film review Archives - Filmmakers Academy Filmmakers Academy Thu, 08 Jan 2026 10:21:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-Filmmakers-Academy-ico-32x32.png film review Archives - Filmmakers Academy 32 32 The Look of Marty Supreme https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-look-of-marty-supreme-film/ Thu, 08 Jan 2026 10:21:03 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107238 “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 […]

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“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

The American Dream promises that anyone — regardless of creed, ethnicity, or origin — can rise to the top through enough hard work and a little tenacity. But there is a dark underbelly to that promise. What happens when the drive to win metastasizes into an obsession? What happens when a man refuses to stop, even if it means sprinting into the abyss, consumed by the terrifying need to secure his legacy at any cost? 

Josh Safdie has built his career on these high-wire acts. He specializes in character-driven narratives that trap the audience in the headspace of protagonists consumed by hubris and shortsightedness. These characters live violently in the present, blind to a future they are mortgaging for a momentary win. It is a cinema of anxiety, where we become accessories to every harebrained scheme and desperate gamble, feeling the walls close in alongside the anti-hero.

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(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

Marty Supreme introduces the next evolution of this Icarus archetype — a man willing to leap from a tower on man-made wings, convinced he can soar to the heavens before the wax melts. Above all, Marty Mauser (Timothée Chalamet) seeks dominion over a sport the world largely dismisses: table tennis. Marty wants to be an ambassador, an icon, a legend. He has the charisma. The talent. The determination. But he lacks the fortune — so he decides to create his own, regardless of the collateral damage.    

So, what happens when the world refuses to respect your dream? Do you fold, or do you burn the house down to prove you were right?

This is the visual language of obsession; this is the aesthetic of a man willing to go to hell and back to achieve greatness.

This is The Look of Marty Supreme.

 

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design

 

MARTY SUPREME TECH SPECS

  • Camera: 
    • Arricam LT, Panavision B-, C-, E-Series and PVintage Lenses
    • Arricam ST, Panavision B-, C-, E-Series and PVintage Lenses
    • Arriflex 416, Panavision Primo Lenses (some shots)
  • Negative Format: 
    • 16mm (Kodak, some shots)
    • 35mm (Kodak Vision3 500T 5219)
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • Digital Intermediate(4K, master format)
    • Panavision(anamorphic, source format)
    • Super 16(source format, some shots)
    • Super 35(source format)
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • 35 mm(Kodak)
    • 70 mm(blow-up)
    • DCP Digital Cinema Package

 

🏓 THE WORLD OF MARTY SUPREME 🏓

The Safdie brothers have always excelled at entrenching their audience in the granular details of the American Jewish experience. Much like Uncut Gems, Marty Supreme is deeply rooted in its rich culture, particularly in Brooklyn. 

The specter of the war looms large over the film’s 1950s setting. The memory of the Holocaust is fresh, anti-Semitism simmers beneath the surface, and the geopolitical trauma is personified by characters like Milton Rockwell (Kevin O’Leary), who blames the Jewish people for the loss of his son in the war. This tension culminates in the film’s climax: a politically charged table tennis matchup between an American Jew and a Japanese champion.

THE REAL MARTY AND THE UNDERGROUND HUSTLE

While Timothée Chalamet’s Marty Mauser is a fictional creation, his DNA is directly extracted from the real-life legend Marty Reisman. Known as “The Needle” for his slender frame and sharp wit, Reisman was the undisputed king of the table tennis underground. Safdie was drawn to Reisman’s autobiography, The Money Player: The Confessions of America’s Greatest Table Tennis Champion and Hustler, seeing in it a dark, twisted metaphor for the American Dream. Like Mauser, the real Reisman was a flamboyantly dressed hustler who viewed the sport not just as a game, but as a vehicle for survival and self-mythology.

This ambition played out in a specific, gritty ecosystem that the film painstakingly recreates: the underground ping-pong parlors of 1950s New York. Far from the suburban rec rooms of popular imagination, places like Lawrence’s Broadway Table Tennis Club were smoke-filled dens of iniquity located in the heart of Times Square. This was a true counterculture, a sanctuary for a motley crew of New York’s “misfits, weirdos, and grifters.” In this subterranean world, the lines between sport and survival blurred, where gangsters, artists, and hustlers rubbed shoulders over high-stakes matches played under the harsh glow of tungsten lights.

CLASS, AMBITION, AND THE WORLD OF BROOKLYN

While the 1950s are often remembered as an era of affluent, white-picket-fence America, the Safdies present a working class Brooklyn defined by stark class divides. We see a clear line between the struggling working class and overwhelming, inaccessible wealth. For Marty, money is a desperate need that fuels his ambition to become the face of table tennis.

This desperation drives the narrative from the very beginning, kicking off with Marty taking money from his uncle’s shoe store vault — money he claims is “owed” to him — to fund his trip to the table tennis competition in London. His relationship with that capital is also performative and careless. For example, he upgrades his hotel suite at the Ritz and pays for Milton Rockwell’s dinner just to project confidence and brag about prize money he hasn’t yet won. 

Marty Supreme in the Ritz hotel

Marty Supreme | A24

He leverages this hubris into a hustle, pitching Rockwell on a sponsorship deal and suggesting that table tennis is the perfect vehicle to market Rockwell’s ink business. But when he loses, the reality of his financial precarity hits hard. The champion-to-be is forced to recoup costs in a humiliating fashion: playing table tennis as a novelty sideshow during the halftime of Harlem Globetrotters games.

ANCHORS AND OBSTACLES

Back in Brooklyn, Marty feels suffocated by the life he is trying to escape. His uncle threatens police intervention over the stolen money to coerce him back into the family shoe business. He avoids his overbearing mother (Fran Drescher) like the plague, viewing her as an anchor dragging down his ambitions. To complicate matters further, he has impregnated a married neighbor, Rachel Mizler (Odessa A’zion), whose love for him serves as yet another barrier between Marty and his dream of freedom. 

Odessa A'zion as Rachel Rizzler

Marty Supreme | A24

This domestic claustrophobia stands in sharp contrast to the opulent world of Milton Rockwell and his movie-star wife, Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow). They possess everything Marty craves — wealth, status, freedom — yet they despise one another and barely register his existence as he desperately shoehorns himself into their lives. Even starting a chaotic tryst with Kay. 

THE FINAL GAMBLE

The film’s tension explodes in the final act when Marty strikes a devil’s bargain with Rockwell, agreeing to travel to Japan for a table tennis exhibition where he must throw the game against the Japanese champion, Koto Endo (Koto Kawaguchi). The stakes of this match are massive for everyone involved. For Japan, Endo represents a beacon of hope for a defeated population living in the shadow of the war. For Rockwell, the match is a Trojan horse designed to open a new frontier for selling American ink. And for Marty, it is simply his ticket to the big leagues.

But in true Safdie fashion, Marty’s ego refuses to be contained. In the final moments, he reveals to the crowd that the fix is in and goads Endo into playing a game “for real,” only to defeat him. In doing so, Marty crushes the hope of a recovering nation and torpedoes Rockwell’s business deal, proving that his need to win in the moment outweighs any future consequence.

MARTY SUPREME PRODUCTION DESIGN

The production design of Marty Supreme is a sprawling, meticulous recreation of 1950s New York, Japan, and Europe, led by the legendary three-time Oscar nominee Jack Fisk. Known for his long-standing collaborations with auteurs like Terrence Malick and Paul Thomas Anderson, Fisk’s partnership with Josh Safdie represents a collision of old-school period prestige and high-energy, contemporary filmmaking. In Safdie, Fisk found a collaborator who reminded him of the directors he started with 50 years ago, possessing a “whole being” dedicated to filmmaking that results in a shared “tunnel vision” on set.

THE FISK-SAFDIE PHILOSOPHY: “DOCUMENTARY” REALISM

Jack Fisk’s approach to Marty Supreme was defined by a commitment to absolute focus. He noted that finding directors who inspire him is the primary factor in choosing his projects, and Safdie’s passion mirrored the excitement Fisk felt at the beginning of his career in the 1970s. Fisk treats his sets not just as backdrops, but as a form of “Method building” or a lived-in documentary. He believes that if a set is closer to authenticity, it helps the actors understand their characters more deeply.

Jack Fisk behind the scenes of Days of Heaven

Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection

This philosophy extends to creating details that might never be captured on camera. Fisk believes that even designs that don’t make it onscreen seep into the DNA of the movie and inform the performances, allowing actors to “get lost in the moment easier.” This collaborative spirit meant that the scope of the film was constantly expanding. If Fisk suggested ten ping-pong tables for a set, Safdie would push for twenty, always wanting things bigger than what had previously been done. 

RECONSTRUCTING LAWRENCE’S BROADWAY TABLE TENNIS CLUB

One of the film’s most central locations is Lawrence’s Broadway Table Tennis Club, a legendary spot that Fisk had to recreate level-by-level because the original building had been torn down. To achieve this, Fisk utilized city tax photos and original blueprints sourced by executive producer Sara Rossein. Fisk was particularly interested in the building’s history, noting it was an industrial space that had housed a car-parts business and an acting school on different floors. 

Marty Supreme | A24

Research revealed a fascinating layer of the club’s history: before it was a ping-pong parlor, the space housed an indoor miniature golf course. Fisk’s team recreated the hand-painted landscape murals — featuring trees, fog, and bushes — that were original to that golf course, even though they are barely visible in the final cut. The art department even discovered a 16mm film of people playing at the original club, which allowed Fisk to see the actual colors of the space and ensured the reconstruction was as authentic as possible.

THE LOWER EAST SIDE: MODULAR NEIGHBORHOODS

Recreating the Lower East Side of the 1950s presented a massive logistical challenge, as modern storefronts, glass, and graffiti have significantly altered the landscape. Fisk remarked that the neighborhood doesn’t look anything like it did seventy-five years ago because almost every storefront has been modernized. To solve this, Fisk and his team developed a modular system of tenement fronts that could be placed in front of contemporary buildings in record time.

On Orchard Street — a location chosen because it was historically the only place open on Sundays due to blue-law exceptions — the team hung period signs and awnings over modern buildings to hide contemporary glass. Set decorator Adam Willis then added layers of street vendors and tables to create a sense of density and “wrinkled” realism. The crew also studied Ken Jacobs’ 1950s short film Orchard Street as a primary piece of research for streetscapes and crowds, which Fisk described as the key piece of research that brought the whole crew together.

“AVOIDING WHITE LIKE THE PLAGUE”

Fisk’s color palette for Marty Supreme was strictly informed by 1950s period color charts and the technical requirements of shooting on celluloid. He famously avoids using white on his sets, noting that it seems more contemporary and can “burn a hole” in the film. Because white on a piece of celluloid effectively leaves the negative clear with no detail, Fisk finds it visually distracting and prefers “rich colors.” 

On set of Marty Supreme table tennis tournament

Marty Supreme | A24 | Matt Heister

In his research of old buildings, Fisk often peels away paint or moves light switches to discover the original colors underneath. Cinematographer Darius Khondji noted that this approach helped create a dingy, downbeat ambience. Everything was “dirtied-up” to look real and wrinkled, which Khondji felt complemented the texture of the film stock on the actors’ faces. 

PRACTICAL GRANDEUR: THE WOOLWORTH MANSION

To contrast Marty’s grimey Brooklyn roots, the production needed a location that represented overwhelming wealth. They eventually secured the Woolworth mansion on East 80th Street to serve as the home of Kay Stone and Milton Rockwell. Because the mansion was a $38 million historical property, the art department had to build independent structures to hold lighting rigs, allowing them to light the interior without ever touching the original walls or ceilings.

Mr. Wonderful in Marty Supreme

Marty Supreme | A24

Fisk and Willis used the top three floors of the mansion, which were exquisitely decorated. Fisk noted that the production could never have afforded to create that level of opulence from scratch, and it served as a vital over-the-top contrast to Marty’s working-class background. This visual divide was essential to the story of a character desperately trying to shoehorn himself into a higher social class.

GLOBAL SCALE: BOWLING ALLEYS TO TOKYO

The scope of the production design extended far beyond New York, requiring Fisk to pivot between vastly different environments on a tight schedule. For a scene shot in an upstate bowling alley, the team had to strip away fifty years of accumulated modern items to restore the 1954 vintage look, which included ensuring the original machinery still worked.

For the climactic match in Japan, Fisk collaborated with a Japanese art department for a month before traveling to Tokyo. They found a concert shell in a park that was “perfect” for the period and built bamboo towers covered in Japanese graphics. These designs were based on photographs from actual world tournaments held just a year or two after the film’s setting. Fisk was particularly impressed by the efficiency of the Japanese crew, noting that a period-accurate Japanese ping-pong table was produced almost immediately after he sent a reference photograph.

🏓 MARTY SUPREME CINEMATOGRAPHY 🏓

The cinematography of Marty Supreme represents a sophisticated fusion of 1950s period aesthetics and contemporary kinetic energy, reuniting cinematographer Darius Khondji, ASC, AFC, with director Josh Safdie following their collaboration on Uncut Gems. Khondji describes the visual approach as an “anthropological study” of a man living in 1952 New York City, capturing the protagonist’s obsessive drive through a lens of “brash beauty.” While the film is a period piece, Khondji and Safdie avoided a purely nostalgic look, instead marrying vintage photographic textures with a modern emotional pulse influenced by a soundtrack featuring 1980s music. This stylistic juxtaposition creates a timeless atmosphere that Khondji feels gives the film a unique “strength” and “modernity.” 

The core philosophy of the film’s imagery is rooted in the human face. Khondji emphasizes that “the story is told by faces,” and he approached the cinematography as if he were using a magnifier to search the characters’ eyes for their underlying souls. This required a departure from standard coverage. The team often utilized extremely long lenses to capture medium and tight shots, creating a sense of “magnified realism” that keeps the audience intimately entrenched in the characters’ headspace.

THE LENS LANGUAGE: MAGNIFICATION AND THE 360MM “JEWEL”

A defining technical aspect of Marty Supreme is the aggressive use of long anamorphic lenses, a preference of Safdie’s that Khondji fully endorsed. While typical anamorphic wide shots might utilize 40mm or 50mm lenses, this production frequently used 65mm, 75mm, and 100mm glass even for wider compositions. This choice minimizes depth of field and forces a subjective point of view, which Safdie believes mimics how the human eye focuses on specific interactions while blurring out the periphery.

Darius Khondji and Josh Safdie on set of Marty Supreme

Marty Supreme | A24

One of the most notable pieces of glass used on set was a vintage 360mm anamorphic CinemaScope lens that Khondji found in the cupboards at Panavision after researching the work of Italian cinematographer Gianni Di Venanzo. Safdie and Khondji treated this rare lens like a “jewel,” using it to achieve extreme compression in the image. In one instance, during a close-up of Gwyneth Paltrow in a stadium, the camera was positioned on the opposite side of the arena, creating an image that felt “almost like a dream” due to the intense spatial compression.

THE CHOICE OF 35MM FILM AND TEXTURAL REALISM

Although Khondji has mastered both digital and analog formats, Marty Supreme was primarily originated on 4-perf 35mm film using Arricam LT and ST cameras. Khondji notes that the film stock — specifically Kodak Vision3 500T 5219 — provides a “painterly look” and a physical texture that digital sensors cannot replicate. He describes the film negative as having a “crust” or “skin” like a painting, which becomes particularly evocative when capturing the pockmarks and acne added to Timothée Chalamet’s skin to enhance the film’s “realness.” 

Marty Supreme running down the street

Marty Supreme | A24

To further enhance this texture, Khondji often pushed the negative during processing. This technique increased the grain and provided a specific “analog feeling” that he found essential for the 1950s setting. While a small portion of the film was shot digitally for logistical reasons, Khondji worked closely with colorist Yvan Lucas at Company 3 to ensure a seamless match, though he maintains that the “incredible pleasure” of shooting film remains his preference for character-driven stories. 

LIGHTING PHILOSOPHY: “POOR-LIGHT” REALISM

The lighting in Marty Supreme was guided by a concept Khondji calls “poor-light” realism. This approach stems from the historical reality that 1952 New York was not as brightly lit as modern cities. Light was a necessity found in specific “pools” rather than a ubiquitous presence. Khondji aimed for a naturalistic warmth by turning lights off to create shadows and using single-direction sources that felt “murky” and “dirty” rather than traditionally “pretty.”

Single source light in Marty Supreme

Marty Supreme | A24

For the table-tennis sequences, Khondji and gaffer Ian Kincaid tested various modern fixtures but ultimately settled on vintage “mushroom” lights. Khondji felt these provided the most beautiful top-down illumination for the actors’ faces, drawing inspiration from the boxing ring paintings of George Bellows. In the shoe store where Marty works, the team placed bulbs in soft little pools of light, using pushed film to capture the rich color separations and the “painterly look” of the hallway and boxes.

CAMERA MOVEMENT AND KINETIC GRACE

The film’s movement is described as a “wild ride” with nonstop energy, often following Chalamet as he runs through the streets of New York. To capture these frenetic sequences on location, the crew utilized a sophisticated camera car setup equipped with a small crane that was hand-operated by grips Richie Guinness Jr. and Joe Belschner. This allowed the camera to maintain a “kinetic grace” while navigating the tight angles of Orchard Street, which production designer Jack Fisk had modularly transformed to look like the 1950s. 

Despite the high-speed movement, Khondji remained conscientious about the “rhythm” of the camera. He believes that camera movement, lighting, and color are deeply connected to music, a sentiment echoed by Safdie’s use of sound to drive the film’s pacing. This rhythmic approach is best seen in the table-tennis matches, which were shot live with three cameras. Khondji avoided “gimmicky” or commercial-style angles, instead positioning the cameras at the height of the characters to capture the “dance” of the sport in a classical, dignified manner.

ANECDOTES FROM THE FIELD: FROM TOKYO TO THE ENDING

The production’s logistical challenges often led to unique creative solutions. When the team could not find a suitable location near New York for the climactic Japanese championship, they opted to fly a minimal crew to Tokyo to shoot outdoors in a park concert shell. Khondji found the Japanese crew to be exceptionally talented, noting that the change in environment created a different visual energy that felt more “intimate” due to the specific daylight and lenses used on location.

Marty Supreme plays table tennis in Japan

Marty Supreme | A24

One of the most emotionally charged moments for the crew was the filming of the movie’s ending. To capture the final scene in a hospital, the crew treated the shoot like a documentary, using a long lens to observe Marty from a distance. Khondji recalls that the crew attempted to “erase” themselves physically, staying silent and remote so as not to invade the actors’ space during the deeply moving moment. This quiet, observational technique resulted in a powerful final shot that Khondji says left many of the crew and friends of the production in tears during screenings.

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MARTY SUPREME COSTUME DESIGN

The costume design for Marty Supreme complements a character defined by relentless self-invention and the “fake it till you make it” spirit of the American dream. Led by costume designer Miyako Bellizzi in her third collaboration with director Josh Safdie, the wardrobe was tasked with a massive scale of world-building, involving over 5,000 costumes and 150 speaking roles

Bellizzi and Safdie approached the 1952 setting as a “lived-in” reality where clothes reflect the internal state of the characters. Bellizzi describes the wardrobe as a manifestation of Marty’s aspirations. She notes that the gray suit he carries in a dry-cleaning bag early in the film represents the man he wants to be, rather than who he currently is. 

THE SILHOUETTE OF AMBITION: DRESSING MARTY MAUSER

To capture the essence of Marty Mauser, Bellizzi looked toward the “wise guys” and hustlers of the Lower East Side for inspiration. She placed Chalamet in boxy, oversized suits that drew heavily from the 1940s Zoot suit silhouette to telegraph his status as an outsider who felt he was greater than his job at a shoe store. A key technical adjustment involved the addition of shoulder pads to Chalamet’s suits. This change was intended to prevent the actor from looking “collegiate” and fundamentally altered his physical presence and gait. This “gangster” swagger was purposefully juxtaposed with his eyeglasses, which Safdie felt reflected a sense of youthful vulnerability and an “upward-striving” element of his character.

Timothee Chalamet and Josh Safdie on set of Marty Supreme

Marty Supreme | A24

In pursuit of extreme authenticity, Bellizzi obsessively searched for specific vintage items, such as the exact shape of a 1950s tank top that Marty wears under his shirts. She notes that the shape of a vintage tee is distinct from modern versions, and finding the right one felt like “winning the lottery.” One of the most iconic additions to Marty’s wardrobe — a pair of red leather gloves — came about organically during a fitting when Chalamet simply threw them on while eating a hot dog. This spontaneous moment of creativity led to the custom fabrication of the gloves, which became a favorite detail of the design team.

Marty Supreme's red gloves

Marty Supreme | A24

THE “BIBLE” OF THE LOWER EAST SIDE VS. UPPER EAST SIDE HAUTE COUTURE

The visual world of Marty Supreme is divided by a sharp class contrast between the Lower East Side and Upper East Side. As previously noted, the primary reference for the downtown world was a 1955 Ken Jacobs documentary shot on Orchard Street. The filmmakers treated this as their “Bible” for the film. In the Lower East Side, Bellizzi used silhouettes from the 1940s to suggest that people were wearing clothes they had owned for a decade, creating a sense of history and immigrant struggle. She even sourced women’s tights from a Hasidic Jewish Center in Williamsburg to ensure every layer was historically accurate.

This contrasts with the world inhabited by the former movie star, Kay Stone (Paltrow). For Kay’s wardrobe, Bellizzi looked toward the “New Look” of emerging fashion houses like Dior and Balenciaga. Kay’s character arc is told through a subtle color story: she begins the film in a “grayscale world” of black and white to reflect her emotional stagnation, but her palette eventually softens into pale blues, creams, and butter yellows as she meets Marty. Her red dress in Central Park marks a pivotal emotional awakening, signifying a moment when she feels truly alive again.

GLOBAL SCOPE AND PERSONAL HISTORY IN JAPAN

The production’s scope extended far beyond New York, requiring Bellizzi to design table-tennis uniforms for 16 national teams, including Brazil, India, and Germany. Each team required distinct polo silhouettes, warm-ups, and custom chest patches that Bellizzi either researched or invented from scratch. The film also required 10 custom-made warmup uniforms for the Harlem Globetrotters, as authentic vintage versions from the 1950s were impossible to source in necessary quantities.

All nations in table tennis tournament in Timothee Chalamet and Josh Safdie on set of Marty Supreme film

Marty Supreme | A24 | Matt Heister

Marty Supreme - Nations in Tournament

Marty Supreme | A24

The Japan sequences held deep personal significance for Bellizzi, who utilized her own family archives to research the postwar era. Her family had been in American internment camps during the war before relocating to New York, and she used photos of her great uncle in uniform to inform the looks of the “everyday people” in the Tokyo scenes. She aimed for an intimacy in the Japanese wardrobe that felt grounded in real family history rather than generic period tropes.

