender,
left) meets with
Father Moran
(Liam
Cunningham) in
a scene that
serves as the
centerpiece of
Hunger, shot by
Sean Bobbitt,
BSC. Most of
the 23-minute
scene plays out
in a static,
medium-wide
shot; this
production still
features
slightly
different
framing.
PHANTOM HIGH-SPEED
RED SPECIALISTS
ARRI ACCESSORIES
AATON PENELOPE
ARRI ZEISS LENSES
CHROSZIEL TEST INSTRUMENTS
P2 VARICAMS
SONY XDCAM
PANTHER | HD SCOPE
personal touch
knowledge
experience
SONY EX
PANASONIC P2
CAMTRAM
www.abelcine.com
New York 888.223.1599
Chicago 630.554.4619
Prison guards
make inmates
run the gauntlet
as an extra
punishment. The
production recreated Northern
Irelands
notorious Maze
Prison in a
warehouse near
Belfast.
18 April 2009
Right: Sands in
his cell. Below
(from left): 1st
AD Mark Fenn,
actress Helen
Madden,
director Steve
McQueen and
Bobbitt work
out their
approach to a
hallway scene.
pushed the bathtub onto me. I was literally wedged between the tub and the
wall, and I was covered in plastic so the
camera wouldnt get wet.
The filmmakers deviated from
their decision to not move walls only
once, for a shot of Sands lying in the
hospital ward. The camera looks down
on him from ceiling height but weaves
around the room in an elliptical fashion.
Steve [McQueen] wanted the camera
to feel like a bird flying around, trying to
escape, says Bobbitt. Steve Pugh and
I came up with all sorts of weird and
wonderful ways to move the camera
like that, but none of them was practical. In the end, we removed the ceiling
and used a Technocrane.
The hospital room is bigger and
brighter than the cells and contains a
larger window. Its less oppressive, but
20 April 2009
Andree Martin
VP Technical Services
www.clairmont.com
Hollywood
818-761-4440
Vancouver
604-984-4563
Toronto
416-467-1700
Albuquerque
505-227-2525
Montreal
514-525-6556
22 April 2009
In Crank High
Voltage, hard-tokill Chev Chelios
(Jason Statham)
requires constant
jolts of electricity
after his heart is
stolen by a
Chinese mobster
and replaced with
a batterypowered ticker.
;I[MPPFITVIWIRXHYVMRKXLI[LSPIWLS[*SVETTSMRXQIRXWTPIEWIWIRHERIQEMPXS SJGI$GMRIZEXMSRRIX
%R]UYIWXMSRWTPIEWIGSRXEGX
236;%=1W%RRMOIR(ELP
ERRMOIRHELP$GMRIZEXMSRRIX
97% 1V)ZER)HIPMWX
IZERIHIPMWX$GMRIZEXMSRRIX
Right:
Cinematographer
Brandon Trost
inspects a
customized
bullet-time rig
built from a piece
of 6' circular
speed rail by key
grip Phil Miller.
Six Canon HF-10
camcorders were
atached to the rig
with Manfrotto
mini ball mounts.
Below: Codirector Mark
Neveldine adds
the element of
motion after
donning a pair of
in-line skates.
24 April 2009
Left: Co-director
Brian Taylor
positions a
pole-mounted
Canon XH-A1.
Right: Neveldine
gets the jump on
Statham while
palming a
camcorder.
26 April 2009
Watchmakers
Cinematographer Larry Fong and director Zack Snyder
reteam to bring the epic graphic novel Watchmen to the
big screen.
by Jon D. Witmer
Unit photography by Clay Enos
he year is 1985, and the 37th
president of the United States,
Richard M. Nixon, continues
to occupy the Oval Office, leading a nation on the brink of
war with the Soviet Union. The
Watchmen, self-made vigilantes
who emerged in the 1930s, have
recently been outlawed, but some of
them continue to operate as either
criminals or secret government
operatives. Their ranks include
Ozymandias, The Comedian, Night
Owl, Rorschach, Silk Spectre and
Dr. Manhattan.
The new film Watchmen is
T
28 April 2009
Opposite, left to
right: The
Comedian (Jeffrey
Dean Morgan),
Silk Spectre
(Malin Akerman),
Dr. Manhattan
(Billy Crudup),
Ozymandias
(Matthew Goode),
Nite Owl (Patrick
Wilson) and
Rorschach (Jackie
Earle Haley). This
page, top: A superslow-motion
opening-credit
sequence,
bolstered by
visual-effects
company CIS,
charts the history
of costumed
heroes. Middle:
Richard Nixon
(Robert Wisden,
standing) meets
with Henry
Kissinger (Frank
Novak, second
from right) in a
war room inspired
by Dr. Strangelove.
Bottom, left to
right: Director
Zack Snyder,
production
designer Alex
McDowell and
cinematographer
Larry Fong watch
the Watchmen.
American Cinematographer 29
Watchmakers
Were all
pretty proud of
the shot of The
Comedian
going out the
window, says
Fong. To
capture the
defenestration,
Morgan was
suspended by a
wire rig and
dropped from a
special set
piece
constructed 30'
above the stage
floor, and Fong
used a PanArri
435 rolling
at 150 fps on
a Technocrane.
Top: To re-create
the graphic
novels stylized
New York City,
three city blocks
were
constructed from
the ground up at
Canadian
Motion Picture
Park Studios
outside of
Vancouver.
Middle: Aided
by the Owl
Ships halogen
headlights, Nite
Owl keeps an
eye on a riot
while The
Comedian gets
his hands dirty
at street level.
The Owl Ship
was regularly
suspended from
cranes or
mounted on
gimbals. Bottom:
Silk Spectre
tours the Owl
Ships interior.
American Cinematographer 31
Watchmakers
Clockwise from
above: Fong
rigged an HMI
balloon light in a
vertical position
to suggest the
blue glow of a
30'-tall Dr.
Manhattan at
work in his lab.
At normal height,
Crudup (second
from left) wore a
special suit
fashioned by
Chris Gillman
and fitted with
LEDs and
tracking
markers; three
suits were made
to allow multiple
Manhattans to
appear in frame
at once. The suit
allowed Crudup
to actually light
his environment,
so we didnt
have to wave a
light around and
make believe he
was lighting
people on set,
says Fong.
32 April 2009
33
Watchmakers
Top to bottom:
Dr. Manhattan
abandons Earth
for the solitude
of Mars; in the
final film, the
character
appears as a
CG creation
courtesy of
Sony Pictures
Imageworks.
The Martian
landscape
comprised a
40'-square
patch of red dirt
surrounded by
greenscreen.
After
teleporting her
off of Earth,
Manhattan
guides Silk
Spectre aboard
his self-made
glass palace,
which existed
onstage as a
green
staircase. SPI
created the CG
palace, based
on McDowells
designs.
34 April 2009
3*<>470
+.12&(&)*2>
FILM & ACTING CONSERVATORY
ONE-YEAR PROGRAMS
TWO-YEAR FINE ARTS DEGREE
MASTER OF FINE ARTS DEGREE
& ) , - s 7 7 7 . 9 &! # / - ! #
MM s MM s (I
$EF s 3UPER MM s 2%$ /.% #AMERA
EACH FILMMAKING STUDENT WRITES, SHOOTS, DIRECTS, AND EDITS 8 FILMS
IN THE MOST INTENSIVE HANDS-ON PROGRAM IN THE WORLD
AND WORKS ON THE CREW OF 28 ADDITIONAL FILMS IN THE FIRST YEAR