“I’ve met many Marty Mausers over the centuries. Some of them crossed me, some of them weren’t straight. They weren’t honest. And those are the ones that are still here. You go out and win that game, you’re gonna be here forever, too. And you’ll never be happy. You will never be happy.” –Milton Rockwell […]
Tag Archive for: Cinematography
In 1888, photography underwent a revolutionary transformation. American entrepreneur George Eastman introduced flexible celluloid film, replacing the heavy, fragile glass plates that had dominated the art form for decades. This innovation was a transparent, flexible base coated with a light-sensitive emulsion, making photography more accessible. In fact, it made the very concept of motion pictures […]
In modern cinematography, there is a pervasive tendency to attribute the “look” of a film to the tools used to capture it. We talk about the “color science” of a specific camera brand or the “magic” of a specific film stock as if they are ingredients that simply need to be bought and mixed. Steve […]
In an age dominated by digital “fixes,” false color overlays, and the ability to change ISO with the scroll of a wheel, the true, hands-on craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare and vital skill. We see the “film look” imitated everywhere. Grain overlays, halation plugins, and LUTs designed to mimic Kodak Vision3. But […]
In an industry obsessed with the latest sensors, 8K resolution, and AI-driven workflows, a quiet but powerful movement is growing. It’s a return to the chemical, the tactile, and the analog. Filmmakers, from studio auteurs like Christopher Nolan to independent visionaries, are increasingly choosing to shoot on motion picture film. Why? In 2025, when digital […]
For the first time in the digital era, 2025 has proven to be a year of resurgence for the organic, unpredictable, and deeply human texture of celluloid. The numbers tell the story. Kodak surges in 2025, selling as much film since 2014 when motion picture film took a downturn due to the digital revolution. The […]
It’s a classic, high-stakes problem. You’re on set, trying to light a large interior. The director wants to see the bright, beautiful exterior through the windows, but the room itself is falling into shadow. You know you need a massive amount of power to balance that interior exposure with the sun. You call for the […]
“I’m stuck between wanting to do something and not wanting to do anything at all.” What if the only thing more terrifying than a monster in the dark is the crushing, hollow weight of a life you’re supposed to want? This is the paralyzing, intimate territory of director Lynne Ramsay. More than any of her […]
This is cinema’s most contradictory and psychologically complex color. Welcome to the tenth installment of our Movie Color Palette series! We’ve journeyed through a vibrant spectrum — from the primal power of red and the earthy grounding of brown to the artificial jolt of magenta and the cool detachment of cyan. Now, we arrive at […]
Is AI coming for your job? Is that new 12K camera really going to make your film better? In our industry, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. There’s a “sensory overload” of new gear dropping every six months and a looming anxiety about what Artificial Intelligence means for creatives. It’s easy to get stuck on what […]
“Some search for battle, others are born into it.” For years, adapting a Thomas Pynchon novel was considered a fool’s errand. That was until Paul Thomas Anderson masterfully captured the hazy, paranoid spirit of Inherent Vice. With his next splash into the Pynchonian universe, One Battle After Another not only proves his unique ability to […]
Modern digital cinema cameras are technical marvels, capable of capturing images with incredible sharpness and resolution. But sometimes, that technical perfection can be a double-edged sword, resulting in a look that feels too harsh, too clinical—too “digital.” So, how do you take that pristine sharpness and shape it into something more organic, more cinematic, and […]
For many filmmakers, the phrase “social media” brings on a wave of exhaustion. You’re a cinematographer, a director, an artist—not a full-time content creator. Yet, in today’s industry, the reality is that your social media profile, particularly your Instagram, often serves as your digital first impression, long before anyone visits your website or watches your […]
In today’s filmmaking landscape, filmmakers face an overwhelming number of options. Every new cinema camera promises to be a game-changer, boasting incredible specs, higher resolutions, and wider dynamic ranges. But beyond the marketing hype and online debates, one fundamental question remains for every cinematographer, director, and producer: How does the camera actually see the world? […]
In cinematography, the final 10% of effort is what separates a good image from a truly great one. Filtration is a huge part of that final polish. The right diffusion filter can subtly alter contrast, bloom highlights, and soften skin tones, adding a layer of texture and emotion that a clean lens alone cannot provide. […]
Before the whir of a camera or the click of a shutter, there were brushstrokes. For centuries, artists used paint to frame life, capturing its drama, stillness, shadow, and light on canvas. Paintings were our original “images”—carefully composed scenes that froze time, gave feeling form, and, in doing so, taught us how to see. It’s […]
For over a decade, one light has been the gold standard on my sets for punching through windows or bouncing into massive frames: the ARRI M90. This HMI has been a powerful workhorse, a tool that expanded my creativity and could beautifully replicate the sun. It was an oldie, but a goodie. But as filmmakers, […]
As a cinematographer, your job extends far beyond simply capturing a well-exposed image. You are a visual psychologist, tasked with translating the complex inner worlds of characters into a language of light, shadow, and movement. Every choice you make—from lens selection and camera placement to the subtle nuances of camera motion—should serve the emotional core […]
Let’s talk about the unspoken reality of a filmmaking career: the feast or famine cycle. One month, you’re on a thrilling shoot, working long hours, creatively fulfilled, and financially stable. The next, you’re staring at your phone, scrolling through job boards, and wondering when the next gig will land. It’s a cycle that can test […]
Remember the old days of filmmaking? The director, cinematographer, and focus puller all huddled around the camera, tethered by short HDMI or SDI cables, creating a cramped and inefficient “video village” of one. Every time the camera moved, the entire group had to shuffle along with it. This workflow wasn’t just cumbersome; it limited creativity, […]