LIVED-IN REALISM AND CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION

A hallmark of the Safdie-Bellizzi collaboration is the lived-in quality of the costumes. Because Safdie believes that captured life should look like it wasn’t created for the camera, Bellizzi’s team would often weather the clothes they built to make them look authentic. This included distressing fabrics and aging garments so they appeared to have been worn for years. This philosophy extended to supporting characters like Marty’s mother (Drescher), and his girlfriend Rachel (A’zion). Rachel’s wardrobe included 1950s-accurate maternity wear, such as pencil skirts with cutouts for her belly, built specifically to handle the action-packed nature of the script.

Odessa A'Zion behind the scenes of Marty Supreme

Odessa A’zion as Rachel Mizler | jimagraphy via Instagram

Working with icons like Isaac Mizrahi and Sandra Bernhard also provided unique collaborative opportunities. Mizrahi, a designer himself, acted as a creative partner in his own fittings, discussing bias cuts and tailoring with Bellizzi. For the character of Wally, played by Tyler the Creator, Bellizzi had to actively “tone down” the artist’s natural flair for bright colors to ensure his character remained distinct from his public persona, opting instead for baggy shirts and braces that fit the period’s “outsider” vibe

Tyler the Creator wardrobe in Marty Supreme

Marty Supreme | A24

In the end, the true measure of success wasn’t just period accuracy, but iconography. Safdie hoped the looks would inspire Halloween costumes. To him, this would serve as the ultimate proof that the wardrobe had distilled the character’s ‘essence’ into an instantly recognizable visual shorthand.

🏓 WATCH MARTY SUPREME 🏓

Transcending the boundaries of the traditional sports drama, Marty Supreme is a psychological symphony of period-accurate details that mirror the obsession of its protagonist. 

For filmmakers, the film showcases how production design, cinematography, and costume design can coalesce to form a unified narrative voice. Whether it is the grain of the 35mm stock or the specific silhouette of a boxy 1950s suit, every choice on screen is an intentional reflection of Marty Mauser’s internal world.

Marty Supreme is currently in theaters and will be made available to watch on major streaming services and for digital purchase in the coming months. 

Don’t miss the opportunity to witness Safdie’s “cinema of anxiety” on the largest screen possible to fully appreciate the “brash beauty” of Khondji’s photography.

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The level of detail found in Marty Supreme is the result of decades of experience — knowledge that is meant to be shared. At Filmmakers Academy, we provide the resources to help you bridge the gap between creative inspiration and professional technical execution.

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The Look of Die My Love https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-look-of-die-my-love/ Tue, 11 Nov 2025 10:53:25 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=106861 “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 […]

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“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 previous work, this film dives deep into the psychological trauma of its characters, where the horror starts in the interior and inevitably splashes out into the physical world. Adapted from the novel by Ariana Harwicz, Die My Love is a raw examination of depression, modern anxiety, and the desperate, carnal desire for anything beyond the profound isolation of marriage and motherhood. 

We are introduced to Grace (Jennifer Lawrence) and Jackson (Robert Pattinson) in a rush of youthful, all-consuming sexual desire. This passion is the entire basis of their relationship. But when they move from New York to an abandoned house in the vast emptiness of Montana to have a baby, the reality of responsibility lands with a thud. 

(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

Beware: This is not a traditional narrative. It is a series of visceral, sensory experiences. We watch Grace descend, and we, like the other characters, are led to assume it’s postpartum depression. But Ramsay hints at deeper, older cracks. Is this madness the result of a childhood she can’t remember, orphaned by a plane crash at ten? Or is it the simpler, more horrifying realization that she and Jackson, outside of their physical connection, have nothing in common? 

PRO TIP: Bookmark this page so you can easily refer back to it later. 

Carnel Desires & The Bottomless Hole

As Grace struggles to find any purpose, she retreats into the only thing that ever felt real: her carnal desires. These manifest in haunting, surreal visions. A mysterious black horse appears, an animal they later crash into. A mysterious motorcyclist begins to visit her for nightly trysts — a figure who may be a real lover, or a complete phantom of her imagination. 

The horror is compounded by Jackson’s ineffectual attempts to help. He is clueless. Just like when he brings home a chaotic, untrained dog that Grace refuses even to acknowledge. He leaves their child alone in his crib to take her on a drive. Even after Grace is committed and returns from a mental hospital, he furnishes the house to feel more like a “home,” but it’s a hollow gesture. It’s a devastating realization that no amount of new furniture can fill an irreconcilable internal void.

What culminates from this profound isolation? When the loud music of youth finally stops, what happens when you are forced to be alone with your thoughts — and what if there are no real thoughts to contend with? What if the only thing to face is an enormous, bottomless hole, an abyss that can feel the entire world but can never, ever be satiated?

This is the great horror of life…

This is The Look of Die My Love.

Die My Love Poster

 

CONTENTS:
  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design

 

♀ DIE MY LOVE TECH SPECS ♂

Die My Love Tech Specs - Banner

  • Runtime: 1h 59m (119 minutes)
  • Color: 
    • Color 
  • Aspect Ratio: 
    • 1.33 : 1 
  • Camera: 
    • Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL2
    • Panavision PVintage
    • Super Speed MKII
    • Petzval Lenses
  • Negative Format: 
    • 35 mm (Kodak Vision3 200T 5213, Vision3 500T 5219, Ektachrome 100D 5294)
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • Digital Intermediate (4K, master format)
    • Super 35 (source format)
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • D-Cinema 

 

♀ THE WORLD OF DIE MY LOVE ♂

The World of Die My Love - Banner

THE ISOLATING WONDER OF THE FRONTIER

Where the novel was set in rural France, Lynne Ramsay’s adaptation intentionally changes the location to the vast, empty countryside of Montana. This crucial move places the characters into the heart of an American frontier that feels both whimsically beautiful and profoundly isolating. The protagonists are immediately framed as outsiders, a youthful couple completely out of place in this rural wonderland and dangerously unprepared for their new circumstances as parents. 

Grace and Jackson in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

Ramsay establishes this voyeuristic and unsettling tone from the opening. The camera lingers in a static wide shot down a hallway, forcing us to observe the characters as they examine their new home. It feels like watching a play. By refusing to give us close-ups, Ramsay denies us access to their micro-expressions or any clear signs of uncertainty. Instead, they appear, at first glance, like any newly married couple (though we later learn they are not) choosing their first home. 

The house itself is a character, a tomb they’ve inherited. It belonged to Jackson’s deceased uncle, who committed suicide within its walls. It’s a chilling detail that immediately foreshadows the tragedy to come. Even after the young couple moves in, they do little to fix the place up. The house remains in a state of disrepair, a stark visual metaphor for their own unwillingness, or inability, to build a stable home or relationship.

A SICKNESS IN THE BLOODLINE

This exploration of madness is not limited to Grace. The film suggests a deeper, perhaps inherited, fragility in Jackson’s family. His elderly father, Harry (Nick Nolte), appears to be suffering from dementia. During what should be a happy housewarming party, he sits apart from everyone, confused and disconnected. His confusion soon turns to aggression as he causes a scene, yelling for everyone to leave his brother’s house.

Grace dances with Harry in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

This culminates in one of the film’s first truly surreal moments. Later that night, the old man wanders outside, and the pregnant Grace follows him. There, in the cold Montana air, an unspoken understanding seems to pass between them. They end up dancing, a strange, silent, and deeply human moment of connection that acts as a prelude to his death in the very next scene. It’s a touching, haunting sequence that links Grace’s psychological state not just to her own desires, but to the generational sorrow of the very family she has married into.

Grace in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

THE SOBRIETY OF DAY, THE DESIRE OF NIGHT

The film’s visual language is built on a stark divide. Throughout the story, the carnal, primal side of Grace unleashes itself almost exclusively under the veil of night. The use of film stock (a bold choice by Ramsay and DP Seamus McGarvey) supplants the texture of this veil, creating a velvet, grainy, and fantastical impression that perfectly supports the surreal tone. 

While her isolation and anxieties are exposed under the harsh, analytical light of day, the nighttime sets her free. She is alone, unbound, and able to pursue the black horse that appears to her, a phantom representing her wild, uncertain, and dangerous desires. These surrealistic nighttime sequences are set in the wilderness — on lonely roads or just outside the flimsy security of a home. It is only in the dark that she truly partakes in the acts she craves. 

THE SPELL OF NIGHT

Grace is not the only one haunted by the darkness. After Harry’s passing, her mother-in-law, Pam (Sissy Spacek), is caught under the spell of her own loss and mourning. She, too, becomes a nocturnal figure, sleepwalking down a lonely street and clutching a shotgun for a protection she can’t articulate. 

The shotgun becomes a terrifying plot point. When Grace checks on Pam during the day, a startled Pam nearly blows her head off, thinking she’s an intruder. This intense encounter, however, gives way to a moment of attempted connection. Pam asks Grace how she’s doing. In response, Grace completely shuts down, a reaction that becomes a painful, recurring part of the narrative. She is triggered anytime anyone brings up her role as a mother. 

Consequently, Grace’s own suppressed violence finally erupts. After the family gets into a car accident by striking the mysterious black horse, their new dog is badly injured. That night, as the dog whines ceaselessly, Grace’s sanity frays. She demands that Jackson put the dog down. He refuses, saying he’ll go to the vet in the morning. Unable to bear the sound any longer, Grace walks to Pam’s, retrieves the shotgun from her sleeping mother-in-law’s grip, walks back home, and shoots the dog. 

Jackson digging a hole for his dog in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

THE BLUR BETWEEN FANTASY AND REALITY

Grace’s nightly desires blur the line between fantasy and a sordid reality. The mysterious motorcyclist who visits her for carnal trysts seems like another phantom. But later, Grace spots him with his family at a grocery store. When he sees her, a spark of a shared secret in his eyes confirms their connection is real.

His wife, sensing the intrusion, brushes Grace off. This only deepens Grace’s obsession. Later, she wanders to his family’s home, waits for him to come out, and they sneak into a nearby toolshed. This desperate, tangible act confirms her desires are not just in her head, cementing her choice to retreat from her domestic prison into a world of pure, carnal impulse.

ISOLATION VS THE PUBLIC

Ramsay forces Grace and Jackson into public settings only a few times, and these moments are intentionally jarring. In these bright, loud, “normal” places, Jackson tries to acquiesce to social norms, while Grace’s isolation becomes even more pronounced. She is utterly incapable of connecting with anyone. 

At a children’s party, surrounded by happy families, she is combative and detached. This culminates in a shocking scene where she makes a spectacle of herself, stripping down to her underwear and hopping into a pool full of kids.

This destructive public behavior climaxes at their own wedding reception. At first, the event is filled with fun, drinking, and laughter. But as Grace becomes increasingly drunk, her carnal side takes over. She is seen walking on all fours, like an animal, on the dance floor. 

When she is finally left alone in the honeymoon suite, she pops a bottle of champagne and convinces the man at the front desk to come up to her room. In a final act of self-destruction, she places her baby into a stroller and walks in a trance down the road. 

♀ DIE MY LOVE PRODUCTION DESIGN ♂

Die My Love Production Design - Banner

The production design of Die My Love, led by Tim Grimes, is central to the film’s suffocating, psychological horror. It joins a long tradition of “haunted house” movies where the horror isn’t from ghosts, but from the trauma and madness of its occupants. As Samantha Bergeson of ELLE Decor notes, the aging house is a direct “reflection of the frustrations” of the characters who live “alongside their own personal ghosts.”

FINDING A “PLAYGROUND” FOR MADNESS

While the Ariana Harwicz novel was set in rural France, Lynne Ramsay relocated the action to the “middle-of-nowhere Montana” (per ABC Arts), specifically shooting in Calgary. 

Production designer Tim Grimes “fell in love” with a dilapidated farmhouse during the location scout. Although it was in disrepair and had to be rebuilt from the ground up, Grimes knew it was the perfect “playground” for Ramsay to explore the story’s themes.

Jackson and Grace arguing in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

Grimes’s goal was to “make it a little bit surreal and a little bit of a storybook quality” without being overt. 

“You don’t want the audience to notice what you’ve done either,” he told ELLE Decor, “You don’t want to be screaming out, ‘We decorated this house!’” 

This approach extended to the house’s narrative DNA. The home was inherited from Jackson’s uncle, who had committed suicide there, immediately layering the space with a history of death and grief before Grace and Jackson even arrive.

CONTRAST: THE NONCONFORMIST HOME VS. THE “BORING” WORLD

Grimes overtly emphasized the stark contrast between the fly-ridden, eclectically decorated farmhouse and the “absolutely boring” and “cookie-cutter” spec houses of the neighboring suburban world. This choice fueled the farmhouse’s design, making it as nonconformist and individualized as its inhabitants.

Grace looking out the window of the house in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

This contrast makes the film’s ending all the more tragic. After Grace’s stay in a mental hospital, Jackson attempts to “fix” their lives by redecorating the house in the same generic, IKEA-esque mold they once stood against. As ELLE Decor points out, this “exorcism” of their past trauma doesn’t work, proving that the house is only as haunted as its occupants.

THE WALLPAPER OF CONFINEMENT

A key element of this “surreal” design is the now-viral bathroom wallpaper. In one of the film’s most intense clips, Grace claws away at the walls, a physical attempt “to shed the confinement of being a housewife and mother.” This fern palm-patterned wallpaper, sourced from Astek in Los Angeles, was a specific and contested choice. 

Grace scratching the walls of the bathroom - Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

 

“Everyone was like, ‘That’s not a country house wallpaper,’ and I was like, ‘I disagree,’” Grimes stated. 

His artistic instinct was validated in an art-mirroring-life moment when the team found a similar wallpaper “under layers of wallpaper in that house” during the rebuild.

Grace and the green fern wallpaper in the farmhouse

Die My Love | Black Label Media

 

♀ DIE MY LOVE CINEMATOGRAPHY ♂

Die My Love Cinematography - Banner

The visual language of Die My Love is a masterful and unsettling “pictorial depiction of a breakdown,” as cinematographer Seamus McGarvey, ASC, BSC describes it. Reuniting with director Lynne Ramsay after their collaboration on We Need to Talk About Kevin, McGarvey knew the camera would be central to the narrative. 

“When you embark on a film with Lynne… you know that the camera is going to be central,” he shares.

Lynne Ramsay and Seamus McGarvey on the set of Die My Love

Courtesy of Seamus McGarvey

The goal was to craft a film that stepped away from simple realism and embraced the emotional, often skewed, perception of its protagonist, Grace. The result is a haunting, poetic, and technically daring visual experience.

THE RETURN TO 35MM EKTACHROME

To capture this “skewed perspective of the truth,” McGarvey and Ramsay made the bold choice to shoot on film. McGarvey’s initial suggestion was to use Kodak Ektachrome 100D, a color reversal film stock that Ramsay had previously used on Morvern Callar

“We didn’t want it to feel like a realist film,” McGarvey explains, and Ektachrome, with its “unique photographic signature,” was the perfect tool to embody Grace’s inner world.

Die My Love Color Palette

colorpalette.cinema

This choice presented significant technical challenges. With a low exposure index of 100D, the day interiors were a constant battle.

“We needed to pump a lot of light into the sets,” McGarvey acknowledges. However, this limitation became a creative benefit, as the “decisiveness of the impact of strong sources gave it a particular look.”

Shooting on film also brought a sense of risk and commitment that Ramsay, a frugal director who knows exactly what she wants, thrives on. 

Panavision film camera on Die My Love

Photo by Seamus McGarvey

“There is a mystery to film,” McGarvey muses. “You don’t know that it’s definitely there. There’s something really special about that because you’ve taken a step into the dark, literally.”

 

THE SURREALITY OF DAY-FOR-NIGHT

The low sensitivity of Ektachrome reversal stock made it impossible to use for the film’s many night scenes. This led to another key stylistic decision: shooting all night exteriors as day-for-night.

Die My Love Color Palette

colorpalette.cinema

McGarvey explains that this choice “gave a sense of surreality to the night work because it doesn’t look real… There’s an absolutely avowed sense of artifice.” 

Day for Night - Die My Love Day4Night - Die My Love

For these scenes, the team switched to Kodak Vision3 negative film stocks (200T or 500T) to get a proper exposure in the shady forest environments. 

“We exposed it normally but printed down in the timing,” he says. The result was a lower-contrast, dream-like, and “twilight unreal” image that perfectly suited the film’s psychological state.

FRAMING CLAUSTROPHOBIA: THE ACADEMY ASPECT RATIO

One of the most defining visual choices was the film’s 1.33:1 Academy aspect ratio. Ramsay and McGarvey felt the location itself dictated this “boxy” format.

“When we saw the location, I wanted to see the whole door rather than cut it off,” Ramsay recalls. “It’s quite a portrait film anyhow, and so it felt like the location dictated the Academy frame.”

Grace (Jennifer Lawrence) in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

This choice proved essential for the film’s themes.

“This film was about portraits, and it was about claustrophobia, and it was about people in a little boxy house,” McGarvey says. 

The 1.33:1 aspect ratio perfectly “fitted the house” and created a sense of confinement. It also allowed for powerful compositions, “putting people in the bottom or the edges of frame” to visually enhance their isolation.

LENSES FOR A FRACTURED MINDSTATE

To further enhance the skewed perspective, McGarvey turned to specific, character-driven lenses, supplied by Panavision in Calgary. The primary set was the PVintage primes — modern-mechanic updates of legacy Super Speeds and Ultra Speeds — which McGarvey describes as “really beautiful.”

Grace at her wedding in Die My Love

Die My Love | Black Label Media

For Grace’s most intense psychological “moments in her head,” he employed two Petzval lenses (a 58mm and an 85mm). These specialty lenses are known for their unique, “swirly bokeh around the edges.” 

This optical distortion created a visible, signature effect that mirrored Grace’s mental unraveling, especially in scenes with dappled backgrounds like trees.

THE CAMERA AS A COMMUNING FORCE

The camera in Die My Love is rarely a passive observer.

“There’s a lot of silence in the film,” McGarvey notes, “and I think that cinematography is uniquely served to depict those kinds of ideas.”

Behind the scenes of Die My Love with Jennifer Lawrence

Courtesy of Chris Chow

To achieve this, the team relied heavily on the “second to none” handheld and Steadicam work of operator Chris Chow. This mobility was essential for working with actors of the caliber of Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson. 

“You’ve got to give them some leeway because they always offer up surprises and beautiful moments of happenstance,” McGarvey says.

This nimble approach proved critical for Ramsay, who famously follows her instincts.

“If she’s not feeling the spirit of the shot, she’ll abandon it immediately,” McGarvey shares. “That is why her films kind of have this peculiar ring to them, because they’re unequivocally filtered through her director’s mind and heart.” 

This combination of instinctive direction and responsive camerawork created a final film that McGarvey describes as “defiantly a piece of poetic cinema.”

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♀ DIE MY LOVE COSTUME DESIGN ♂

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The costume design of Die My Love, led by Catherine George, was an element that director Lynne Ramsay was “across every inch” of, working closely with her team to build the film’s specific visual world (ABC Arts). 

The approach was less about creating standout “costumes” and more about finding a precise visual palette that could track the characters’ emotional states. 

As Ramsay explained to ABC Arts, “We were looking at color palettes for different moods.”

Die My Love Color Palette

colorpalette.cinema

Grace’s main costume in the film is a perfect encapsulation of this philosophy. At her wedding, she wears a “powder-blue dress… with its slightly 50s feel” (ABC Arts). This choice is highly symbolic. Ramsay notes that this look represents Grace “at the beginning,” when she is “bright and hopeful.”

This initial, distinct identity then deliberately erodes as the film’s suffocating world closes in. As Grace’s psychological state fractures and she becomes lost in the isolation of motherhood and her unraveling marriage, her wardrobe reflects this internal collapse. 

Jennifer Lawrence as Grace in Die My Love Jennifer Lawrence as Grace in Die My Love

Ramsay notes that Grace eventually “starts dressing like everyone else,” a visual cue showing she has shed her bright, hopeful individuality and is conforming to a suffocating world.

This subtle but powerful transformation in her clothing is a key part of the film’s visual language, tracing her journey from a “punk rocker” who is “setting the world on fire” to a woman who feels “eradicated from her own space” (ABC Arts, The Film Stage).

 

♀ WATCH DIE MY LOVE ♂

Watch Die My Love - Banner

Die My Love is a visceral, poetic, and uncompromising cinematic experience. It showcases a team of artists — Lynne Ramsay, Seamus McGarvey, Tim Grimes, and Catherine George, along with a fearless cast — working at the absolute peak of their craft. 

From its claustrophobic Academy-ratio framing and surreal day-for-night sequences to its psychologically-charged production design, this film demands that audiences see, feel, and study it.

Now that you’ve explored the incredible detail and artistry that went into every frame, it’s time to witness the final, haunting result.

 

Die My Love is currently playing in theaters and will soon arrive on major streaming services and for digital purchase.

Feeling inspired by the incredible level of artistry in Lynne Ramsay’s film? The techniques used to create such powerful, psychologically-driven masterpieces are at the very core of what we teach at Filmmakers Academy. 

If you’re ready to move beyond the technical and start mastering the skills of visual storytelling, cinematography, and directing, our All Access membership is your next step.

JOIN OUR ALL ACCESS MEMBERSHIP TO LEARN FROM INDUSTRY PROFESSIONALS!

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WORKS CITED: 

Bergeson, Samantha. “Two New Movies, Die My Love and Sentimental Value, Redefine the Haunted House Genre.” Yahoo! Entertainment, 8 Nov. 2025, www.yahoo.com/entertainment/movies/articles/two-movies-die-love-sentimental-150000659.html.

Bradshaw, Peter. “Die My Love review – Jennifer Lawrence excels in intensely sensual study of a woman in meltdown.” The Guardian, 17 May 2025, www.theguardian.com/film/2025/may/17/die-my-love-review-jennifer-lawrence-excels-in-intensely-sensual-study-of-a-woman-in-meltdown.

Feldberg, Isaac. “‘You’re Living Intrusive Thoughts’: Jennifer Lawrence and Lynne Ramsay on “Die My Love”.” RogerEbert.com, 2025, www.rogerebert.com/interviews/die-my-love-jennifer-lawrence-lynne-ramsay-interview.

Hammond, Caleb. ““Let the Location Speak to You”: Lynne Ramsay on Die My Love, Shooting Academy Ratio, and Adapting Impossible Novels.” The Film Stage, 10 Nov. 2025, thefilmstage.com/let-the-location-speak-to-you-lynne-ramsay-on-die-my-love-shooting-academy-ratio-and-adapting-impossible-novels/.

Newland, Christina. “‘She’s a beast’: Jennifer Lawrence’s extreme new role is a radical portrayal of a woman on the edge.” BBC Culture, 4 Nov. 2025, www.bbc.com/culture/article/20251104-the-power-of-jennifer-lawrences-extreme-new-role.

Panavision. “Seamus McGarvey ASC BSC on the cinematography of Die My Love.” Panavision, www.panavision.com/highlights/highlights-detail/seamus-mcgarvey-asc-bsc-on-the-cinematography-of-die-my-love.

Russell, Stephen A. “Die My Love filmmaker Lynne Ramsay on realising a punk rock adaptation of Ariana Harwicz’s novel.” ABC Arts, 8 Nov. 2025, www.abc.net.au/news/2025-11-09/die-my-love-movie-jennifer-lawrence-martin-scorsese-lynne-ramsay/105948060.

The Making Of. “Seamus McGarvey ASC BSC on the cinematography of Die My Love.” The Making Of, themakingof.substack.com/p/die-my-love-cinematographer-seamus.

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The Look of One Battle After Another https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-one-battle-after-another/ Tue, 14 Oct 2025 02:15:11 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=106580 “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 […]

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“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 translate the author’s complex prose but does so with a startling and urgent modern lens. The casting of Leonardo DiCaprio, following Joaquin Phoenix (as Doc Sportello), solidifies a fascinating trend of PTA pairing generational actors with Pynchon’s bewildered, soulful protagonists.

By streamlining Vineland‘s multifaceted plot, the film focuses on a more intimate, melancholic, and deeply resonant theme. The quiet apathy and lingering ghosts of a revolution gone wrong. This focus on the “aftermath” is classic PTA. The director excels at exploring the emotional spaces after the primary drama has unfolded. More specifically, where characters are left to grapple with the consequences. 

(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

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What makes One Battle After Another arguably PTA’s most prescient work is its brilliant decision to ground the narrative in a modern context. The on-screen world, with its militarized police presence and public protests against anti-immigrant movements, feels ripped directly from today’s headlines. The film’s central conflict — the grassroots “French 75” movement versus the shadowy white supremacist cabal, the “Christmas Adventurers Club” — transforms Pynchon’s text into a powerful and uncomfortable mirror to our current political landscape.

This approach marks a significant return to the kind of explicit, politically charged filmmaking that defined the great American cinema of the 1970s. In an era where such directness is often avoided by major studios in a meaningful way, PTA is clearly making a bold statement. He’s championing the idea of activism and resistance in the face of creeping fascism. The film leverages Pynchon’s core truth: that reality is often far more absurd and terrifying than fiction.

CINEMA THAT IS MORE THAN FICTION…

A film like One Battle After Another doesn’t feel like a movie so much as a vital, anxious pulse beat for our current moment. PTA takes the soul from the source material, and like a used needle he dug up on Venice Beach, he mainlines its paranoia directly into the present, creating a world where the line between absurdist fiction and our own fractured reality has completely dissolved. In an age where decades of change feel crammed into a single year, this is cinema as a warning shot. It’s a declaration that the battle for a nation’s soul is far from over, and a powerful confirmation that… the revolution has only just begun.

This is The Look of One Battle After Another.

One Battle After Another Poster

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design

 

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER TECH SPECS

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER TECH SPECS

  • Runtime: 2h 41m (161 minutes)
  • Color:
  • Aspect Ratio:
    • 1.43 : 1 (IMAX GT Laser & IMAX 70MM)
    • 1.50 : 1 (VistaVision)
    • 1.85 : 1
  • Camera:
    • Beaumont VistaVision Camera
    • Leica R Lenses
    • Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL2
    • Panavision Primo Lenses
  • Negative Format:
    • 35 mm (also horizontal, Kodak Vision3 250D 5207, Vision3 200T 5213, Vision3 500T 5219)
  • Cinematographic Process:
    • Spherical
    • Super 35 (source format, some scenes)
    • VistaVision (source format)
  • Printed Film Format:
    • 35 mm (also horizontal, Kodak Vision 2383)
    • 70 mm (also horizontal, also IMAX DMR blow-up)
    • D-Cinema
    • DCP Digital Cinema Package

 

THE WORLD OF

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

THE WORLD OF ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

The Agents of Change vs. The Agents of the State

The world is a-changing, whether you like it or not. In the universe of One Battle After Another, the agents of this change begin with the youth. The film opens on the sexy and audacious Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor), a key member of the revolutionary group, “The French 75.” As she walks down a highway overpass at dusk, the camera leads her over a makeshift immigrant detention center. This facility is guarded by a score of U.S. soldiers led by Col. Steven J. Lockjaw (Sean Penn).

Still of One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

Lockjaw is the very embodiment of American grit twisted into perversity. He is a lapdog to power, representing those individuals willing to do anything to be accepted by the ruling class. In other words, people like Lockjaw are unable to see anything outside the narrow confines of their own ambition. This opening image immediately establishes a clear paradigm. The stark opposition between those who strive to correct the injustices of the world, like Perfidia, and those who are willing participants in enacting that injustice, like Lockjaw.

The film then expands this paradigm even further. Beyond the immediate conflict on the street, we have the innocent victims — the immigrants being persecuted — and the ultimate victimizers, ‘The Christmas Adventurers.’ This fascist cabal, a shadowy collective of old-wealth elites, titans of industry, politicians, and select military officers, is the mastermind behind the anti-immigration rhetoric and policy sweeping over the nation.

A Revolution Born of Passion and Betrayal

Perfidia is dating a fellow French 75 member, Bob Ferguson (DiCaprio), a skilled bombmaker. It soon becomes clear, however, that his love for revolution does not exceed his love for Perfidia. On some level, his inspiration for radical action seems directly connected to his desire for her. 

Still of One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

This dynamic is put to the test in the film’s explosive opening sequence, where the French 75 liberates the detention center under Lockjaw’s command. During the chaos, Perfidia uses her sex appeal as a weapon. She subdues Lockjaw in a move that unexpectedly awakens in him a kink for being dominated by her, sparking an immediate and intense infatuation.

Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

This daring liberation becomes a storied exploit. It grants the group notoriety and makes them heroes of the resistance. For Lockjaw, however, it becomes a personal mission to track Perfidia down. A mission driven by both duty and desire. He eventually corners her as she is planting a bomb in an office building. 

Perfidia in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

He offers her an ultimatum: meet him that night at a motel, and he will keep her secret. She complies, satisfying his kink, and nine months later, gives birth to a daughter, Willa, whom Bob believes is his own.

Perfidia in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

After this moment, a shift occurs…

Perfidia, perhaps driven by guilt or a renewed sense of purpose, becomes even more resolute in her revolutionary mission, but also more reckless. In contrast, Bob retreats into domestic life. He stays home with their baby, his revolutionary spirit seemingly quelled by the satisfaction of fatherhood. 

The balance is broken, and during a bank robbery, Perfidia kills a security guard. The entire group is forced to flee, leading to an intense getaway sequence. Perfidia is captured, and the surviving members of the French 75 are scattered into hiding or systematically killed. Bob is given a new identity and escapes with the baby.

One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

The Absurdity of Power and the Christmas Adventurers’ Club

One of the more absurdist, and thus Pynchon-esque, threads of the story is Lockjaw’s desperate pursuit of acceptance into the Christmas Adventurers’ Club. This racist, super-secret society is an old boys’ club that seems to be a cross between the Safari Club, Masonic Lodge, and Skull and Bones, all wrapped into one — holding a fascist grip on the levers of power. They occasionally allow certain military figures to join, but only if they meet the strict criteria: being white and having never been part of an interracial relationship, among them.

Lockjaw, haunted by his past with Perfidia, lies about his history to gain entry. To cover his tracks, he abuses his military power to search for Willa and eventually conduct a DNA test, confirming his deepest fear and hope: that she is, in fact, his daughter. This reckless pursuit is what places the aging, scattered members of the French 75 back in mortal danger and set the main action of the story in motion.

The assassin in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

In a chilling scene, the severity of the club’s ideology is laid bare. An assassin, appearing as a clean-cut, pasty Lacoste-wearing, country club-frequenting “good boy,” is guided through a labyrinth of secret hallways beneath a mansion. He enters a large masonic-like room with a small committee of wealthy men (as white as mayonnaise) who have discovered Lockjaw’s secret. They give the order to “clean up the situation,” meaning to kill not only Lockjaw for his transgression but also his potential child. This moment shows their unwavering and lethal ideology, revealing their power and stranglehold on society. This is exactly what the revolution is up against. 

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER PRODUCTION DESIGN

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER PRODUCTION DESIGN

One Battle After Another achieves an epic scope that feels both fantastical and tangibly real. The story races from the redwood forests of Northern California to the sun-baked hills of the Anza-Borrego desert and the stark reality of the Tijuana border. Creating this sprawling, yet intimate, world was the monumental task of production designer Florencia Martin, who previously collaborated with Anderson on the meticulously recreated 1970s San Fernando Valley of Licorice Pizza.

For One Battle After Another, Martin had to craft a unique vision: a sort of present-day reality that exists in a world all its own. The goal was to go “beyond the matte paintings” and create an immersive space that the audience could step into. Drawing from insights with Martin, let’s delve into how the production design team built the unforgettable world of the film, piece by practical piece.

Behind the scenes of One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

A Tapestry of Unseen California

As previously mentioned, the film is loosely based on Thomas Pynchon’s novel Vineland, with the story’s origins in the redwood country of Humboldt County. This set the tone for the entire scouting process. 

“We’d go to all these inland neighborhoods like Sacramento, Stockton, Fresno,” Martin explains. “It really is like a tapestry of California to me — a California that we don’t really know.”

Sacremento Stockton
Sacramento (L) | Stockton (R)

The production filmed across at least nine California counties and in El Paso, Texas, deliberately avoiding typical coastal sights. The Sacramento rail yards, the undulating “river of hills” near the Texas Dip in Borrego Springs, and the Otay Mesa border crossing give the film a visual identity completely distinct from other California-set movies. This adherence to exclusively finding unique, authentic locations was foundational for the film’s grounded feel.

Anza Borrego El Paso Texas
Anza Borrego (L) | El Paso Texas (R) 

Building the Worlds Within the World

Bob and Willa’s Redwood Hideout

To create the secluded home where Bob has raised his daughter, Willa, for 16 years, the team found a single-bedroom house engulfed by redwoods. The design philosophy was one of accumulation. 

“It’s that sense of someone who found a little sanctuary… and got really settled in,” says Martin. 

Redwood cabin in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

The space was dressed with years of history, using artwork from Anderson’s own children and baby photos from Chase Infiniti herself to create an authentic sense of a lived-in family home. In a touch of Pynchon-esque whimsy, a nearby property filled with tiny, moss-covered cars became the location for the redwood outhouse, built right amongst them as if it were another of Bob’s eccentric hobbies.

Sensei’s ‘Underground Railroad’ Apartment

For the sprawling safe house run by Sensei Sergio St. Carlos (Benicio Del Toro), the production moved to El Paso, Texas. A location scout found the Genesis Perfumeria, a shop with an “incredible fluorescent green interior” and a staircase leading to an empty second floor. This discovery sparked the entire sequence. 

Benico Del Toro in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

“That’s how his story started to grow,” Martin notes. 

Her team then built Sensei’s apartment and the entire warren of interconnected living spaces for refugees practically on that empty second floor. 

“That is one of my favorite sets I’ve ever been a part of,” Martin says, explaining how they gave a unique story and design to each family’s space.

The Sisters of the Brave Beaver Compound

Inspired by the real-life “weed nuns” of California’s Sisters of the Valley, the film features a secluded convent. The challenge was finding a location that felt authentic and not overly restored. After visiting numerous missions, the team chose La Purisima Mission in Lompoc. 

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another film at nunnery

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

“La Purisima was the most stripped away, the closest to being a believable space that these women would have found… and taken it over,” Martin recalls. 

PTA BTS in One Battle After Another

Paul Thomas Anderson Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

It provided the perfect backdrop for the perverse paternity test scene, set within the mission’s chapel.

The Border Detention Camp

To create the chilling detention camps, authenticity and respect were paramount. Martin consulted contemporary and historic photos and worked with a military advisor. The team found an incredible location that allowed them to build their temporary camp right next to the actual border wall at Otay Mesa. 

Perfidia and Lockjaw in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

The experience was profoundly impactful, as Martin notes, “We would have Border Patrol and immigrants crossing in as we were shooting.” The design was based on the stark reality of how these centers are run and laid out, avoiding a fictionalized interpretation.

Designing the Details: From Secret Societies to Sci-Fi Tech

Beyond the major locations, the design team crafted the film’s more fantastical elements with a grounded approach. The nefarious Christmas Adventurer’s Club found its headquarters in Sacramento’s historic Reagan Mansion, its fittingly formal architecture providing the perfect backdrop for the shadowy cabal. 

For the revolutionaries’ tech, like their unique scanner devices, the team looked at a mix of real-world communication methods. 

“It was just looking at 3G networks and ham radios and satellite… and also a little bit of fantasy too,” Martin explains, resulting in technology that feels functional and, as she puts it, “already old.”

The Power of the Practical

The immersive, tangible quality of One Battle After Another is a direct result of a core filmmaking philosophy championed by Anderson and Martin: prioritize real, built environments over digital ones. 

“CGI can distance the audience, but architecture really holds you,” Martin states. 

On set of One Battle After Another film

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Photography by Thomas Anderson

From the practical build of Sensei’s apartment to the real desert hills of the car chase, every location feels authentic and lived-in. This dedication to craftsmanship grounds the film’s epic story and complex characters, making its world not just a spectacle to be watched but a reality to be experienced.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER CINEMATOGRAPHY

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER CINEMATOGRAPHY

Paul Thomas Anderson’s films are defined by their unforgettable visual language, and One Battle After Another is no exception. Reuniting with his recent collaborator, cinematographer Michael Bauman, Anderson has crafted a film that feels both timeless and urgently contemporary. The movie’s look is a chaotic, sun-baked, and often surprisingly beautiful mosaic, shot on film and presented in a variety of large formats, including the resurrected VistaVision, 70mm, and IMAX. This vision for analog capture and ambitious presentation is a bold statement in the digital age, creating a tangible, textured world for this modern revolutionary tale.

PTA cinematography in One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

The cinematography masterfully walks a tightrope, balancing the kinetic energy of a genre film with the intimate, character-focused portraiture that is Anderson’s signature. Let’s break down the key cinematic choices that define the look of this epic.

Embracing the Analog: VistaVision and the Power of Film

In an era of digital precision, Anderson and Bauman made the deliberate choice to shoot One Battle After Another on celluloid, primarily using the rare VistaVision format. This high-resolution format, which runs 35mm film horizontally through the camera, captures a larger, more detailed negative, resulting in a stunningly sharp yet organic image. As Leonardo DiCaprio notes, the film feels “tactile,” a direct result of shooting in “real cars, real environments and situations.”

Cinematography of One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

The choice of film also creates a distinctive visual texture. The inherent grain structure of the film stock adds a layer of authenticity and nostalgia, separating the film’s aesthetic from the often sterile look of modern digital cinematography. The color reproduction on film, especially in the direct VistaVision prints, is described as breathtaking, with a range and depth that feels both vibrant and true to life. This analog approach grounds the film’s sometimes absurd or fantastical events in a believable, textured reality.

Camera car on One Battle After Another film

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Photo by Robert Pitts

Letting Darkness Be Dark: A Philosophy of Night Cinematography

One of the most striking aspects of the film’s cinematography is its approach to night scenes. In an era where many films are criticized for being overly dark or murky, Bauman’s work here is praised for its clarity and deliberate use of darkness. The philosophy is simple but effective: let darkness be dark. Rather than trying to artificially light every corner of the frame for visibility, the team embraced deep shadows and allowed light to be motivated by practical sources.

Still of One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

This technique has a powerful effect. Night scenes look richer and more saturated, and the contrast between the pools of light and the surrounding darkness creates a sense of depth, mystery, and suspense. 

Border wall in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

As film critic Patrick Tomasso notes, “Our eyes can’t see everything at night in real life, so why should cameras?” This approach makes the darkness an active element in the composition, a space where threats can hide and characters can find temporary refuge.

Choices That Serve the Story: Embracing “Imperfection”

The cinematography in One Battle After Another isn’t afraid to be “imperfect.” It utilizes techniques that some might consider technically wrong, but that perfectly serve the film’s chaotic and disorienting story. Borderline overexposed daylight scenes convey the oppressive heat of the California desert, while unsettling, shaky handheld camera work plunges the audience directly into the frenetic energy of a chase or the paranoia of a character.

Desert in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

As DiCaprio describes, the action sequences are “done in a Paul Thomas Anderson fashion that is very unexpected.” Anderson and Bauman eschew slick, CGI-heavy set pieces in favor of a more bare-bones, visceral approach.

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another film

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

The camera is often right in the middle of the action, capturing real cars on real roads, with a “meta-jitteriness” that feels more authentic and thrilling than a perfectly smooth drone shot. These choices are deliberate decisions to prioritize the emotional and visceral experience over sterile technical perfection.

Paul Thomas Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Merrick Morton Photography

The Human Landscape: A Focus on Faces

For all its epic scale and visual pyrotechnics, One Battle After Another remains a deeply human story, and the cinematography reflects this. Anderson is a master at chronicling the human face, and this film is filled with stunning portraits that capture the complex inner lives of its characters.

Behind the Scenes in One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Warner Bros.

The use of large formats, such as VistaVision and IMAX 70mm, with their immense height and detail, draws the viewer incredibly close to the actors. Every nuance of a performance — a hint of doubt in Regina Hall’s eyes, a flash of fear on Chase Infiniti’s face, the weary lines on Leonardo DiCaprio’s — is captured with devastating clarity. 

Regina Hall in One Battle After Another

Regina Hall in One Battle After Another

As critic Jim Hemphill observed, this format makes the film a “meditation on faces and the histories they illustrate.” Even amidst the chaos of a shootout or a car chase, the camera consistently finds its way back to the human element, reminding the audience of the emotional stakes at the heart of the story. 

The VistaVision Presentation

For the first time in over 60 years, Anderson has championed the projection of a new feature film from true VistaVision prints, reviving a dormant but legendary format. This provides a viewing experience for audiences that is as close as possible to the original camera negative.

Created by Paramount Pictures in 1954 as a response to the rise of television, VistaVision is a high-resolution widescreen format. Unlike standard 35mm film, which runs vertically through the camera, VistaVision orients the film horizontally. This creates a negative frame that is twice the size (8 perforations wide, hence “8-perf”), resulting in a finer-grained, higher-quality, and more detailed image. Alfred Hitchcock was a notable champion of the format, using it for classics like Vertigo and North by Northwest.

A 60-Year Hiatus and a Triumphant Return 

After its heyday in the 1950s, VistaVision’s use for principal photography waned, with Marlon Brando’s One-Eyed Jacks being the last major American film shot and released this way. For decades, the format was kept alive almost exclusively for special effects work on blockbusters like the original Star Wars and Jurassic Park, where its high resolution was ideal for compositing.

Filming One Battle After Another

Behind the Scenes of One Battle After Another | Merrick Morton Photography

With One Battle After Another, Anderson has not only revived VistaVision for capture but has also worked with Warner Bros. to retrofit four select theaters worldwide — in Los Angeles, New York, Boston, and London — with the rare, specialized projectors required to screen true VistaVision prints. This is a significant undertaking, as these projectors must also run the film horizontally and are exceedingly rare. This allows audiences in those locations to see a print struck directly from the original cut negative, offering a viewing experience of unparalleled color and clarity.

The VistaVision Difference 

According to those who have seen the VistaVision presentation, there is a subtle but undeniable difference. The color reproduction is described as stunning, with a range and depth far greater than other formats. Cool colors appear colder, warm ones feel red-hot, and the subtle gradations across the spectrum are filled with rich detail. Anderson himself has noted that this presentation is the closest to the film’s intended look, offering a direct, unfiltered connection to the work of the cinematographer and the director. While other large formats like IMAX 70mm and standard 70mm offer their own immersive and beautiful experiences, the VistaVision print is unique in its direct photochemical lineage from the camera to the screen.

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ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

COSTUME DESIGN

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER COSTUME DESIGN

While epic car chases and sprawling landscapes grab the eye, the film’s character-driven story is powerfully yet subtly reinforced by the masterful work of Oscar-winning costume designer Colleen Atwood. Tasked with dressing a diverse cast of revolutionaries, white supremacists, high schoolers, and a freedom-fighting Sensei, Atwood perfected the art of what she calls “unconscious-conscious dressing”—creating looks that feel deeply authentic to the characters’ lives and circumstances, rather than costumes that scream for attention.

Dressing the Revolutionaries: The Subtlety of Living Off-Grid

Atwood’s collaboration with Anderson was organic, beginning with a serendipitous run-in. Early fittings with Leonardo DiCaprio and Chase Infiniti took place at Anderson’s own home, where he would shoot camera tests on 35mm film, allowing the team to collaboratively refine the looks.

Chase Infiniti in One Battle After Another Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another

For the revolutionaries of the “French 75,” the key was to avoid romanticizing their image. 

“It’s always a possibility in that world to over-romanticize… to want everyone to look like him,” Atwood says, referencing the iconic image of Che Guevara. “They’re living off the grid, so they don’t want you to notice what they’re wearing.” 

This philosophy is embodied in the uniform-like dressing of Deandra, whose simple attire reflects what Atwood calls a “Madonna-esque purity,” suggesting a character who is more concerned with her cause than with her clothes.

Bob’s Robe: An Accidental Icon

For Bob, the revolutionary-turned-stoner-dad, the initial idea was a simple sweatshirt. However, a fluid process of collaboration led to a more memorable choice. 

“I don’t know if it’s Paul or Leo who said, ‘What if he’s just in his robe?'” Atwood recalls. 

Bob Ferguson in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

Inspired by Jeff Bridges’ “The Dude,” Bob spends a significant portion of the film in a faded, checked bathrobe. Atwood sourced a vintage rental robe as a template, then custom-made multiples from a vintage-looking cotton-wool blend fabric, which was then heavily aged. The result is an “old, cheap dad robe” that perfectly captures Bob’s state of inertia and cozy paranoia. 

Even his shoes, a pair of Altra Lone Peak trail runners, were a practical choice influenced by DiCaprio’s preference for a wide toe box, with their subtle orange soles occasionally peeking through the grime.

Willa’s Skirt: Sweetness and Action-Ready Strength

The primary costume for the teenage Willa was inspired by a student Anderson saw wearing a petticoat skirt at a real high school dance in Eureka. Atwood took this idea and adapted it for the screen. Initially considering a faded pink, she ultimately chose blue to feel more “low-key” and less vulnerable, reflecting Willa’s emotional state. 

Willa in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

The skirt was crafted from airy silk gazar, cut with enough volume to catch air during action sequences and layered to allow light to pass through during dark exteriors. This sweet skirt was then contrasted with a tough, beaten-up leather jacket, described by Atwood as Grease-esque. 

“It felt right for her to have this beat-up jacket — that was her treasure,” she adds.

Dressing the Villains: From Awkward Aspirants to Real-Life Elites

For the white supremacist Christmas Adventurers’ Club, Atwood drew inspiration directly from real life. 

“I went to Orvis one day in Pasadena, and I saw one of the guys there who looked just like that,” she says, recalling a golf enthusiast who inspired one of the clandestine meeting costumes. “I went and bought exactly what the guy had.” 

This grounds the film’s antagonists in a recognizable, upper-class reality.

Col. Steve Lockjaw, an aspiring club member, is deliberately dressed to look out of place. His formalwear — a brand-new navy blazer, khaki pants, and tie — is what “his mother would’ve put him in for church on Easter Sunday.” The look is awkward and ill-fitting for the situations he’s in, reflecting his desperate, sad struggle for acceptance.

Sensei’s Style: A Collaborative and Authentic Look

Sensei Sergio St. Carlos was a particular highlight for Atwood, with a look that evolved through direct collaboration with the actor. The initial idea of keeping him in his gi was challenged by Del Toro himself, who questioned, “Why would I be hanging out in my gi doing my paperwork?”

Benecio Del Toro as Sensei in One Battle After Another

‘One Battle After Another’ Warner Bros.

Instead, the final look became a fusion of influences. He keeps his gi pants, but pairs them with a custom-made indigo denim jacket (inspired by a design from Jimmy McBride) and unique cowboy boots Atwood found on a scouting trip to El Paso. 

This piecemeal, rooted-in-reality look, combining martial arts attire with Western and custom elements, perfectly reflects the character’s unique role as a protector and guide, and exemplifies what Atwood calls the “very fluid way” the film’s costumes came together.

WATCH ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

WATCH ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

From the tangible, practical world built by Production Designer Florencia Martin to the stunning analog cinematography of Michael Bauman and the character-driven costumes of Colleen Atwood, One Battle After Another is a marvel of filmmaking at the highest level. It’s a film that demands to be seen, studied, and experienced. 

Now that you’ve explored the incredible detail and artistry that went into every frame, it’s time to witness the final, breathtaking result.

To get a taste of the film’s unique, action-packed, and visually stunning world, watch the official trailer below.

One Battle After Another is still in theaters, then it will be made available to watch on major streaming services and for digital purchase.

Feeling inspired by the incredible level of artistry in Paul Thomas Anderson’s film? The techniques used to create movie masterpieces like this are at the very core of what we teach at Filmmakers Academy. Are you ready to move beyond appreciation and start mastering skills like cinematography, lighting, and directing? Get the knowledge from professionals who have worked on films of this scale with our All Access membership. It’s your next step to becoming a well-rounded filmmaker.

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WORKS CITED:

 

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The Look of The Brutalist https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-the-look-of-the-brutalist/ Sun, 06 Apr 2025 17:28:02 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=103603 The Brutalist is not just a film; it’s an experience played out in concrete and steel. It’s a decades-spanning epic that grapples with grand themes of legacy, identity, and the elusive nature of the American Dream. Brady Corbet’s ambitious third feature film is a work of striking visual power, an ode to the enduring allure […]

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The Brutalist is not just a film; it’s an experience played out in concrete and steel. It’s a decades-spanning epic that grapples with grand themes of legacy, identity, and the elusive nature of the American Dream. Brady Corbet’s ambitious third feature film is a work of striking visual power, an ode to the enduring allure of classical filmmaking techniques and the collaborative artistry of a dedicated team. This isn’t a film that whispers. It declares itself, demanding attention with its bold visual language and its unflinching exploration of human ambition and the scars of history.

Director Brady Corbet on the set of The Brutalist | Photo by Trevor Matthews

Director Brady Corbet on the set of The Brutalist | Photo by Trevor Matthews

This article delves into the creation of that visual language. We’ll go beyond the surface, exploring not just how they achieved the film’s distinctive look, but why they made the choices they did. From the groundbreaking decision to shoot on VistaVision — a format rarely used in contemporary cinema — to the meticulous design of the film’s central architectural marvel, the Institute, we’ll uncover the layers of meaning embedded within the film’s visual fabric.

(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

PRO TIP: Bookmark this page so you can easily refer back to it later. 

The Brutalist tells the story of László Toth (Adrien Brody), a Hungarian-Jewish architect who survives the Holocaust and emigrates to America. He carries with him the physical and emotional scars of his past. A past that informs his unwavering dedication to his craft and his relentless pursuit of a singular, monumental vision. The film chronicles his struggles, his triumphs, and his complex relationship with a wealthy patron, Harrison Lee (Guy Pearce), as Toth strives to create a lasting architectural legacy. It’s a story about the creation of art, the clash of ideologies, and the enduring weight of history. It is also a story about America, and what the country represents.

But this isn’t just a story told with visuals. The Brutalist is a story shaped by them. The film’s use of VistaVision, its carefully considered color palette, its meticulous production design, and its bold framing choices all work in concert to create a cinematic experience that is both grand and intimate, both epic and deeply personal. We’ll explore how Lol Crawley, BSC’s cinematography captures the scale and texture of brutalist architecture, while also conveying the inner lives of the characters. Likewise, we’ll examine how Judy Becker’s production design creates a world that is both historically authentic and emotionally resonant. A world where buildings become characters and spaces speak volumes.

Prepare to enter the world of The Brutalist, a film that challenges us to consider the enduring power of architecture, the complexities of the American Dream, and the indelible mark of history on the human soul. This is a film that demands to be seen — and understood — on a grand scale.

This is The Look of The Brutalist.

The Brutalist poster

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design

THE BRUTALIST TECH SPECS

Statue of Liberty - The Brutalist - Banner

  • Camera: 
    • Arri Alexa (one shot)
    • Arricam LT, Cooke S4 Lenses
    • Arricam ST, Cooke S4 Lenses
    • Arriflex 235, Cooke S4 Lenses
    • Arriflex 416, Zeiss Super Speed Lenses (some scenes)
    • Arriflex 435, Cooke S4 Lenses
    • Beaumont VistaVision Camera, Leica R Lenses
    • Digital Betacam (epilogue)
  • Negative Format: 
    • 16 mm (Kodak Vision3 250D 7207, Vision3 500T 7219)
    • 35 mm (also horizontal, 3-perf, 2-perf, Kodak Vision3 250D 5207, Vision3 500T 5219)
    • ARRIRAW (one shot)
    • Video (epilogue)
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • Digital Betacam (source format, epilogue)
    • Digital Intermediate (master format)
    • Super 16 (source format, some scenes)
    • Super 35 (source format, some scenes)
    • Techniscope (source format, some scenes)
    • VistaVision (source format)
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • 35 mm 
    • 70 mm 
    • D-Cinema 
    • DCP Digital Cinema Package

 

THE WORLD OF THE BRUTALIST

Cranes in The Brutalist - Banner

The Brutalist is not confined to a single time or place. The epic spans continents and decades, tracing the journey of László Toth, a Hungarian-Jewish architect who escapes the ashes of post-war Europe to pursue the American Dream. This transatlantic narrative, encompassing both the devastation of the Holocaust and the burgeoning optimism of mid-century America, presented a unique world-building challenge for the filmmakers. The film needed to evoke multiple distinct settings, each with its own historical and emotional weight, while maintaining a cohesive visual language. While much of the principal photography took place in Hungary, the film’s story traverses a far wider geographical and emotional landscape.

“Brutalism, as an architectural style, is often seen as cold and impersonal. But I think there’s a beauty in its honesty, in its refusal to hide behind ornamentation. That’s something I wanted to explore in the film.” —Brady Corbet

Upside down Statue of Liberty in The Brutalist Upside down cross in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

FROM POST-WAR EUROPE TO THE PROMISE OF AMERICA

The film’s early scenes are crucial for establishing Toth’s backstory and motivations. These scenes depict the trauma of the Holocaust and the challenges of rebuilding a life in its aftermath. Ultimately, he is searching for a new beginning. 

Adrien Brody in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

The film then shifts to America, specifically evoking the atmosphere of Pittsburgh in the 1950s. This was a period of significant urban renewal and architectural innovation in America. It was a time of both optimism and underlying social tensions. Pittsburgh, with its industrial heritage and its own history of immigration, provides a fitting backdrop for Toth’s story. It’s a city built on steel and ambition, but also a city grappling with the complexities of progress and the displacement it can cause.

Pennsylvania in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

BRUTALISM: MORE THAN JUST CONCRETE

The film’s title, and its central architectural focus, is Brutalism. This architectural style, which emerged in the mid-20th century, is characterized by its use of raw concrete (béton brut in French, from which the term “brutalism” derives), its massive forms, and its emphasis on functionality. Brutalism was often associated with social housing projects, government buildings, and universities — structures intended to embody a sense of civic purpose and democratic ideals.

Brutalist architecture in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

However, Brutalism has also been criticized for its perceived coldness, austerity, and even inhumanity. It’s a style that evokes strong reactions, and its use in the film is undoubtedly deliberate. For Toth, brutalist architecture may represent a rejection of the ornate, decorative styles of the past. A desire to create something new and enduring. Something that speaks to the raw realities of the human condition. It’s a style that reflects both his personal trauma and his unwavering belief in the power of architecture to shape society. 

Laszlo Toth Brutalist architecture

‘The Brutalist’ A24

PRODUCTION DESIGN

The Institute - The Brutalist - Banner

Judy Becker’s production design for The Brutalist is not merely about creating aesthetically pleasing sets. It’s about building a world that embodies the film’s complex themes, reflects the protagonist’s turbulent inner life, and serves as a tangible manifestation of his artistic vision. Her work on the film is a masterpiece in using architecture and design to tell a story, creating spaces that are both historically resonant and deeply symbolic. This goes beyond simply finding locations. It’s about constructing meaning through the built environment.

MORE THAN DECORATION: PRODUCTION DESIGN AS CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT

From the outset, Becker understood that The Brutalist demanded a production design approach that went beyond surface decoration. The architecture, particularly the central structure of the Institute, needed to function as a character in its own right, reflecting the complexities and contradictions of László Toth, the Hungarian-Jewish architect at the heart of the film. This required a deep dive into the history of brutalist architecture, the cultural context of post-war America, and the psychological impact of trauma and displacement.

Corbet (center left) and Becker (center right) | Photo courtesy of A24

Corbet (center left) and Becker (center right) | Photo courtesy of A24

THE INSTITUTE: A MONUMENT TO TRAUMA AND TRANSCENDENCE

The Institute, Toth’s magnum opus, is the film’s most significant design challenge and its most powerful visual statement. Becker’s description of it as a “factory-slash-crematorium disguised as a church” is deliberately provocative, revealing the layers of meaning embedded within its design. 

“[The Institute is a] factory-slash-crematorium disguised as a church.” —Judy Becker

Laszlo Toth designing The Institute

‘The Brutalist’ A24

This is not a building that offers easy comfort or simple beauty. It’s a structure that confronts the viewer, forcing them to grapple with the darkness of the past and the ambiguities of the present.

Next, let’s examine the several key influences of the Institute’s design.

BRUTALIST ARCHITECTURE 

The film’s title, of course, points to the dominant architectural style. Brutalism, with its emphasis on raw concrete, massive forms, and functional design. However, Becker’s Institute is not a generic brutalist structure. It pushes the style to its extremes, creating a building that is both imposing and unsettling. 

CONCENTRATION CAMP ARCHITECTURE 

Becker’s reference to concentration camps is crucial. The Institute’s starkness, its lack of ornamentation, and its imposing scale evoke the architecture of these sites of unimaginable horror. The disguised smokestacks, functioning as church towers, are a particularly chilling detail, adding a layer of dark irony and subversive commentary. 

The construction of The Institute in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

This connection to the Holocaust is not gratuitous. It’s directly linked to Toth’s personal history and his struggle to reconcile his past with his present. 

MARCEL BREUER 

Becker cites a specific real-world example as inspiration. A synagogue in her hometown designed by Marcel Breuer, a prominent modernist architect. This temple features a hidden Star of David shape, only visible from above. 

Marcel Breuer Brutalist architecture

This concept of hidden meaning, of a building that reveals its true nature only from a particular perspective, resonates with the Institute’s design. It suggests that Toth’s architecture contains layers of symbolism and personal significance that are not immediately apparent. 

The Institute, therefore, is not just a building. It’s a physical manifestation of Toth’s trauma, his ambition, his artistic vision, and his complex relationship with his adopted country. It’s a monument to both memory and the desire to transcend the past.

BEYOND THE INSTITUTE: CREATING A COHESIVE WORLD

While the Institute is the film’s centerpiece, Becker’s work extends to every aspect of the film’s world. Thus, it creates a cohesive and believable environment that spans decades and continents.

EARLY DESIGNS 

The film depicts Toth’s earlier work, including furniture designs and a library. These designs, while still rooted in a modernist aesthetic, are less overtly brutalist than the Institute. These reflect Toth’s evolving style and his initial attempts to find his place within the American architectural landscape.

The library in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

THE CONSTRUCTION SITE

The evolving construction site of the Institute is a significant setting in the film. Becker’s team meticulously recreated the look and feel of a mid-century construction site, using period-appropriate materials, tools, and techniques. This attention to detail adds to the film’s authenticity and provides a dynamic backdrop for the unfolding drama. This also helped show the passage of time, along with the scale.

The production design of The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

HUNGARY AS AMERICA: THE ART OF TRANSFORMATION

The decision to film primarily in Hungary presented a significant challenge. How to convincingly recreate American settings, particularly those of 1950s Pittsburgh, on a different continent. This required a close collaboration between Becker’s production design team and Lol Crawley, BSC’s cinematography team.

Locations in Hungary in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

Becker’s team focused on sourcing period-appropriate props, furniture, and vehicles, transforming Hungarian locations into believable American homes, offices, and streetscapes. The opening interrogation room, a completely fabricated set, exemplifies the level of detail and control achieved by the production design team.

Opening interrogation room in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

The choice of locations was also crucial. Hungary, with its own rich architectural history and its mix of urban and rural landscapes, offered a surprising degree of versatility. However, careful framing, strategic set dressing, and the skillful use of lighting were essential to conceal any telltale signs of the European setting.

Filming The Brutalist in Hungary

‘The Brutalist’ A24

Judy Becker’s work on The Brutalist is a powerful example of how production design can elevate a film from a simple narrative to a rich, multi-layered work of art. Her meticulous research, her attention to detail, and her deep understanding of the film’s themes and characters have resulted in a world that is both visually stunning and emotionally resonant. 

The buildings, the sets, the props — they are not just background elements. They are active participants in the story, shaping our understanding of the characters and their world. This is production design at its finest. A craft that transforms the mundane into the meaningful, the ordinary into the extraordinary.

THE BRUTALIST CINEMATOGRAPHY

The Brutalist - Banner

Lol Crawley, BSC, is a cinematographer known for his bold visual choices and his ability to create atmosphere and emotion through light, composition, and camera movement. His work on The Brutalist is no exception. He crafts a visual language that is both grand and intimate, echoing the film’s thematic concerns of ambition, legacy, and the human cost of progress.

VISTAVISION: A DELIBERATE CHOICE, NOT A GIMMICK

The decision to shoot The Brutalist on VistaVision, a large-format film system rarely used in contemporary cinema, was not a stylistic flourish, but a fundamental choice driven by the specific needs of the story. Crawley emphasizes that the decision was “motivated by this desire to shoot on a larger film format” and that it “earned its place” rather than being an “affectation or anything like that, or a gimmick.”

Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey

Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey

According to Crawley, the rationale behind choosing VistaVision was twofold…

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

 Brady Corbet wanted to evoke the cinematic language of the 1950s, the era in which a significant portion of the film is set. VistaVision, popularized by directors like Alfred Hitchcock in films such as Vertigo and North by Northwest, provided a direct link to that cinematic heritage. It wasn’t simply about nostalgia. It was about tapping into a visual vocabulary associated with a specific time and place. 

Classic cinema and The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

ARCHITECTURAL REPRESENTATION

The wider field of view offered by VistaVision was crucial for capturing the scale and grandeur of brutalist architecture without introducing the distortion that can occur with wider-angle lenses on smaller formats. 

“[We wanted to] celebrate the space.” —Lol Crawley, BSC

The Brutalist - Architecture

‘The Brutalist’ A24

As Crawley explains, the larger negative area allows for a “wider field of view” without needing “a wider angle lens to achieve that.” This results in a “truer” representation of the buildings, with “lines [that] are less distorted.” This was particularly important for showcasing the clean lines and geometric forms that characterize brutalist structures. 

LENSES: SHAPING PERSPECTIVE WITH LEICA R AND COOKE S4

Crawley’s lens choices for The Brutalist were specific and carefully considered, utilizing two distinct sets of prime lenses to complement the different film formats employed and shape the film’s visual narrative. This wasn’t about finding one “do-it-all” lens, but about selecting optics with specific characteristics for particular effects.

LEICA R LENSES (PAIRED WITH VISTAVISION)

For the sequences captured on the unique Beaumont VistaVision camera, Crawley employed Leica R lenses. Originally designed for Leica’s 35mm still photography cameras, these vintage full-frame lenses possess the necessary image circle to cover the large, horizontal VistaVision negative. Leica R glass is renowned for its distinct character. They have pleasing bokeh, beautiful flares (when pushed), excellent center sharpness, and a slightly warmer, less clinical feel than many modern cinema lenses.

Using these vintage optics on the VistaVision format contributed significantly to the film’s period aesthetic. They added a subtle layer of nostalgia and optical character that complements the historical setting and the grandeur of the large format.

Intimate close up shots in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

COOKE S4/I LENSES 

For the portions of the film shot on standard 35mm, Crawley utilized the industry-standard Cooke S4/i prime lenses. These modern cinema lenses are famous for delivering the classic “Cooke Look” – a unique combination of sharpness and smoothness. They possess a flattering rendering of skin tones, beautiful bokeh, and a gentle focus fall-off.

Plus, they provide a reliable, high-quality, and distinctly cinematic image often favored for narrative filmmaking. Using the Cooke S4s for the standard 35mm sequences provides a consistent, high-quality look.

Dual Lens Sets: Crafting Visual Texture

The deliberate choice to use two different sets of lenses, paired with distinct film formats (VistaVision and standard 35mm/Super 35mm), allowed Crawley and director Brady Corbet to create varied visual textures within the film.

The Leica R lenses on VistaVision provided a grander, perhaps slightly more romantic or vintage feel for certain sequences. Whereas, the Cooke S4/i lenses on standard 35mm offered a reliable, classically cinematic look for others. This approach adds another layer to the film’s sophisticated visual language.

Regardless of the specific lens set, the choice of focal length remained crucial for shaping perspective and emotion:

  • Wider Lenses: Employed to capture the imposing scale of the brutalist architecture and vast landscapes. Potentially creating feelings of isolation or emphasizing the environment’s impact on the characters.
  • Normal Lenses: Utilized to provide a more naturalistic perspective. Grounding scenes of dialogue and interaction in a relatable visual field.
  • Longer Lenses: Used to compress perspective, isolate characters, intensify close-ups. This draws the audience into specific emotional moments, highlighting nuances in performance.

By carefully selecting both the lens type (Leica R vs. Cooke S4) and the focal length for each shot and sequence, Lol Crawley masterfully shaped the audience’s perception, enhancing the emotional resonance and thematic depth of The Brutalist.

CAMERA MOVEMENT: A DANCE BETWEEN FORMALISM AND FREEDOM

Crawley describes the camera movement in The Brutalist as a balance between “formalism” and “intimacy.” This duality reflects the film’s thematic concerns, contrasting the rigid, controlled world of architecture and ambition with the messy, unpredictable reality of human relationships.

Lol Crawley, BSC on set | Photo by Bence Szemerey

Lol Crawley, BSC on set | Photo by Bence Szemerey

FORMALISM

In scenes featuring Harrison Lee, the wealthy patron, the camera often remains static or moves with a controlled, deliberate precision. This reflects the power dynamics at play and the formality of their interactions. Tripod shots, smooth dolly moves, and carefully composed frames would be characteristic of this approach.

Static camera shots in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

INTIMACY

In contrast, scenes involving more personal moments, or moments of emotional turmoil, often employ a handheld camera. This creates a sense of immediacy and vulnerability, drawing the audience closer to the characters’ experiences. 

Crawley mentions a particularly striking example. A scene where the Steadicam operator, Attila Pfeffer, transitions from a smooth Steadicam shot to a handheld mode within the same take. This daring technical feat reflects the film’s willingness to break with convention in order to serve the emotional needs of the story.

Handheld camera in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

This deliberate shifting between camera styles is not arbitrary. It’s a carefully orchestrated visual strategy that adds depth and complexity to the film’s narrative.

LIGHTING: SCULPTING WITH SHADOWS AND NUANCE

Crawley’s approach to lighting in The Brutalist is characterized by a strong emphasis on naturalism and a willingness to embrace shadows. 

Candle light in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

He describes his process as “lighting it to replicate what the best version of how we found it.” 

Meaning that he draws inspiration from the existing light in a location and then subtly augments it to create consistency and control.

Lol Crawley on set | Photo courtesy of International Film Festival Rotterdam

This doesn’t mean that the film is devoid of stylized lighting. In the furniture showroom scene, for example, Crawley uses Venetian blinds to create a “noir-ish quality.” They cast dramatic shadows and shape the light to enhance the mood. This demonstrates his ability to blend naturalistic and stylized approaches, creating a lighting design that is both believable and emotionally expressive. He also worked with Judy Becker on a fabricated light for the Library, something that is seen in other films.

Noir lighting in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

PRACTICAL LIGHTING

Crawley frequently uses practical lights — lights that are visible within the scene, such as lamps, windows, or overhead fixtures — as a key source of illumination. This adds to the film’s realism and creates a sense of depth and texture.

Practical lighting in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

NATURAL LIGHT

Whenever possible, Crawley utilizes natural light, shaping and modifying it with reflectors, diffusers, and flags to achieve the desired effect. This creates a soft, believable light that feels organic to the environment.

Sunlight in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

SHADOWS

Shadows are not avoided; they are embraced as a crucial element of the visual composition. Crawley creates depth with shadows to sculpt the actors’ faces and to add a sense of mystery or drama.

Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey

Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey

A CINEMATOGRAPHIC VISION REALIZED 

The choice of VistaVision gives the film its own visual identity. Lol Crawley’s cinematography on The Brutalist is a vital component of the film’s success. His technical skill, his artistic sensibility, and his deep understanding of the story have resulted in a visual language that is both striking and emotionally resonant. From the grand sweep of the VistaVision format to the intimate details of the lighting and camera movement, every choice is deliberate, serving the narrative and enhancing the audience’s experience. This is cinematography that goes beyond mere visual spectacle; it’s cinematography that tells a story.

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COSTUME DESIGN

Costume Design - The Brutalist - Banner

While architecture forms the imposing backbone of The Brutalist, costume designer Kate Forbes masterfully uses clothing to flesh out the characters, chart their emotional journeys, and subtly reinforce the film’s themes. Her work on the film is not simply about dressing actors; it’s about crafting a visual language that speaks to the passage of time, the weight of personal history, and the complexities of the American Dream. Forbes, with three decades of experience, brings a nuanced understanding of period detail and a punk-rock spirit of resourcefulness to this challenging project.

Costume Designer & Stylist Kate Forbes | Courtesy of Each is Every

Costume Designer & Stylist Kate Forbes | Courtesy of Each is Every

AUTHENTICITY ON A BUDGET: SOURCING AND CREATING THE WARDROBE

The Brutalist spans several decades, from 1947 to 1960, demanding a wardrobe that accurately reflects the evolving fashions of the era. However, as Forbes reveals, the film operated on a “limited budget,” necessitating a creative and resourceful approach to sourcing costumes. This wasn’t about commissioning lavish, custom-made pieces for every scene. It was about meticulously curating a wardrobe that felt authentic and lived-in, while still serving the narrative needs of the film.

“The script itself drew me in 100%. I thought it was an amazing script, and I’ve always loved ‘The Fountainhead,’ the Ayn Rand book, and there seemed to be echoes of that in ‘The Brutalist.’” —Kate Forbes

Forbes and her team embarked on a transatlantic treasure hunt, collaborating with “seven costume houses in the end in the U.K. and [the rest of] Europe.” This involved scouring vintage stores, costume rental houses, and private collections for original pieces from the 1940s, 50s, and 60s. This approach not only ensured authenticity but also added a layer of texture and history to the costumes, imbuing them with a sense of lived experience.

The wardrobe of The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

The sheer scale of the wardrobe was daunting. Forbes estimates that over 750 to 1,000 costumes were used for the extras alone, highlighting the meticulous attention to detail required to create a believable period world. This wasn’t just about dressing the leads. It was about populating entire scenes with characters who felt authentically rooted in their time and place.

CHARACTER THROUGH COSTUME: DEFINING PERSONALITIES AND RELATIONSHIPS

Beyond reflecting historical accuracy, the costumes would play a crucial role in defining the characters and their relationships.

LÁSZLÓ TOTH (ADRIEN BRODY)

Forbes emphasizes Toth’s “defiant independence,” a quality that sets him apart from the “sea of suits” represented by Harrison Lee and the American establishment. This suggests that Toth’s clothing, even as he achieves success, might retain a certain individuality, a subtle rejection of conformity. 

Laszlo Toth Wardrobe Laszlo Toth Wardrobe

In a pivotal scene where Toth reunites with his wife, Erzsébet (Felicity Jones), Forbes made a conscious choice to dress him in a grey sports jacket and pale blue shirt, signifying “a moment of hope and serenity.” This departure from his usual attire underscores the emotional significance of the reunion.

the wardrobe of Laszlo Toth (Adrien Brody) in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

HARRISON LEE (GUY PEARCE)

Lee’s costumes, as a wealthy patron, were impeccably tailored and expensive, conveying his status and power. This creates a visual contrast with Toth’s more individualistic style. The choice of his ties was a selection between sapphire and deep red.

The wardrobe of Harrison Lee (Guy Pearce) in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

ZSÓPHIA (RAFFEY CASSIDY)

Her introductory outfit is one that helps to display the tense situation she is in during her interrogation scene.

The wardrobe of Sophia in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

BEYOND THE SURFACE: SYMBOLISM AND SUBTEXT

Forbes’s approach to costume design goes beyond mere period accuracy. She uses clothing to convey subtle nuances of character, emotion, and theme. The choice of a grey sports jacket and pale blue shirt for Toth in the reunion scene is a prime example of this. It’s not just a random outfit. Rather, it’s a deliberate choice that signifies a shift in his emotional state.

Similarly, Forbes mentions the “Lee Harrison ties,” carefully selected in shades of “sapphire and deep red.” These seemingly minor details contribute to the overall visual language of the film, hinting at the underlying power dynamics and the contrasting personalities of the characters.

UNPLANNED MAGIC: EMBRACING THE UNEXPECTED

Forbes also highlights the importance of being open to unexpected moments of serendipity. She describes a scene featuring Emma Laird in a red dress, set against red curtains. 

The serendipity of wardrobe in The Brutalist

‘The Brutalist’ A24

This striking visual juxtaposition wasn’t meticulously planned; it was a happy accident, a moment of “unplanned magic” that arose from the confluence of costume and set design. Forbes’s willingness to embrace these unplanned moments, to recognize their beauty and incorporate them into the film’s visual tapestry, speaks to her experience and her intuitive understanding of using costumes to shape a story. She also explains how this helps capture “how life goes.”

Forbes describes herself as having a “punk spirit,” an attitude that informs her approach to filmmaking. This doesn’t mean she’s creating punk-inspired costumes for a period piece. Instead, it speaks to her resourceful, independent, and anti-establishment approach. She values individuality and authenticity, and she’s not afraid to break the rules or challenge conventions to achieve her vision. This punk spirit is evident in her willingness to source original vintage pieces, to collaborate closely with actors, and to embrace the unexpected moments that can elevate a film’s visual language.

WATCH THE BRUTALIST

Laszlo Toth (Adrien Brody) The Brutalist - Banner

The Brutalist stands as a filmic monument to the power of collaborative filmmaking, a symphony of vision orchestrated by director Brady Corbet and brought to life by the artistry of Lol Crawley, BSC, Judy Becker, Kate Forbe, and the entire creative team. It’s a film that demonstrates how every visual element — from the grand sweep of VistaVision cinematography to the subtle details of costume and production design — can contribute to a powerful and unforgettable cinematic experience. 

This isn’t just a film about architecture. This is a film that uses architecture, light, and design to explore the complexities of human ambition, the weight of history, and the enduring search for meaning. Thus, proving that independent films can be just as beautiful as blockbusters.

“The film is, in many ways, a meditation on the American Dream, its promises and its pitfalls. It’s about what it means to strive for greatness, and what we lose in the process.” —Brady Corbet

The Brutalist is available on your friendly neighborhood streaming service. 

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The-Brutalist-BTS_1 Director Brady Corbet on the set of The Brutalist | Photo by Trevor Matthews The-Brutalist-poster-v2jpg Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_1 Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_4 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_6 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_7 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_2 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_3 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_5 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_1 Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_7 The-Brutalist-BTS_7 Corbet (center left) and Becker (center right) | Photo courtesy of A24 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_9 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_11 Marcel-Breuer-Synogogue The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_8 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_13 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_14 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_15 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_16 Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_9 The-Brutalist-BTS_4 Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_23 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_3 Courtesy of A24 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_24 The-Brutalist-BTS_3 Lol Crawley, BSC on set | Photo by Bence Szemerey The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_25 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_26 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_27 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_28 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_30 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_29 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_8 Lol Crawley, BSC on location of The Brutalist | Photo by Bence Szemerey Blog-CTA-Banner Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_8 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_18 Costume Designer & Stylist Kate Forbes | Courtesy of Each is Every The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_22 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_16 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_17 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_18 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_17 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_20 The-Look-of-The-Brutalist_21 Look-of-The-Brutalist-Banner_2
The Look of Barbie: The Movie https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-the-look-of-barbie-movie/ Mon, 28 Aug 2023 19:44:56 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=99415 Barbie is a film about the doll who inspired generations of children to follow their dreams. Created by Ruth Handler for her daughter Barbara, Barbie hit the shelves in 1959 and was the first contemporary doll for girls not modeled on a baby. Pretty groundbreaking, right?  Before the advent of Barbie, a little girl’s connection […]

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Barbie is a film about the doll who inspired generations of children to follow their dreams. Created by Ruth Handler for her daughter Barbara, Barbie hit the shelves in 1959 and was the first contemporary doll for girls not modeled on a baby. Pretty groundbreaking, right? 

Before the advent of Barbie, a little girl’s connection with her dolls was exclusively a motherly one. So, while at its core the movie explores the themes of the mother-daughter relationship, the filmmakers valiantly attempt to free Barbie from any conflation with patriarchy — because quite simply, we’re all Barbie. 

From its opening sequence which pays homage to Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, the Barbie movie breaks the mold of cinematic universes. The film’s auteur director, Greta Gerwig, conveys the impact of the titular doll by capturing the imagination of millions of girls around the world. Barbie encourages young girls to look outward and represents the endless possibilities of what they may achieve if they so desire. 

(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

PRO TIP: Do yourself a favor and Bookmark this page so you can easily refer back to it later! 

Beyond the elaborate dance numbers and choreography is a fish-out-of-water story that shifts into a reversal of roles. In her Barbie movie, Gerwig reveals another side of the iconic doll that is much more than a piece of merchandise geared toward young girls ages 3-12 years of age. 

The director cleverly illustrates the idea that anyone can imagine themselves in the titular role of Barbie, and pink isn’t a dreadful by-product of the patriarchy, but rather a color with a history of empowering women.

Greta Gerwig behind the scenes of Barbie movie

Now, some may feel a sense of unease or even resentment about how the Barbie movie makes them feel — but that’s on purpose! The film doesn’t only challenge gender roles but also holds a mirror up to the audience in the real world. In Barbie Land, the gender roles are flipped and women hold every position of power, while the men serve as second-class citizens who vie for the Barbies’ attention and approval. 

What Gerwig does so well is take said gender roles of circa 1959, and flip them on their heads. Ruth Handler envisioned more in life for her daughter than only becoming a housewife or a secondary role in the workplace. Barbie could be a doctor instead of a nurse. A pilot rather than a flight attendant. A president over a first lady. 

So, why emasculate Ken? Ken doesn’t just represent men but in this mirror world, he also represents the women and how they are treated in a patriarchal society. After he turns Barbie Land into a Kentriarcy, he asks, “How does that feel?” Not only is he addressing Barbie, but the audience, too. 

Greta Gerwig directs Ryan Gosling (Ken) Barbie movie BTS

Photo credit: Jaap Buitendijk | Warner Bros.

Such themes make Barbie more than just a fantastical comedy but also a meditation on today’s world and the relationship between genders. Just as the Kens need more than “Beach,” women desire a purpose in life that extends beyond motherhood. 

Discover how Gerwig and her team of filmmakers adapted the world of the iconic doll for the silver screen, while masterfully conceiving a new kind of cinematic universe that is quite simply a fantastical marvel.

This is The Look of Barbie.

Barbie movie poster

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design
  • Practical FX

 

💋 BARBIE TECH SPECS 💋

Barbie Movie Tech specs

  • Runtime: 1 hour 54 minutes (114 minutes)
  • Color: 
  • Aspect Ratio: 
    • 2.00: 1 
  • Camera: 
    • Arri Alexa 65, Panavision System 65 Lenses
  • Laboratory
    • Company 3, Los Angeles (CA), USA (dailies)
    • Company 3, New York (NY), USA (color, finish)
    • Warner Bros. De Lane Lea, London, UK (digital dailies)
  • Negative Format: Codex
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • ARRIRAW 6.5K, source format) 
    • Digital Intermediate (4K, master format)
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • D-Cinema
    • DCP Digital Cinema Package 

 

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💋 THE WORLD OF BARBIE 💋

The World of the Barbie movie banner

The world of Barbie Land is a feminist paradise where every day is as sunny and as fabulous as the last. 

Speaking of paradise, have you heard of the Barbie Paradise Pool Playset?! 

Barbie Paradise Pool Playset

Well, to be fair, this waterfall is closer to a bird bath — but a girl can dream…

But just before you start thinking the whole movie is just one big ad, we would insist that merchandising is foundational to the very concept of Barbie. Plus, there’s much more depth than your average commercial spot. Barbie is a collective force that must seek self-awareness from the real world to improve the quality of life for its class of Kens. It’s an allegory, duh! 

Even Mattel, the company behind Barbie, is a patriarchal force in the film that tries to manage and control Barbie. In any case, it’s essentially all played for laughs and Mattel’s ineptitude even leads to some loveable Barbie flops from over the decades. 

Except for Allan. Whoever created that guy should have been fired and is hopefully burning in — oh, hello Allan! 

Allan played by Michael Cera in Barbie movie

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

What’s his deal? And did you see that cardigan? BLAH! Anyway…

The Land of Barbie is a direct foil to the outside world, specifically represented by Century City in Los Angeles and Venice Beach. In a fish-out-of-water sequence, Barbie and Ken are struck by the patriarchy. Men serve in most positions of power but “hide it better” as one businessman discloses to Ken. Barbie not only contends with catcalling construction workers and the male gaze, but even her target audience that she once inspired no longer shares her unwavering optimism.  

The Barbie movie is jam-packed full of popular film references and easter eggs — one of our favorites was from The Matrix. In this case, Stereotypical Barbie must choose between maintaining the status quo with the pink heel or entering the real world with the Birkenstock. Will she accept a flatfooted existence like the rest of us? 

Weird Barbie presents the pink heel or Birkenstock

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

Another reference was a la Jon Voight in Midnight Cowboy as Barbie and Ken wander the streets dressed in western-themed wear. Plus, there was the montage of traveling between worlds. That was highly reminiscent of Buddy the Elf trekking from the fantastical North Pole to the real world of The Big Apple. 

The movie then shifts into a reversal of roles plot as Ken takes the real world’s patriarchal ideas, and slinks back to Barbie Land to plan a total Ken takeover. The genders subsequently face off. However, the Barbies somehow withstand the combined might of a Ken-wide serenade, even fighting off the unadulterated charm of the Kens’ cover of Matchbox Twenty’s Push. 

Ryan Gosling as Ken in Barbie movie

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

“I wanna push you a-round, well I will, well I will! I wanna push you down, well I will, well I will. I wanna take you for graaaannted!”

Jealousy ensues leading to an epic dance battle showdown where many Kens courageously fall to rolled ankles and wardrobe malfunctions.

💋 PRODUCTION DESIGN 💋

Barbie movie Production Design banner

The Barbie movie had the monumental task of taking a miniature, idealistic plastic world and making it a life-sized reality. Fortunately, the production design was in the very capable hands of Sarah Greenwood, who is also known for her work on Anna Karenina and Darkest Hour

Greenwood along with longtime collaborator set decorator Katie Spencer, conceived of the contrast between the pastel world of Barbie Land and the gritty streets of Los Angeles. The reason Gerwig chose Greenwood and Spencer was because of their reputation as builders of complete worlds

Production Designer Sarah Greenwood and set decorater Katie Spencer

(L) Set decorator Katie Spencer and (R) Production designer Sarah Greenwood | Photo credit: Laurie Sparham

Production took place 20 miles northwest of London at Warner Bros’ Leavesden Studios. Interestingly enough, the production took place amidst a gray and dreary English winter. So, inside the dull, dreary hellscape that is an English winter, the Barbie production shone bright like a pink gemstone amidst a perfect summer day. 

PRE-PRODUCTION:

Greenwood and Spencer found inspiration for Barbie Land directly in the merchandise. Most notably, the Barbie Dreamhouse playhouses. This was in conjunction with the midcentury modernism of Kaufmann Palm Springs Desert House by Richard Neutra and the photography of Slim Aarons. Neither playing with Barbies as children, the duo ordered their first dreamhouse off of Amazon and made up for lost time. 

Midcentury modernism of Kaufmann Palm Springs Desert House by Richard Neutra and the photography of Slim Aarons Midcentury modernism of Kaufmann Palm Springs Desert House by Richard Neutra and the photography of Slim Aarons

“We were literally playing with it with the Barbie dolls we had in the office.” —Sarah Greenwood, Filmmaker Magazine

The filmmakers found themselves motivated by what Barbie represented, especially when her first dream house was released at a time when few women owned their own houses. Gerwig’s vision was to create an “authentic artificiality,” like a hand-painted backdrop of the sky or an oversized toothbrush and hairbrush. In fact, the cloth they used was over 800 feet long and 50 feet high. As the director puts it, “Everything needed to be tactile, because toys are, above all, things you touch.” 

Barbie dreamhouses in Barbie Land Barbie doll in dreamhouse

“We’re not recreating Mattel, we are interpreting the dream houses through the last 70 years,” Greenwood tells IndieWire. “And it’s an amalgam of all the [Palm Springs] houses. But it had to work for our story and also to make it suitable.”  

 

CONSTRUCTING BARBIE’S DREAMHOUSE

The result was the 360-degree, open-air neighborhood of dollhouses otherwise known as Barbie Way. Its open architecture allowed the filmmakers to cross-shoot into the houses. Then, they downscaled the structures by 23% to match how a Barbie doll fits in a toy dreamhouse. While it helped contain more in the frame, it also made the ceilings closer to the head and rooms traversable by merely a few steps. 

Barbie Way neighborhood production design

While each dreamhouse’s design forgoes walls and doors that may be unsuitable for you and me, its architectural design is more than fitting for a doll. “Dreamhouses assume that you never have anything you wish was private — there is no place to hide,” Gerwig says to Architectural Digest. In place of walk-in closets are vitrines inspired by toy boxes containing fabulous outfits and every kind of accessory imaginable. 

Barbie dreamhouse closet Behind the scenes of 'Beach' in Barbie movie

The real challenge was figuring out how to make the house stand without any walls. They used a pink-stoned chimney that runs up the center of the structure to hold it all up. In an interview with Filmmaker Magazine, Spencer notes their success in making the house feel like a toy by playing with absence. 

“It’s the space,” she says, “it’s what you don’t have…. Your wallpaper is not just behind you. It’s all three-dimensional things that are behind that, which are the trees, the mountains of houses, other actors, so that was quite tricky.” 

Their architecture was inspired by past dreamhouses, like the 1970s bohemian model, which was itself designed with luxury trimmings. For example, its lamps were inspired by trompe l’oeil Tiffany, and according to AD, her clamshell headboard was upholstered in velvet and had a sequined coverlet. 

Barbie dreamhouse production design Barbie dreamhouse and pink bed

The fantasy fuchsia home is complete with a coiling slide that leads down to a kidney-shaped pool bordered by yellow umbrellas and Philippe Starck chaise lounge chairs. 

Barbie dreamhouse with coiling slide leading to kidney shaped pool

Barbie movie | Warner Bros.

THE COLOR PINK

“I don’t think we have seen or will ever see a film with more pink in it,” says Barbie movie producer David Heyman

Issa Rae in the Barbie movie

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

Of course, not just any shade of pink would do in the Barbie movie! Not all pinks are created equal as Greenwood mentions that there are “nasty pinks out there as well.” Their shade of pink, known as Baker-Miller pink (#FF91AF), was also used in the 1950s to treat depression. Barbie fans may better know it as Pantone 219. In fact, outside Mattel’s executive conference room in the movie sits a giant chip of Pantone 219. Overall, they tested about 100 kinds of pink, and out of those selected 12 key shades. 

“It’s also the quantity of color and light,” explains Greenwood to Filmmaker Magazine. “If the colors had been off-putting — and I think that’s a good word to use — it would’ve been horrendous. But the colors and that pink were so pure. And Rodrigo Prieto’s lighting was so pure: like, a thousand sky pans in the roof and big soft suns. The wattage was fantastic. 

Barbie movie production design of dreamhouses

“Normally when you go on a film set, it’s all focused into this little dark corner and everything else is black,” the production designer continues. “It was the opposite with us. Everything was colorful from wall to wall. It was just brilliance and light and color. You walk onto those stages out of the gray Watford [UK] winter, and it was just like being bathed in something. Better than going on holiday. It was an amazing color therapy.”

DID YOU KNOW? When they began construction of Barbie Land, it led to an international crisis on Rosco’s pink paint. Gerwig wanted very bright pinks, “almost too much,” the way she remembered it back in her childhood.

 

BARBIE MOVIE PRODUCTION:

There’s no time, logic, or physics in Barbie Land, says Greenwood. Just as the imaginary world of Barbie Land lacks fire, water, and electricity, most of the movie’s production turns to in-camera and practical effects over CGI. Gerwig had many philosophical conversations with the filmmakers about the nature of dolls and properly conveying the laws of their reality. 

Greta Gerwig behind the scenes of Barbie movie with Margot Robbie

Amco | BACKGRID

Greenwood and her team also made use of miniatures for their set extensions in Barbie Land. Once they photographed them they added them in post-production. “You get miniatures within miniatures,” says Greenwood. “We like this layering, of not quite knowing where it is and what you are looking at.” 

“Everything in camera [is] tangible, due to the fact that we made all the set extensions. When you drive past the cinema and you’ve got all the shops and you’ve got the beachfront, and all the little houses when she’s standing on the roof and looking beyond… We made all of them as 1:18 scale miniatures. They’re all made in the same way we make all the sets, and then they’re put in post…. It’s all in camera. And it also means that when the actors walk in, they are in the world, it’s a completely immersive experience. In this instance, it really helped.” —Greenwood, Filmmaker Magazine

DANCE PARTY

In an instantly iconic moment, the Barbies get jiggy with it at a spectacular dance party. It has all the flash and pomp you would expect in a Barbie movie, full of sparkly lights, your favorite music, and never-ending fun! 

Barbie and Ken at disco in dreamhouse Greta Gerwig with Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling in Barbie movie BTS

“It’s disco, it’s a bit of Studio 54, a little ‘Sweet Charity,’ it’s got sparkles. It’s Greta’s love of Barbie. She had lots of Barbies, but her favorite era was the ’80s.” —Katie Spencer, IndieWire

WEIRD BARBIE HOUSE

The ostracized ‘Weird Barbie’ (Kate McKinnon) lived in a structure with a twisted design inspired by the houses of Norman Bates in Psycho and Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird. And just like the Bates house in Psycho, Weird Barbie’s lair constructed of blocks and triangles sits atop a hill. 

Weird Barbie house miniature

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros

While the Barbie Dreamhouse cul-de-sac was an actual set, Weird Barbie’s house was actually a miniature

“With the purity of the color, the shape, texture, lighting and everything, there was nowhere to hide, so it all had to be real. There is one sequence that was put in in post—and I don’t think it’s the best sequence. It is when she’s walking up to Weird Barbie’s house. It’s too far, too cartoon, and kind of wrong. It should have been done differently — I wasn’t around when it was done.” —Sarah Greenwood, Filmmaker Magazine

VENICE BEACH

Venice Beach served essentially as a foil to the beach in Barbieland. A particular crossover element that extended into both worlds was the lifeguard station. In Barbieland, it was smaller and ombre in blues and pinks, which is contrasted by the real-world whites and browns. 

BTS of Barbie movie at Venice Beach

Behind-the-scenes video of Barbie: The Movie | Warner Bros.

“I’ve always loved the palm trees on Venice Beach that have the graffiti on,” says Greenwood. “I just think they land on Venice Beach and they are alien. This place is alien to them, but they are alien within it and this is where Jacqueline’s costumes were sublime. When you’re landing in the real world it is heightened.” 

MATTEL HEADQUARTERS

Gerwig wanted Mattel to feel like a “halfway house” between the two worlds. The execs of Mattel had an awareness of Barbieland and how to travel there. 

Will Ferrell as Mattel CEO in Barbie movie Barbie meets Mattel executives

“Everything about their world was slightly combined and very monochromatic until you went upstairs into the boardroom,” explains Greenwood. “You go into that boardroom and what we did, rather than doing a blue screen, we did a painted cloth outside. And we slightly played with the architecture of Los Angeles.”

What the filmmakers did was bring in the snowy mountains, added Warner Bros. Discovery in center frame, and aspects of downtown Los Angeles. 

“We wanted it to look like the Emerald City, but in gold.” —Sarah Greenwood, TheWrap

THE MAGICAL KITCHEN

The filmmakers dubbed the kitchen at Mattel headquarters “The Magical Kitchen,” haunted by the creator of Barbie, Ruth Handler. The 1950s-style kitchen feels purposefully out of place from the rest of the corporate office building. It’s like entering another dimension made for the late Barbie creator.  

“Just in the corner, she’s got her own little doll’s house, which is like the Barbie house, with flamingos and things like that,” describes Spencer. “And she used to type up scripts for movies, so there’s lots of movies there. She’s making gold clothes on her sewing machine.”

BARBIE LAND AND THE KEN TAKEOVER

According to Greenwood, the rules of Barbie Land included no black or white colors. “Nothing from the real world,” she says

Meanwhile, upon Ken’s return, he paints it black as he turns Barbie Land into the patriarchy. Ken is quick to lay claim on Barbie’s dream house, remodeling it into his Mojo Dojo Casa House replete with leather sofas and rootbeer fountains. Gerwig told Greenwood and Spencer to go for it when they asked if they could make it ugly. 

Total Ken Takeover in Barbie film Barbie re-enters Barbieland to find Ken takeover and TVs with horses

So, they filled the place with mini-fridges and Hummers giving it the feel of an Ivy League frat house. 

“What I love as well is all the television screens that he places in peculiar places like the chimneys and in the gardens because there’s no walls, of course,” explains Spencer. “It’s all playing the same footage of horses cantering slowly towards camera and then stopping. And there is a sort of melancholia about that as well, so it’s the comedy and the pathos.”

By the time we reach the end of the film, there’s a balance between Barbie and Ken. And not just that but the misfit Barbies, as well, with Weird Barbie’s stairs and her vulture mailbox. 

 

💋 BARBIE CINEMATOGRAPHY 💋

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The impressive cinematography of the Barbie movie was the result of three-time Oscar-nominated director of photography, Rodrigo Prieto, ASC, AMC. Who better to take on nearly every cinematographer’s nightmare of balancing numerous shades of pink in perhaps the pinkest movie ever? 

When conversations began with Gerwig and her team, Prieto was planning Killers of the Flower Moon in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Pretty much in every way, Barbie is the polar opposite of the upcoming Scorsese film — which Prieto acknowledges was a huge challenge. 

PRE-PRODUCTION:

Echoing the production design, it was Prieto’s plan to cinematically convey a world of make-believe with the audience feeling like they’re in a box. Accomplishing such a feat includes painted backdrops (as mentioned above) and embracing the feeling of being on a stage.  

Pre-production began via Zoom conversations with Gerwig and production designer Sarah Greenwood. Gerwig was inspired by movies of the 1950s and musicals like Singin’ in the Rain and The Wizard of Oz. These weren’t the only inspirations for the filmmakers as The Umbrellas of Cherbourg influenced Prieto’s lighting and color decisions. 

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg poster The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

CAMERA AND LENSES

To capture Barbie and friends with frontal camera movements, Prieto chose the big sensor camera Alexa 65 for its shallow depth of field. As for glass, they went with the Panavision System 65 Lenses. 

Barbie movie cinematography BTS

However, for the real world, they used a regular sensor over the big sensor so the depth of field felt more “like a regular movie.” 

TECHNIBARBIE

Prieto devised the Lookup Tables (LUTs) for the Barbie film with one primarily for Barbie Land and another for the real world, in addition to a few select others. The main LUT for Barbie Land was based on the three-strip Technicolor utilized in movies of the 1930s – 1950s. This would give Gerwig the saturated colors of her favorite musicals. Greta coined their new LUT, ‘TechniBarbie’

Issa Rae as President Barbie with her Barbie cabinet

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

The LUT they used for the real world was inspired by a film negative to give the impression of celluloid even though they shot on digital. By contrast, the palette very much feels flatter and grittier than its fantastical dollhouse foil. 

PRODUCTION:

One of the biggest challenges for the Barbie movie cinematography was bridging the gap between fantasy and reality. This is where the production design and cinematography truly come to a head. The beach in Barbie Land contains a few otherworldly variables. For one, the beach simply goes on forever, and the water is, well, not water. It’s actually solid! Prieto and his team shot plates for the walls so visual effects could extend the painted backdrop of the sky. 

When it came to reality, Prieto allowed his team to work a “little more sloppy” in terms of camera movement to accentuate the imperfections of the real world. 

Barbie film BTS at Venice Beach Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling in cowboy outfits in BTS Barbie movie

Photo (L) | Credit: Hollywood Pipeline and Photo (R) | Credit: MEGA

“It’s what’s beautiful about life,” explains Prieto, “the messiness and the unpredictability of things. We used longer lenses sometimes, which in Barbie Land was a no-no because everything needed to feel sort of close and wide. I think it’s relatively subtle, but I mean, certainly simply being in Venice, California, versus being in a studio in London automatically created a big difference.”

The production contains big musical numbers with epic choreography that is reminiscent of some of the most iconic musicals. Prieto had lensed choreography sequences in the past on music videos but the Barbie movie was about capturing the timeless quality of musicals. One of Prieto’s favorite movies is All That Jazz, specifically with how Bob Fosse finessed the choreography with the camera work. 

All That Jazz film Bob Fosse in All That Jazz

“I worked closely with the choreographers and it was all really thought out of what the camera was going to do, where it was going to be. It was amazing. I really enjoyed it and also coming up with the lighting for all that and designing it with my gaffer and my dimmer operator.” —Prieto, TheWrap

 

LIGHTING

The sky was literally the limit when it came to light motivation for Barbie Land, where every day was sunny. If you noticed, in every shot, the characters were backlit by the gorgeous sun. On different corners of the stages, the filmmakers rigged big fixtures known as soft suns, along with another on a lift. Even though it’s artificial, Prieto was keen on making the lighting feel like a true exterior. 

Barbie and Ken flipping pink car in movie

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

When communicating with his team about lighting, Prieto would say, “‘OK, now we’re doing this angle, turn that one on, turn this one on,’ or sometimes when the camera pans around, we’d literally dim the soft sun down, so that when you pan the camera around now it’s backlit again, so we took away one sun and brought up another.”

One of the challenges was dealing with the pink and magenta bounce on the actors from all the pink props. What made it even more difficult was that there was no black in Barbie Land, so their hands were tied when it came to negative fill. So, instead, they turned to neutral fill and draped everything in gray that wasn’t on camera. 

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

Returning back to The Umbrellas of Cherbourg as a reference, Prieto felt the frontal lighting made Catherine Deneuve look innocent. Since they wanted lateral and frontal camera moves on tracks instead of oblique camera angles, they had to use high-key lighting. So, then, they had to contend with creating the illusion of depth with their lighting.  

Margot Robbie as Barbie Margot Robbie (Barbie) in the middle of the Kens in Barbie movie

“I had to figure out how to get the sensation of dimensionality and depth with color,” Prieto tells TheWrap. “So that’s the sort of world we were navigating, trying to make it feel like a miniature but not exactly, try to make it feel like a daytime exterior but not exactly. So that was always that balance of artificial but feeling somehow authentic to that world.” 

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💋 BARBIE COSTUME DESIGN 💋

Barbie Movie Costume Design Banner

Starting from the opening of the film when Barbie stands like the monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey, wearing her first-ever outfit, a legendary black and white swimsuit from circa 1959, her character journey transitions from a reflection of what others behold in her to her own liberation of becoming human. It was essential that the wardrobe help illustrate Barbie’s trajectory. 

It’s no surprise that one of the first people Gerwig sought out for her Barbie film was Costume designer Jacqueline Durran. The two had previously collaborated on Little Women which earned Durran an Academy Award. The Oscar-winning costume designer masterfully replicated Barbie’s most iconic wardrobe that dazzled Barbiecore adorning audiences. 

Pink Ken and Barbie in Barbie film

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

The germ for Barbie’s coveted closet began right at the source. Durran wanted to pay homage to Barbie’s most fabulous looks and connect with the memories of the Barbie fanbase. This achievement was conducted with the help of Kim Culmone, the head of design for fashion dolls at Mattel. Culmone and her team were tasked with digging into the Barbie archives to support Durran’s team. 

Durran also worked closely with production designer Sarah Greenwood to ensure their colors and designs matched. This wasn’t their first collaboration as they had all worked together before and had already developed a “shorthand” form of communication. With pink as their primary color, they chose gold as a contrasting color inspired by Mattel’s back catalogs. In the wardrobe, this pink/gold contrast is most notably exhibited in Barbie’s gold sequined disco jumpsuit. 

WHAT INSPIRED THE BARBIE WARDROBE?

Durran had perhaps the greatest of all challenges — meeting the aesthetical expectations of fans who each have their own personal connection to the ubiquitous doll. So, how did she pull it off? There was their relationship with Mattel that granted authenticity to their approach to both fabric and design. 

For example, the rollerblading outfit was an updated version of ‘Hot Skating Barbie’. “I looked up all of the rollerblading and roller-skating costumes that Barbie’s ever had and then I thought, well, let’s do “Hot Skating Barbie.” Durran and her team used the same fabric as the original but modified its design. 

“Instead of her wardrobe being a reflection of her character, it’s a reflection of the wider idea of Barbie.” —Jacqueline Durran, Harper’s BAZAAR

However, there were occasions where they decided to replicate the design to exaction. The discontinued Barbie costumes had to appear exactly the same or audiences wouldn’t identify with them. The designers encountered a mountain of work scaling each costume to fit the civilization of Barbies and Kens. 

Barbie and Kens at disco dance party

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

The costume designers crafted every article of clothing by hand and down to custom silk screening. Committed to its fanbase, the Mattel team wanted to adhere to Barbie’s “toyetic” nature in the real world. From the iconic 1950s swimsuit to the cowboy attire, such wardrobe decisions were key to defining Barbie and Ken from regular people. It’s even better if it doesn’t make sense. Like when Ken strolls around in flat boxing shoes meant for smooth surfaces, in the fake grass and gravel of Barbie Land. 

BARBIE CHANEL COLLABORATION

The Barbie production’s collaboration with Chanel was a result of Durran’s long-standing relationship with the luxury fashion house and the pink-suited Chanel Barbie of the 2000s. Margot Robbie’s Stereotypical Barbie sports the Chanel suit when meeting President Barbie (Issa Rae) at the White House. This, of course, was under the direction of Chanel’s creative director Karl Lagerfeld, who also designed a Barbie collection inspired by his personal image in the 1990s. 

Barbie inspired by Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld Margot Robbie as Barbie

Chanel also helped bridge the gap for some costumes that were never featured in the Barbie collection. Even though Chanel doesn’t make menswear, they helped the production by crafting Ken’s ski suit. So, ultimately, Chanel was the cornerstone of the Barbie movie’s legendary wardrobe. 

“There’s the kind of piece de resistance which is the full Chanel look when Barbie has to really look her best,” explains Durran to THR. “And I thought, let’s just do the complete thing head-to-toe Chanel and it’s great. I think it’s kind of a high point.” 

In addition to their collaboration with Chanel, the Barbie production also featured dressware and accessories from Zara, Stuart Weitzman, and Gap. 

WESTERN-THEMED BARBIE OUTFIT

The western-themed outfits Barbie and Ken wear once they enter Venice Beach are much more than a wardrobe of convenience. After the cat-calling construction workers, Barbie and Ken switch threads to blend into the real world. Not only were the cowboy costumes inspired by Midnight Cowboy. Their Wild West theme also conveyed the idea that the toys were very much out of place in a uniquely American patriarchal realm. 

Western themed Barbie doll Barbie and Ken getting booked by police in Barbie movie

In creating the Western look, the biggest challenge was finding pink denim. Durran tells Entertainment Weekly how they had to print a denim texture on pink stretch fabric. “There were lots of different versions of it, with a waistband, without a waistband. It took a long time just to work, to get the exact details of it.”  

KEN’S ‘KENTRIARCHY’ OUTFITS

Throughout the first part of the movie, Ken is dressed to function as another one of Barbie’s accessories. So, when he returns to Barbie Land, he can’t help but overcompensate. 

Ryan Gosling and the Kens takeover Barbie Land

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

His wardrobe is a cross between a 1980s action hero and a horse-obsessed frat boy. What ties every Kentriarchy outfit together is his lightning-flaring headband, which was taken from the pattern on his tracksuit with a horse galloping amidst lightning flashes. In fact, Ken’s fascination with horses is one of his few interests that doesn’t involve Barbie’s approval of him. And this is reflected in his wardrobe as he takes control of Barbie Land. 

The action hero-inspired part of the wardrobe was influenced by Sylvester Stallone. “Those images were kind of around in the early prep when we were first talking about what Ken would look like,” says Durran. While describing it as over-the-top would even feel like an understatement, Ryan Gosling embraced the look — particularly the fur coat! And, yes! The fur coat also has a pattern of horses on its inner lining. “That’s one of my favorite things,” says Durran

Durran and her team shopped for many of Ken’s retro sportswear outfits with the help of shoppers based in the U.S. They then imported the clothing back to London for Duran and her team, who were in much need of it

BARBIE’S CLIMACTIC OUTFIT

The yellow outfit Barbie wears at the climax near the end of the movie is an opportune moment for Durran, because the costume designer explains that it denotes Barbie “as she’s becoming human.” 

Margot Robbie (Barbie) in yellow outfit

The costume stands out from Barbie’s other wardrobe with its bias-cut dress that drapes. One of Barbie’s most popular costumes over the past decade is a yellow dress that Durran considered copying. 

“But it wouldn’t really be recognizable enough,” Durran tells Variety. “We wanted a soft yellow and wanted it to have less pop. So, we printed that yellow onto white silk, and because of the cut, it clings to the body. That’s not really a Barbie characteristic — the Barbie characteristic is to be cut straight and to create a shape that falls away from the body.” 

 

💋 PRACTICAL FX 💋

Barbie movie Practical FX banner

A team of craftspeople in the art department was essential to pulling off the look of Barbie. While it was important to create everything first by hand, such as the miniatures, the visual effects department would then scan them into CG models. This allowed the filmmakers to retain an authentic color and texture.  

BARBIE EMBRACES PRACTICAL EFFECTS OVER CGI

While production designer Sarah Greenwood feels there’s a time and place for CGI, she notes that Gerwig decided early on that she wanted to embrace practical effects. Returning to the opening sequence inspired by 2001, the legs were very much real — as were all of the rocks. Only the sky was created with CGI in post-production. 

“You’re making a toy,” says Greenwood, “and if you don’t, if it’s not real and it’s not there, it’s kind of irrelevant.”

Classic Barbie in Barbie film

Barbie Movie | Warner Bros.

The crew actually constructed the pair of legs so the little girls actually interacted with them. 

The goal for Gerwig and her team of filmmakers was to create the look and feel of a diorama box rather than an overly polished CGI finish. So, even the stars and flowers were hung on wires and strings

LEAVING BARBIE LAND

A fan-favorite part of the Barbie movie was the montage sequences of Barbie leaving and returning to Barbie Land. It was reminiscent of Buddy the Elf leaving the North Pole. 

According to cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, ASC, AMC, he found the practical effects of the transitionary scenes challenging but fun. The fantastical journey involved a car, boat, rocket ship, and snowmobile, among other modes of transportation. The primary motor for their “journey” was a conveyor belt that’s typically used in stage productions. 

Ken and Barbie in pink boat in movie Behind the scenes of Barbie movie

“The script just said, ‘and now they’re on a boat, and now they’re on the spaceship,’ but didn’t specify anything,” the cinematographer tells TheWrap. “But we, as a team, came up with this idea of it being very theatrical. Sarah Greenwood, the production designer, is brilliant. She made this very theatrical thing where you’d have the foreground, the foreground ground moving on a belt, and the vehicle was a cut-out that had a little bit of dimension on a fake road that little lines were moving, and then the next layer was maybe the desert on a flat painting which was moving at different speed, and then another layer was mountains that were moving in another speed.” 

Everything from the dolphins to the seagull was operated by puppeteers. This suits comedy especially well because the actors can interact and improvise with handmade props and objects. “They were actually seeing dolphins,” explains Prieto, “they were seeing the cut-out mountains. So it was great fun. Pretty challenging, but fun.” 

💋 WATCH BARBIE 💋

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Watch Greta Gerwig’s authentically artificial world full of a civilization of Barbies and Kens! And book your tickets at your local movie theater to see the Barbie movie in all of its synthetic splendor! 

After Barbie leaves theaters, it will be available on your friendly neighborhood streaming service. 

Join Filmmakers Academy starting at just $4.99/mo.!

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The Look of Oppenheimer https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-look-of-oppenheimer/ Mon, 31 Jul 2023 20:05:04 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=99217 Oppenheimer is the story of the man behind the atomic bomb. Based on the Pulitzer-Prize-winning book “American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer,” Christopher Nolan’s newest film examines the gifted theoretical physicist, played by Cillian Murphy, as he wrestles with the consequences and moral implications of bestowing a world-ending power unto humanity.   […]

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Oppenheimer is the story of the man behind the atomic bomb. Based on the Pulitzer-Prize-winning book “American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer,” Christopher Nolan’s newest film examines the gifted theoretical physicist, played by Cillian Murphy, as he wrestles with the consequences and moral implications of bestowing a world-ending power unto humanity.  

(SPOILERS AHEAD!)

Nolan tells the tale in the way he does best — presenting non-linear timelines to thematically converge on the political destruction of the scientist after his public opposition to creating more weapons of mass destruction following the war. Oppenheimer is professionally ruined, labeled a Communist sympathizer, and his government clearance is revoked. Once he gave the United States the A-bomb, he was no longer useful to the emerging world power. 

At one point in the film, Kitty Oppenheimer (Emily Blunt) says, “You think because you let them tar and feather you that the world will forgive you? They won’t.” 

PRO TIP: Bookmark this page so you can easily refer back to it later. 

OPPENHEIMER ‘PUSHING THE BUTTON FEATURETTE’:

The filmmakers had the unique challenge of conveying the interrelationship between the brightest minds in academia and the war effort that was increasingly suspicious of communism. The rising USSR, though among the Allied forces, rivaled American hegemony. Even as Lieutenant General Leslie Groves (Matt Damon) interviewed Oppenheimer for the Manhattan Project, it was clear the scientist’s sympathies for the Soviets played to his detriment. This was later emphasized when Oppenheimer struggled to achieve Q-level clearance — and it would ultimately be revoked for that very reason. 

However, what motivated Oppenheimer wasn’t the bomb itself. The idea that a weapon so great would not only end the Second World War but end all wars was enticing for a man whose sights were set on bettering humankind. Needless to say, their work only ended up perpetuating the demand for more weapons of mass destruction. 

THE TECHNICAL MARVEL OF THE AMERICAN PROMETHEUS

Even though the stakes are so astronomically high that there’s even a chance the detonation could destroy the Earth, the film retains a sobering, noirish quality through the perspective of Oppenheimer. 

Christopher Nolan confirms this very idea with the LA Times, “All the films I’ve made, one way or another, are film noirs. They’re all stories about consequences. And with Oppenheimer, the consequences are the fastest to arrive and the most extreme.” 

J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) and director Christopher Nolan, Universal Pictures

J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) and director Christopher Nolan, Universal Pictures

Over 100 theaters obtained specialized equipment to properly screen the 70mm prints, and the technical innovations and modifications are in and of themselves a marvel, necessitating a theatrical viewing to properly watch the film as it was intended. With a weight of over 600 pounds, the final prints for Oppenheimer unravel to over 11 miles. About less than a mile longer than the ground flattened by the bomb at the test site. 

Christopher Nolan made the film on the largest scale possible because the idea was for audiences to experience the film in a theater. That way they could adequately exhibit the phenomenon of the nuclear trial, codenamed: TRINITY

It is said when Oppenheimer witnessed the raw power unleashed in the Jornada Del Muerto desert, he was struck by a verse from the Bhagavad Gita… 

“Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.”  

Keep reading to unravel the filmmaking behind the tale of an enigmatic scientist whose paradoxical plight was to risk the destruction of the world in order to save it. 

This is The Look of Oppenheimer.

Oppenheimer film poster

 

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design
  • Practical FX

 

☢ OPPENHEIMER TECH SPECS ☢

Oppenheimer Tech Specs Banner

  • Aspect Ratio: 
    • 1.43: 1 (IMAX 70mm: some scenes)
    • 1.90: 1 (Digital IMAX: some scenes)
    • 2.20 : 1 (70mm and Digital)
    • 2.39 : 1 (35mm)
  • Camera: 
    • IMAX MKIII, Panavision Sphero 65 and Hasselblad Lenses
    • IMAX MKIV, Panavision Sphero 65 and Hasselblad Lenses
    • IMAX MSM 9802, Panavision Sphero 65 and Hasselblad Lenses
    • Panavision Panaflex System 65 Studio, Panavision Panspeed & System 65 Lenses
  • Negative Format: 65 mm (also horizontal, Kodak Vision3 50D 5203, Vision3 250D 5207, Vision3 500T 5219, Eastman Double-X 5222)
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • IMAX 
    • Panavision Super 70
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • 35 mm(anamorphic, Kodak Vision 2383)
    • 70 mm(also horizontal, also IMAX DMR blow-up, Kodak Vision 2383)
    • D-Cinema 

 

THE WORLD OF OPPENHEIMER

The World of Oppenheimer Banner

The story of Prometheus is one that is in the bones of our origins. Eons ago when humanity was first conceived, we had to decide how to best sacrifice to the gods. With the help of the titan Prometheus, we tricked Zeus into accepting the bones and fat of animals as their tribute while keeping the meat for ourselves. 

Outraged once he discovered he was deceived, Zeus took back fire from humanity as punishment. Pitying the cold and hungry humans, Prometheus ventured up to Mount Olympus and brought fire back down so humanity could prosper. For his treachery, Zeus chained Prometheus to a stone on a far-off island where his regenerative liver would be eaten by an eagle every day for eternity. 

Titan Prometheus steals fire The eagle eats the liver of Prometheus

The “fire” that the American Prometheus provided to humankind is more than a weapon of mass destruction. As a theoretical physicist, J. Robert Oppenheimer was motivated by innovating the field and the possibilities of quantum field theory, spectroscopy, and theoretical astronomy. But just as fire could be used for creation or destruction, Oppenheimer’s work could either power the world or obliterate it. 

OPPENHEIMER FEATURETTE ‘TRINITY TEST’:

The film does not put its sights on showing the nuclear devastation at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Rather, it focuses on the moral implications that overcome the scientist who contends with the guilt of constructing such a weapon. What the audience is eventually treated to is the grand spectacle of the first atomic bomb test on July 16, 1945. It’s like waiting for some titanic Lovecraftian monster to reveal itself. 

Fast forward to 1947, just a few years after the war and Oppenheimer is now the director of Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ. Still very much plagued by the shockwaves of his efforts. While chairing the General Advisory Committee of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, he lobbied for international control of nuclear power to prevent an arms race with the Soviet Union. When he opposed the development of the hydrogen bomb in 1949, this was a bridge too far for the national security state. Oppenheimer became a target for the Second Red Scare, sabotaging his reputation and security clearance. 

Any other instance, outside the Trinity Test, where the atomic bomb is felt throughout the film is consequentially in the mind of Oppenheimer. Such as when he stands before a cheering audience at Los Alamos after Japan surrenders and while facing a particularly heated interrogation years later in a private tribunal that functions as a kangaroo court. In no way could he take the fire back from humanity. It was too late. 

☢ PRODUCTION DESIGN ☢

Oppenheimer Production Design Banner

The filmmakers launched into pre-production in January 2022 and wrapped principal photography in May of that same year. With such a quick turn time, production designer Ruth De Jong had her work cut out for her. Her collaboration with Nolan, producer Emma Thomas, and executive producer Thomas Hayslip began even a year earlier in 2021. 

There were plenty of locations to consider from Princeton, New Jersey to Cambridge and Zurich — not to mention, New York and Los Angeles. De Jong largely worked within the theoretical physicist’s beloved desert, replicating the 1940s top secret laboratory town of Los Alamos. 

Oppenheimer production at night Oppenheimer films at Princeton

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Designing Non-Linear Timelines

Comprised of a non-linear timeline, Oppenheimer alternates between when the theoretical physicist is developing the science and theory for the atomic bomb and his later public destruction due to his opposition to furthering nuclear development. Nolan finds a clear way to define the contrast between Oppenheimer’s “Fission” timeline in color and Strauss’ “Fusion” timeline in black and white.  

We open with Oppenheimer at Cambridge before turning his studies to the University of Göttingen, the world’s leading center of theoretical physics, then becoming a professor at Berkley and his eventual recruitment as the director of the Manhattan Project. 

This is woven along with the 1954 timeline with an aged, pensive Oppenheimer who faces a private security hearing that questions his allegiance to the U.S. and its national security. Then, it is fused with yet another storyline in black and white, following the 1959 confirmation hearing of Admiral Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey Jr.). 

“It was lots of hard work,” says De Jong. “With every film, you have to start somewhere. You can’t overanalyze too much. Chris [Nolan] likes to work closely with his designer in prep. We had some wonderful time to talk together to talk concepts and have the script to use as our guide, and we dove in.” 

 

PRE-PRODUCTION

When it came to research and development, the production designer found herself obsessed with each and every little detail. To this, Nolan told her, “Ruth, I’m not making a documentary snooze fest.” This clarified to De Jong that she didn’t have to be so married to the reality of the time period and instead bottle its essence. This was a story about the forward-thinking Oppenheimer, after all. 

Los Alamos Project Main Gate Los Alamos New Mexico

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Location scouting for the epic vistas took them through Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. Ultimately, they found that New Mexico would supply more than enough scenery to match the historic desert detonation. So, they set up shop in Santa Fe to plot the production. 

Oppenheimer production in New Mexico desert Oppenheimer production in New Mexico desert

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

They worked off of a detailed recreation of Los Alamos that De Jong illustrated, and ultimately physically rendered it as a 3D white model. It became so extensive that they moved it into the backyard of the production office. Vision, however, sometimes outweighs the cost. So, they had to downscale it as they realized the heavy price of recreating the entire town. 

“Chris liked to call it ‘our little Western town,’ which is a few small buildings and two gunslingers, and that’s about all you see,” says Thomas Hayslip. “But there’s nothing little about Los Alamos, and much of our work was as much about creating the illusion of the place as it was recreating it.” 

 

OPPENHEIMER PRODUCTION

The production of Oppenheimer predominantly took place in New Mexico and California. They focused their world-building efforts on a select number of locations that fit Nolan’s story like a puzzle. There weren’t any additional pieces left over. This allowed the filmmakers to work efficiently within their allotted five months. 

Building Los Alamos for Oppenheimer film

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“New Mexico was really going to be the source of where we filmed everything,” says De Jong. “We ended up filming a lot of D.C. interiors in New Mexico, and Pasadena doubled for the Berkeley shots.” 

While there, they were immersed in the region far from a soundstage and without a centralized home base. Starting her mornings in Santa Fe, De Jong would typically end up wrapping each day in Belen where they constructed their Trinity Test site. 

While Nolan initially considered filming all the Los Alamos scenes on location, he eventually changed his mind once he saw it. The director resolved to only film the interior scenes there due to how much the outside had changed. Exteriors would have been too difficult with its modern buildings on location, replete with its own Starbucks. So, instead, they constructed the town at the 21,000-acre retreat known as Ghost Ranch in Northern New Mexico. 

Ghost Ranch in New Mexico

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Authentic Interiors and Exteriors

Shooting the interiors at the actual locations of Los Alamos imbued a sense of authenticity and timelessness to the film, from the laboratory where the bomb was assembled to the office space where the scientists feverishly collaborated.  

Director Christopher Nolan behind the scenes building the bomb of Oppenheimer Christopher Nolan directing scientists of Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

For the exteriors, they constructed all 360 degrees of the structures, not just the camera-facing sides. “We want it to feel like you are right there, you are in this,” De Jong says. “This is happening, this is real. This isn’t a backlot.” 

Production Designer Ruth De Jong in recreated Los Alamos Los Alamos recreated at Ghost Ranch
Filmmakers recreated town of Los Alamos for Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

As far as Oppenheimer’s house, it’s still standing. This permitted Cillian Murphy and Emily Blunt the latitude to authentically channel their performances. 

Christopher Nolan directing Cillian Murphy and Emily Blunt for Oppenheimer

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

This also extended to Oppenheimer’s home at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton where they shot both interiors and exteriors, including its surrounding grounds. 

Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton New Jersey

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Filming at the Oppenheimer's home Christopher Nolan on set of Oppenheimer directing scientists

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

The Oppenheimer production also received permission to use Einstein’s old office at the Institute for Advanced Study and to redress it as Oppenheimer’s. This is because Oppenheimer’s office was remodeled over the years whereas Einstein’s office was preserved for the period. 

When shooting on location wasn’t viable, De Jong constructed sets where possible. For instance, they shot the New York hotel scenes at Amy Biehl High School in Albuquerque. When Oppenheimer was received by President Truman (Gary Oldman) in the White House, the interiors were actually shot in various Santa Fe state buildings. 

Filming of Oppenheimer Filming Oppenheimer at Los Alamos

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

TRINITY TEST SITE

The centerpiece of the film is the infamous Trinity Test site where the first atomic bomb was detonated. The scale of the site and the blast were important because it was intended to send shockwaves throughout the entire film. Everything depended on the viability of this set piece. Its two main features include the 100-foot steel tower and the bunker where Oppenheimer and the scientists watched the test. 

Filming Trinity Test for Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

The U.S. military gave Nolan and his production permission to shoot at White Sands Proving Ground, but since it’s an active military base, there were too many hoops to jump through. For one, they would have to go dark for military training drills and lose 6-8 hours each day. 

Filming Oppenheimer Trinity Test in Belen New Mexico

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Ultimately, it made more sense for the Oppenheimer production to pick another space in open New Mexico to replicate the place of the Trinity Test site. They chose Belen to do so because it shared the same mountain range, and was the place where Oppenheimer watched the original detonation. 

Trinity Test Tower in Oppenheimer film

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

De Jong and her team built the set piece as large as possible while still staying within budget. They of course don’t share the benefit of an endless military budget. From the circular windows to the detonation button, the bunker had all the trappings of a top-secret military bunker of the 1940s. This was crucial for the sequence of shots leading up to the pushing of the button. 

Pressing the button for the a-bomb in Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Oppenheimer Trinity Test Oppenheimer Trinity Test

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

OPPENHEIMER CINEMATOGRAPHY

Oppenheimer Cinematography Banner

Christopher Nolan teamed up yet again with the one and only Hoyte van Hoytema, ASC, NSC, FSF to lens the Oppenheimer biographical drama. The two titans of the film industry previously collaborated on Interstellar (2014), and continued with Dunkirk (2017), and Tenet (2020)

Typically, when Nolan initiates a project with van Hoytema, they go out to lunch and the director shares his new idea. Since Nolan only makes a few copies of the script, he invites the seasoned DP to his house to read it. For Oppenheimer, Nolan wanted van Hoytema to read the script before he did any other research. 

In an interview with Kodak, the Oppenheimer DP says, “I discovered that he had boiled down the story into a dramaturgical structure that was very personal, intimate, and thrilling. In our previous films the emphasis was on the action, but for this film, he wanted a very simple, unadorned style to the photography, especially on faces to support the unfolding psychological drama.”

IMAX camera on Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

However, one of the biggest technical challenges was shooting lots of close-ups on large format and keeping the audience engaged on faces for an intimate outcome.

“To a certain extent,” van Hoytema tells British Cinematographer, “we felt like we somehow had to grasp the grand principles of quantum physics, as well as finding a way for us to make the audience understand it. And, of course, quantum physics is a very abstract form of physics. And there are very few people in this world who really understand it on the level of J. Robert Oppenheimer… he’s a genius. And my mind, for sure, doesn’t even tip to the places that he could go. Yet, we felt as filmmakers we could understand things on an intuitive level.” 

Abstract Cinematography of Oppenheimer Abstract Cinematography of Oppenheimer

Read more about the cinematography of Oppenheimer at British Cinematographer!

“The style of photography that Hoyte and I adopted for this movie was to be very simple yet very powerful,” Nolan says. “No barrier between the world of the film and the audience, no obvious stylization other than the black-and-white sequences. But particularly with the color sequences, we wanted very unadorned, simple photography, as natural as possible, revealing lots of textures in the world. Whether it’s the costumes or the sets or locations, you’re looking for real world complexity and detail.”

What fascinated Hoytema was the descriptions of the bomb from firsthand accounts. There were those who said it appeared like a mushroom cloud while others spoke of the morning sky “suddenly lit by searing bright white before turning golden yellow, then red to beautiful purple and violet.”

They were subjective responses, says the DP, “I found it really compelling as I sought to get to the essence of what those people experienced during that period and on that particular day.” 

Real footage of the Trinity Test atomic bomb Impact of Atomic Bomb

IMAX FILMMAKING

What better way to capture the immense power of an atomic bomb than on IMAX (15-perf) format using KODAK 65mm large format film? 

According to van Hoytema, IMAX preserves the full 18K resolution of the image because if you get it in camera, you can make a contact print. Otherwise, the process involves scanning, digitizing, and taking it back to film. “There’s not a more refined, not a more depth-giving medium in the world than doing it exactly in that way,” says the cinematographer.

Camera technician on set of Oppenheimer Filming Oppenheimer Trinity Test

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

They shot on the IMAX MSM 802 MKIII and MKIV cameras along with the Panavision Panaflex System 65 Studio Cameras. The 5-perf 65mm “work horse” cameras permitted them to record dialogue. 

“Large format photography gives clarity and places the audience in the reality you are creating for them,” van Hoytema tells Kodak. “Of course, as the film has grand vistas and deals with the explosion of the world’s first atomic bomb, it had to be a blast, and there is nothing better than IMAX for creating that spectacular cinematic experience.”

Christopher Nolan on set of Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

What Nolan relishes about large-format photography is its clarity before anything else.

“It’s a format that allows the audience to become fully immersed in the story and in the reality that you’re taking them to, says Nolan. In the case of Oppenheimer, it’s a story of great scope and great scale and great span. But I also wanted the audience to be in the rooms where everything happened, as if you are there, having conversations with these scientists in these important moments.”

IMAX CAMERAS AND FILM STOCK

They filmed on KODAK VISION3 250D Color Negative Film 5207 for bright day interiors and exteriors. For low-light and night scenes, they switched to KODAK VISION3 500T Color Negative Film 5219. 

Director Christopher Nolan and DP Hoyte van Hoytema | Universal Pictures

Director Christopher Nolan and DP Hoyte van Hoytema | Universal Pictures

“The 250D and 500T are workhorse speeds that I knew would cover pretty much all of the lighting situations I would encounter, explains van Hoytema. “And even though the larger surface area of the emulsion means the grain is finer – especially in IMAX – they still had enough texture for me. There’s still nothing that beats the resolution, depth, color and roundness of the analog image, nor in the feeling overall that film conveys. When you watch an analog print, especially in an IMAX theatre, the level of impact is freaking inspiring.” 

BLACK & WHITE FILM

Just as the film portrays the first test of detonating an atomic bomb, Oppenheimer also has its own first in the form of celluloid. Oppenheimer was shot on IMAX black-and-white film photography for the first time ever, combined with IMAX 65mm and 65mm large-format film. Nolan and Hoytema had wanted to shoot black-and-white on large format for some time and felt that it would benefit the confirmation hearing of Strauss, set in 1959. 

Oppenheimer BTS of Robert Downey Jr as Lewis Strauss

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“The reason for the black-and-white was very much a way of separating those two narratives, so that on an intuitive level you could easily jump from one to the other,” explains van Hoytema. In a way, we had already done that with the blue and the red color coding in ‘Tenet.’ Black-and-white seemed a very obvious way to do it in this film.”

Since black and white 65mm celluloid didn’t exist, they made a request to Kodak to manufacture it for them. 

Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey, Jr.) greets J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy)

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

“It was a gutsy choice,” van Hoytema says. “One of my very first phone calls was to Kodak, enquiring if they had any 65mm large-format B&W filmstock,” the DP recalls. “But they had never made that before, and early on it was uncertain as to whether they would or could achieve it in time for this production. But they stepped up to the plate and supplied a freshly manufactured prototype DOUBLE-X 5222 65mm filmstock, delivered in cans with handwritten labels on the outside.”

However, you cannot simply load the black and white film into a camera made for color due to its emulsion’s thickness and breakability. Just like the scientists in the film devising the bomb, a team of camera engineers and lab technicians from IMAX, Kodak, Panavision, and Fotokem experimented with the prototype 65mm black and white Kodak film stock. 

They modified the IMAX cameras to accommodate the film stock, adjusted the pressure plates, and made new gates. Hoytema also had to overcome the static in the film, scratching of the negative, and fogging issues. Sometimes they needed to agitate the bath differently and other times it wasn’t so obvious. “We had to keep a very keen eye on the whole process,” Hoytema tells BC

LENSES

Optical innovations and special equipment were essential to the look of Oppenheimer. Dan Sasaki of Panavision re-engineers lenses and optics as well as builds them from the ground up for a specific purpose. 

Sasaki constructed the equivalent of a snorkel lens for the IMAX camera to shoot underwater cinematography and capture extreme macro shots. The lens is a large waterproof long tube that allowed them to convey the atomic world of physics. 

Dan Sasaki constructed the equivalent of a snorkel lens for the IMAX

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Hoytema was fascinated by Peter Kuran’s book ‘How to Photograph an Atomic Bomb’ and referenced it while replicating the Trinity explosion. He investigated the side development of extremely high-speed, ultra-light sensitive, and split-field cameras and long lenses to record the nuclear explosions. 

Authentic Trinity Test cameraman Trinity Test cameramen

The director of photography selected the 50mm and 80mm as his preferred lenses that he believes “touch the sweet spot of immersiveness in IMAX.” 

“Anything beyond those focal lengths and you start to diminish the immersive quality of the image,” says the Oppenheimer DP. “If you go too long the image appears compressed and more graphic, as if you’re looking at a sort of flat screen. Anything too wide becomes more like a fishbowl, where the edges start to fall off too fast. So, the 50mm has become our wide lens, the 80mm our tighter lens. On close-ups they give you the right proximity and wideness, and everything around starts to function like the peripheral vision of your eyes.” 

Christopher Nolan aims IMAX camera at Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

Sasaki helped deliver close focal optics like the Hasselblad Panavision Sphero 65 and Panavision System 65 lenses. This would allow the filmmakers to get closer to the actors in low-light situations shooting at T1.4 instead of T4

CAMERA MOVEMENT & LIGHTING

They used cranes and dollies to move the camera and van Hoytema even lugged the heavy 50-pound IMAX camera on his shoulder for handheld shots. 

Hoyte goes handheld with IMAX on Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Camera on crane behind bunker wall on Oppenheimer movie IMAX handheld on Oppenheimer

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“Yes, it’s heavy, but it’s perfectly manageable,” he insists to the folks at Kodak. “We were not doing long takes, and I only had the IMAX camera on my shoulder in short bursts. Plus, I had a rock-solid crew with whom I have worked on many films before. My key grip Kyle Carden and dolly grip Ryan Monro were very sensitive and sensible towards my needs in wrangling the camera and making sure that I got it on and off my shoulder in good time. I must also mention Keith Davis, my genius focus puller, in getting the cameras ready in the first place to do some run-and-gun work.”

Camera team on Oppenheimer production

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Oppenheimer production in New Mexico

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Authentic and natural sources informed the film’s lighting. Even when it came to inside the mind of the theoretical physicist, the “interpretive work” was motivated by reality with a helping hand of added creativity from veteran gaffer R. Adam Chambers ICLS.  

They used a mix of old-fashioned Tungstens and the extra punch of 18K ARRIMAX HMIs with newer fixtures like the ARRI Skypanels. 

Lighting of Oppenheimer movie

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“I have to say that LED lighting has come on dramatically in the last few years,” remarks van Hoytema. “The lighting is rich, the color rendering indexes are way up there, and the controllability is great. Adam, together with his brothers Noah and Shane, have developed an extremely solid, no-latency, 100% wireless DMX control system. This meant our lights were instantly controllable from the board as soon as we put them up.”

Van Hoytema didn’t use any lights inside the room for the Oppenheimer hearing sequence in Room 2021. Instead, all their lights came from outside the windows as they followed the color of real daylight from the board, matching it perfectly with ambient light. The DP notes, “It’s such a fast and versatile way to work.” 

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COSTUME DESIGN

Oppenheimer costume design banner

From Oppenheimer’s wide-brimmed hat to Strauss’ handmade suits, the cast was dressed by the one and only Ellen Mirojnick, who conveyed the pomp and dignity of the 1930s and 1940s period with her masterful costume design. 

“What I found really interesting about Oppenheimer’s story was learning how in-sync both their geniuses were in exploring an unknown landscape through the experimentation of fission and fusion, literally and figuratively,” says Mirojnick

The costume designer carefully selected clothing for each character, accentuating their unique personas, quirks, and position in society — be it in the scientific, political, or military communities. 

The biggest challenge for the costume designer above all else was handling the extras. The scale of the movie is large full of European academics, American students, scientists and their families at Los Alamos, soldiers, military personnel, and politicians, and that’s only about half of what Mirojnick and the costume department contended with. 

“There were scientists, soldiers, mothers, workers, and children, of all shapes and sizes, over a period of a number of years,” Mirojnick says. “Additionally, the team were tasked with making sure each season was represented correctly whilst being mindful of the actors who were shooting outside in the cold of a New Mexico winter.”

J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER

Beginning with Robert Oppenheimer, he was an academic who was well-traveled and of means. Mirojnick focused on his silhouette, which of course was capped by his wide-brimmed hat that took extensive research and persistence to get just right. She describes it as a “porkpie crown with a somewhat Western brim.” 

Its origin unknown, Mirojnick sought out hatmakers in New York and Italy for help, but they came up empty-handed. Eventually, it was the Hollywood hatmaker Baron Hats that came through and recreated its infamous shape. 

Baron Hats hatmaker

Photo Credit and Copyright by Elisa Sandez

“Only Chris had the ability to shape it just so,” recalls Mirojnick. “When Chris touched it, magic would happen. He’d flip it or turn it a bit or squeeze the brim slightly to get it how he saw it in his mind’s eye.”

Oppenheimer Hat Oppenheimer Hat and pipe

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

The costumer accented the silhouette with blue shirts that the theoretical physicist preferred and also highlighted Murphy’s blue eyes. With his wide-brimmed hat and his K-6 badge, Oppenheimer appears as the sheriff of his own town. 

Oppenheimer sheriff of Los Alamos

J. Rober Oppenheimer | Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

When Oppenheimer moves to the desert, Mirojnick keeps the same kind of suit but alters it to a sandy color. They used a tan whipcord fabric from hard-twisted yarns that played beautifully against the blue. 

KITTY OPPENHEIMER 

Beginning as a Bay Area socialite, Kitty Oppenheimer (Emily Blunt) brought a distinct intellectual flavor of smart yet fashionable dress that soured with children in a domestic setting. 

Emily Blunt as Kitty Oppenheimer Emily Blunt as Kitty Oppenheimer

As her role as a wife and mother carried her off into the desert by the winds of destiny, her choice of clothing turned more practical and casual while still clinging to the stylish vestiges of her previous life.  

JEAN TATLOCK 

Mirojnick didn’t have many references for Jean Tatlock (Florence Pugh) outside of some headshots. 

Jean Tatlock (Florence Pugh) and Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy)

Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy | Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

This meant she had to get creative with Tatlock and invited Pugh to dream up what her character would eventually wear. Together they let the character’s personality inform the style of dress and the character’s movements. 

ADMIRAL LEWIS STRAUSS

Meanwhile, Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey Jr.) adorned handmade suits, and custom shirts, and was perfectly manicured in every scene. Mirojnick and her team even recreated his ties from old photographs. Every part of Strauss’ outfit exuded affluence, wealth, and success. 

Admiral Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey Jr.)

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

What informed Mirojnick’s design for Strauss and his Senate confirmation hearing was an old photograph from the event. In the photograph, Strauss wore a narrow dark pin-striped suit, white shirt, and yellow tie with a dark blue stripe. 

Even though the sequence is in black and white, Mirojnick and her team carefully crafted each article of clothing to perfectly match the photo. 

☢ PRACTICAL FX ☢

Oppenheimer Practical Effects banner

The idea for Oppenheimer was to do as much as possible in camera with practical effects and miniatures over CGI and VFX. Nolan proudly insists that the film has absolutely zero CGI shots. 

“Chris wants everything to feel authentic, whether shooting in the actual places where the people in the Manhattan Project lived or building things from scratch,” producer Charles Roven says. “He also likes films to feel hand-made, not made in a studio or generated with computer-generated imagery. You feel that throughout the movie, particularly in the area of practical effects, whether it’s putting snow on the ground, or creating ripples in a pond, which is a recurring motif in the movie, or how he approached the first atomic bomb explosion.”

Oppenheimer Trinity Test

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Van Hoytema also prefers the physical world to the world of VFX. He tells British Cinematographer, “I always get a big kick out of enabling shots or enabling ways of storytelling that you haven’t seen before, and especially in these times where people think they can do whatever they can come up with in CGI… I always like to challenge myself and find the equivalent of a good CGI [shot] in the physical world, because I just think that the physical world brings us a certain level of tangibility that is unobtainable in CGI.”

Oppenheimer trinity test IMAX camera on tower IMAX camera in trinity test tower Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Discover more on cinematography at British Cinematographer!

 

REPLICATING THE ATOM BOMB

Visual effects supervisor Andrew Jackson was given the ultimate challenge of making a mushroom cloud explosion without CGI. Using solely practical effects, Jackson had to recreate the spectacular Trinity Test of July 16, 1945. 

Atom bomb Trinity Test

Pushing The Button Featurette | Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

Atom bomb with Oppenheimer

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

 

“I knew from the beginning that the Trinity test was going to be one of the most important things for us to figure out,” says Nolan. “I had done a nuclear explosion via computer graphics in The Dark Knight Rises, which worked very well for that film. But it also showed me that with a real-life event like Trinity, which was well documented using new cameras and formats developed for recording that event, computer graphics would never give you the sense of threat that you see in the real-life footage.”

Oppenheimer Trinity Test

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

Nolan continues, “There’s a visceral feeling to that footage. It becomes tactile, and in becoming tactile it can be threatening as well as awesome. So that was the challenge. To find what you might call analog methods to produce effects to evoke the requisite threat, awe, and horrible beauty of the Trinity test.”

This weighed so heavily on the director that he invited Jackson to be the first person to read his script when it was finished — after his wife and producer Emma Thomas, of course. That way he could begin dreaming up how to make it practical without launching a nuke for the sake of cinema. 

Assisting Jackson with the atomic endeavor was special effects supervisor Scott Fisher. They conducted experiments that ranged from smashing together ping pong balls to developing luminous magnesium solutions. Using small digital cameras, they filmed closeups of the experiments at varying frame rates. 

“Their whole unit was one, big science project,” says van Hoytema. “I was very jealous that they got to play around so much with all that kind of stuff.”

 

ATOM BOMB WITH PRACTICAL EFFECTS

The explosion was a delectable recipe of gasoline over propane and other fuels because Fisher notes that it gives “so much bang for your buck.” In addition, they used magnesium and aluminum powder to enrich the brightness and provide its raw atomic appearance. 

Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“We did a bit of that on this because we really wanted everyone to talk about that flash, that brightness. So we tried to replicate that as much as we could,” he explained.

When Jackson and Fisher showed their work to Nolan, he affirmed that they were on the right track and tasked them with figuring it out on IMAX cameras. This is where Sasaki’s long, fish-eyed probe lens came in handy. 

So, combining magnesium flares with gasoline and black powder explosions, among other things, they experimented with combinations of imagery that both the main unit and Jackson had shot. 

Practical Effects of Oppenheimer Oppenheimer practical effects

Oppenheimer | Pushing The Button Featurette | Universal Pictures

“You just start visualizing combinations,” says Nolan, “and experimenting with combinations of imagery to give the feeling of what this must have felt like to watch this. And what that gave me in the edit suite was this thread, this connecting set of analog techniques that confuse scale, from the particle world of quantum mechanics to the vast universe, astrophysics, et cetera, and all the points in between.”

The finished product was one of immense power and distinction — the world would never be the same. 

“There was a definite feeling of what we are seeing is both beautiful and dangerous, in equal measure”, says Nolan. “And that’s what we had asked for. So we always knew that the sequence would be a collage rather than one iconic shot. If there is an iconic shot, I think it’s the profile of Oppenheimer seeing it.”

Oppenheimer watches Trinity Test

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

According to Universal Pictures, “how the actual atomic explosion images were created for the film remains top-secret.”

CONVEYING ATOMIC PHYSICS

The filmmakers cut the film with extraordinary images of atoms and subatomic particles without the use of CGI. This meant that the filmmakers had to imagine other ways to represent the microscopic world that Oppenheimer dreamt of. 

“We’ve gotta see the world the way he [Oppenheimer] sees it,” Jackson remembers Nolan saying. “We’ve gotta see the atoms moving, we’ve gotta see the way he’s imagining waves of energy, the quantum world. And then we have to see how that translates into the Trinity test. And we have to feel the danger, feel the threat of all this somehow. Let’s do all these things, but without any computer graphics.” 

Oppenheimer Abstract cinematography Newton physics Oppenheimer Abstract cinematography Newton physics

Nuclear Cinematography | Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

The techniques that Jackson, Fisher, and the FX team used to recreate the nuclear explosion were also used to convey Oppenheimer’s internal world. 

“There’s one sense in which computer graphics is the obvious way to do it, but I didn’t feel we were going to get anything that would feel personal and unique to Oppenheimer’s character,” says Nolan. “We were able to generate this incredible library of idiosyncratic and personal and frightening and beautiful images to represent the thought process of somebody at the forefront of the paradigm shift from Newtonian physics to quantum mechanics, who is looking into dull matter and seeing the extraordinary vibration of energy that’s within all things, and how it might be unleashed, and what it might bring.”

Oppenheimer Abstract cinematography Newton physics

Abstract Cinematography | Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

“We try and grow that thread to its ultimate release, this kind of vibrating energy that follows through the whole film, to its ultimate release in this incredibly destructive event”, Nolan tells IGN. “And so some of what they did was absolutely tiny and magnified, sort of miniature, as it were, or even beyond that really, microscopic. And some of it was absolutely vast and required intense concentration on set.” 

The film showcases some of the fallout in the gymnasium at Los Alamos as Oppenheimer addresses a crowd following the Japanese surrender. As he speaks, he imagines the nuclear fallout from the impact of the bombs, the filmmakers utilize a combination of VFX and LED technology to tremble as the scene unraveled. 

Oppenheimer in gymnasium at Los Alamos

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

The final results are MIND-BLOWING. But you will have to get tickets and head to the theater to see for yourself!

WATCH OPPENHEIMER

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As Robert Downey, Jr. says, “Do yourself a favor and go see this on as big a screen as you can.” 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYPbbksJxIg 

Oppenheimer is currently playing in theaters. After that, it will be available on your friendly neighborhood streaming service. 

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The Look of Asteroid City https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-the-look-of-asteroid-city/ Thu, 06 Jul 2023 00:12:03 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=99008 Asteroid City is a film that’s not so much about extraterrestrial contact in a desert town as it is about humanity’s deep desire for universal meaning — and the connection between the actor and their character.  Moreover, one can take away how the art of theatrical storytelling is a collective effort that cannot be solely […]

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Asteroid City is a film that’s not so much about extraterrestrial contact in a desert town as it is about humanity’s deep desire for universal meaning — and the connection between the actor and their character. 

Moreover, one can take away how the art of theatrical storytelling is a collective effort that cannot be solely claimed by one lone narcissist, like the romanticized writer, Conrad Earp (Ed Norton). From the Host (Bryan Cranston) to playwright Conrad Earp to the director Schubert Green (Adrien Brody) and to each character performed by a star-studded ensemble, each has a hand in defining the story and its larger meaning. 

PRO TIP: Bookmark this page so you can easily refer back to it later. 

This latest installment into Wes Anderson’s repertoire explores its meaning within a Russian Doll of plots from the writer to the play to the TV broadcast filming the play, only to extract the truth through its layers of character intervention and exploration. 

In this way, the film is about infinity, both inside and out. The film props open a window into the creative process where inspiration is sought as a means to acknowledge the connection between the artist and their work. 

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) is Asteroid City

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Somewhere between the third and fourth walls lies the very nature of imagination and how it ultimately plays into the performance and meaning of a theatrical work of art. 

“You can’t wake up if you don’t fall asleep!” 

Follow along as we plunge into the imagination of Wes Anderson, highlighting his team of collaborators while learning what inspired them, and how they constructed the worlds that fall in a story within a story…

This is The Look of Asteroid City.

Asteroid City movie poster

CONTENTS:

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Cinematography
  • Costume Design

 

ASTROID CITY TECH SPECS

Asteroid City Tech Specs Banner

  • Runtime: 1 hour 45 minutes (105 minutes)
  • Color: 
  • Aspect Ratio: 
    • 1.37: 1 (some scenes)
    • 2.39: 1 (theatrical ratio)
  • Camera: 
    • Arricam LT, Cooke S4 and Zeiss Master Anamorphic Lenses
    • Arricam ST, Cooke S4 and Zeiss Master Anamorphic Lenses
  • Laboratory:
      • Company 3, London, UK (digital intermediate)
      • FotoKem Laboratory, Burbank (CA), USA (film processing)
      • Hiventy, Malakoff, France (film processing)
  • Negative Format: 35 mm (Kodak Vision3 200T 5213, Eastman Double-X 5222)
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • Digital Intermediate (4K, master format) 
    • Master Scope (anamorphic, source format) 
    • Super 35 (source format, some scenes)
  • Printed Film Format: D-Cinema 

 

THE WORLD OF ASTEROID CITY

World of Asteroid City Banner

Set in a 1950s desert town somewhere between California and Arizona, Asteroid City takes place in the post-WWII Atomic Era when science fiction and the pursuit of knowledge and technology captured the public imagination; some would say, it served in a vacuum of crumbling dogmas. Even though humankind still looks to the sky for answers, the intervention of intelligent alien life hardly imparts any peace of mind. In the world of Asteroid City, humanity is met with silence. Communication is still only one-sided and the interstellar visitors don’t seem in the slightest bit interested to make direct contact. 

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) atomic bomb test in Asteroid City

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

The majority of the ‘50s took place under the presidency of retired 5-Star General of the Army and Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe, Dwight D. Eisenhower. Otherwise, known to his friends as “Ike.” Ike stood before a new world superpower with its attention turned optimistically toward the possibility of infinite new worlds, while still silently contending with the aftermath of the one they left behind after the war. 

The idea of Manifest Destiny is deeply entrenched in the psychology of America as it spread west until it reached the Pacific. Now, with its influence spread across the globe, our imagination is captured by the stars above, wondering and entertaining the possibility of new worlds. 

The story of stargazing teenage geniuses is right out of a Karen Russell anthology and reminiscent of short stories like, “The Star-Gazer’s Log of Summer-Time Crime.” Like Russell, Anderson constructs almost a fable-like setting of Asteroid Day, commemorating an ancient meteorite crash site. 

Asteroid City Junior Stargazers

Junior Stargazers in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

MULTI-LAYERED STORYTELLING

Asteroid City is a film best described as “a Russian doll,” a multi-layered story, comprised of three unique plots that vary significantly on the scale between reality and fiction. In other words, it’s an embedded narrative that follows a writer, his play, and a teleplay, the titular town of “Asteroid City.” 

But how did the auteur director create contrast between these separate plots?

Wes Anderson on set of Asteroid City movie

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh

Wes Anderson is one of few directors with a unique, globally trademarked style that’s undeniably all his own. His greater sensibilities toward themes and tropes, best conveyed essentially through a theatrical, literary style, are captured with the same air of fuzzy self-awareness you observe while watching a play. When a filmmaker wants their look for a project to feel as if it’s filmed in some plush playhouse in Connecticut, or perhaps out of the imagination of a particularly gifted yet severely introverted outcast adolescent — all in pastel, of course — they will unwittingly describe this look as “Wes Anderson.” 

The Golden Era

In an interview with IndieWire, Anderson expressed how he was always captivated by the aura and mystique of a backstage story and the theater as a whole. What particularly struck Anderson about directors like Elia Kazan was how they worked with a new form of acting both on stage and on film. Anderson considers the time as a bygone era that was “the most cinematic ever.” 

Even the structure of Asteroid City harkens back to the presentation of old Hollywood. With the opening of credits, title cards with act and scene numbers, and an intermission to break up both halves of the film. This approach to structure is nothing new for Anderson whose other works benefit from this theatrical presentation.

The look of Asteroid City is couched in an uncanny desert town characterized by a nearby crater from a meteorite. While it also serves as a fitting spot to sit back with a strawberry daiquiri in hand and watch a marvelous display of mushroom clouds from nearby nuclear tests. Anderson had a “Euro take” on the American West and was inspired by the likes of Wim Wenders and his Berlin point of view. 

Below are photographs from Wim Wender’s collection, Written in the West.

Wim Wenders American West Wim Wenders American West

 

PRODUCTION DESIGN

Asteroid City Production Design banner

Let’s next explore the film’s production design. First off, there’s a theatrical play with a red, sunbaked color palette in Anderson’s signature pastel that beautifully complements the aqua and turquoise features of the scenery. 

While on top of that is the behind-the-scenes making of the play in classic, inky black and white. You can practically choke on the cigarette smoke. 

An additional layer includes a host with the trappings of Rod Serling that informs the audience that they are in fact watching a TV broadcast of a play that doesn’t actually exist. 

Asteroid City color palette Asteroid City color palette

Southwest color palette in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Brian Cranston in Asteroid City Asteroid City black and white Adrian Brody

Northeast color palette in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Pre-Production

The filmmakers develop the color palette after Anderson presents his narrative’s main ideas. During prep, they shoot tests on different color walls with various swatches of cloth. 

Director of Photography Robert D. Yeoman, ASC shares an example from The Grand Budapest Hotel:

“To get the right hue for the purple jacket used in The Grand Budapest Hotel, we shot different shades of purple against a pink wall in different lights to see how the colors would work on film. Then Wes makes the decision about what kind of purple or pink we are going to use.” 

—Robert D. Yeoman

In a work that is set in the 1950s United States, Anderson’s longtime production designer Adam Stockhausen (since 2012’s Moonrise Kingdom) brings together both east coast and west — the frontier desert town in the southwest and an urban news broadcast studio in the east. 

“The light is very warm and the innate redness is magnified by the setting sun. From the start, Wes was very clear about the color of the ground and rocks. Then we start adding that color to the sketches and seeing how the white of the luncheonette and motel bounced off that.”

—Adam Stockhausen, Focus Features

Stockhausen started as he does on any other project, asking questions to determine the needs. For example, is it being filmed on a stage or on location? In the case of Asteroid City, it’s a fictional town that doesn’t exist on the map. This gives them some flexibility on where they film. Then, there are big-picture questions. How much of the set needs to be constructed? In their case, all of it. 

CLASSIC DESIGN INSPIRATIONS

Another reason for multiple viewings is to soak in the underlying themes and fully appreciate the production design from the little bridge that leads nowhere to every cactus peppering the background. Visual influences for the look consisted of various references from Looney Tunes to Bad Day at Black Rock

In fact, there were many classic references that helped set the tone and matched the feel of the project. The films of Billy Wilder, for one, were a huge point of reference. Stockhausen was struck by Kiss Me, Stupid, particularly its single stage with a gas station and painted backdrop of a town. “Something about that was exciting in terms of the artificiality of the world of Asteroid City,” Stockhausen tells Focus Features

“The Billy Wilder films Kiss Me, Stupid and especially Ace in the Hole in terms of the overall feeling of the place, the carnival coming to town. It Happened One Night was a big one in terms of the motel and the layout of that. Niagara was a big one, especially with the luncheonette at the cafe. But it starts to bleed away from cinema references and into photographic references, and we dig into each one of these structures and do huge background [research] into gas stations, roadside structures of all sorts, motor courts, motels, postcard collections of the American Southwest with really beautiful images and loads of mid-century color photography of Monument Valley.” —Adam Stockhausen

CONSTRUCTING THE TOWN OF ASTEROID CITY

Stockhausen’s impressive attention to detail stems from the fact that everything you see on screen was designed from scratch. “Everything was physically built and laid out” to give actors and crew “the sense of living in a real town,” says associate producer Ben Adler

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City movie

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

While the setting of the film is in the American southwest, the production took place in the town of Chinchón in Spain. So, the background you see that appears like it’s from a Looney Tunes cartoon (or a Spaghetti Western for that matter) was built from the ground up in a watermelon field. 

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City town in Spain

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

Although, it wasn’t a stroll in the park for Jeremy Dawson and the locations team since that field you see was part of 137 different farms. This tends to be the case in Europe, Stockhausen explains to Filmmaker Magazine, “where the land has been divided and subdivided by generations into smaller and smaller parcels of lands until the point where you’ve got our little town, which was a few thousand feet.” 

Asteroid City desert town

Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Incredible Attention to Detail

Rest assured that there were no shortcuts taken in the construction of the set. According to Stockhausen, it was all meticulously laid out in advance. “If we’re on the 40mm lens and we have 15 chairs in the luncheonette, then Midge is going to feel this far away. If we went to the 35mm lens and we only had 12 chairs, it would feel like this.”  

And let’s just marvel for a moment at the vending machines stacked full of sandwiches, cocktails, and bullets. 

Asteroid City Vending Machines at London Pop up

Asteroid City Exhibition, London

One of the production designer’s regrets was assembling the crater in pieces and not building the gigantic crater into one set piece. As one set piece, it would have allowed them more mobility with the camera. 

FORCED PERSPECTIVE

Stockhausen took all the forced perspective tricks that he normally would employ on a stage with backdrops of landscapes and inflated the scale outside. Due to the nature of the landscape, other than cacti there isn’t anything between the mountains and the characters. 

Asteroid City Production Design behind the scenes making cacti

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

FORCED PERSPECTIVE: A photographic technique using space between subjects and objects to manipulate the viewer’s perception, creating an optical illusion. 

The mountains themselves were very large miniatures constructed by Stockhausen and his team. Their buttes and mesas had to appear like the ones you would see in Monument Valley — 3,000 feet tall and two miles apart. So, Stockhausen and his team made their large miniature versions at 75 feet tall and 1,500 feet apart. 

Asteroid City production design large miniature mountains

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

“For us,” says Stockhausen, “the experiment was trying to figure out that sweet spot where objects are far enough that our brains believe that they are truly huge, but not so far that we are just wasting money building bigger sets.”

Asteroid City large miniature mountains and mesas

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

3D MODELING IN PRE-PRODUCTION

During the pandemic, productions were forced to create alternate forms of collaborative techniques in order to continue work. For instance, Shane Hurlbut, ASC implemented the Insta360 into his scouting and prep process to streamline communication between department heads. Likewise, Adam Stockhausen leveraged 3D modeling software to virtually design the set and camera planning. 

Stockhausen was over the moon with the results that the 3D modeling software brought to his process. 

That was a big shift that we did a great deal more because of the nature of our prep during the lockdown,” he says, “but it worked out really well. And when we were moved out to the real site, it was actually incredibly satisfying to do the first move physically and have it actually line up with what you had planned virtually and have everything work.”

Are you interested in learning more about how 3D modeling software can improve your pre-production? 

In his Cinematographer Essentials Series, DP Justin Jones demonstrates how he uses Cinema 4D in pre-production to ensure precise results in production. Join Filmmakers Academy today to access Jusin’s series!

 

ASTEROID CITY CINEMATOGRAPHY

Asteroid City Cinematography Banner

The film was lensed by none other than director of photography Robert D. Yeoman, ASC in what appears sun-shiny Kodachrome. Yeoman tells Focus Features that they shot anamorphic color film in the desert. 

The film was shot on the Arricam LT and Arricam ST with Cooke S4 and Zeiss Master Anamorphic Lenses. It’s a Wes Anderson flick, which means a planimetric composition with room-to-room tracking shots and whip pans that usually provide a comedic reveal or some kind of periscope effect. 

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) Asteroid City movie

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Pre-Production

Yeoman starts laying the visual groundwork for Asteroid City when location scouting. He and the other department heads are aided by an animatic. Yeoman describes it as “an animated cartoon of the movie” acted out entirely by the auteur director. Anderson started making animatics after Fantastic Mr. Fox. (Please let the animatic hit the internet!) 

“We used that cartoon to understand how the camera was going to move and how Wes planned to explore the town cinematically,” Yeoman says. “On location, we have lots of discussions about the space. I take measurements and walk about with a viewfinder to see how to arrange the very precise shots that Wes has imagined.”

Throughout pre-production, the animatics serve as their Bible. They used it to plot all the camera movement and lighting in advance. Yeoman claims this process improves their accuracy by the time they step on set. They might switch out a lens but overall they know exactly what they’re walking into. 

This was incredibly important because timing is everything when blocking intricate scenes. So, Yeoman and Stockhausen had to collaborate to ensure the placement of buildings aligned with the blocking and dialogue. Yeoman says plainly, “If the dialogue takes place in a minute, we need to make that shot within a minute, not a minute 10.”

ASPECT RATIO

When the film opens, our eyes aren’t treated to the pastel color palette but to black and white imagery in a 1950s New York City broadcast studio at a square 1.37: 1 (4:3 Academy) aspect ratio. 

Side by side comparison of Asteroid City aspect ratios

Southwest and Northeast in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

When we switch to the world of Asteroid City, the aspect ratio opens to 2.39: 1 and we’re treated to technicolor as the camera pans 360 degrees in a dynamic single shot. 

“There’s a different kind of cinema that comes from the ‘50s besides the Kazan approach, which is big-picture Cinemascope. Suddenly there are these widescreen things that take up the whole landscape, these wide formats they invented to make movies bigger. I’m drawn to that, too.” —Wes Anderson

ASTEROID CITY LIGHTING

No stranger to a lo-fi approach, Anderson carried the concept to the film’s lighting, preferring the sun to be the dominant source. The director told Yeoman that he wanted all-natural lighting and no movie lights. Not only because the overwhelming sun is a primary feature of Asteroid City, but to keep the set as small and intimate as possible. According to Yeoman, Anderson likes to keep it to himself, the DP, a focus puller, second AC with a slate, a dolly grip, and a boom op. “In his dream world, he would have eight people making the entire movie.” 

Wes Anderson style of filmmaking

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh

While in pre-production, Yeoman confirmed that he could use skylights for the interior scenes, comparing its effects to “the early days of cinema when they put a nice soft silk overhead and you shot the interiors with the overhead sun.” 

Asteroid City skylights in structures production design

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

So, production designer Adam Stockhausen built skylights into all of the buildings where they shot interiors. For example, in the luncheonette, the only thing between the sun and the actors is a soft piece of diffusion. “Wes loved that we didn’t use lights on the interiors,” recalls Yeoman. “He was thrilled.” 

Asteroid City Cinematographer Robert D. Yeoman, ASC

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh

Embracing the Sun

Now you’re probably wondering how Yeoman dealt with the hard shadows from the overhead sun, especially while filming during summer. It wasn’t easy maintaining a consistent light. “With lights, you can fill in some of the face,” explains Yeoman. “But Wes was eager not to use lighting. We used large white bounce cards to put some light into people’s faces.” 

At first, Yeoman wasn’t crazy about this approach but eventually came around to the harsh light, feeling as if it was almost a character. Films like Paris, Texas weren’t afraid to shoot at high noon, and even though it challenged the cinematographer, he learned to embrace it

The gaffer would sometimes add light from underneath with a white card, as well. Then, later they tweaked the image a bit when they did the digital intermediate. 

Lighting New York City Sequences

Of course, natural lighting wasn’t used for the black-and-white New York theater world. As previously noted, Elia Kazan was a primary inspiration so Yeoman and his team pre-lit it so they could just flick the studio lights on when the actors walked in. 

Yeoman used this opportunity to create a contrast between the world of Asteroid City and New York. He leaned on expressionistic lighting techniques and also the neon and glitter of One from the Heart.

“I love the idea of lights changing within a shot and coordinating those moves to the actors,” says Yeoman. “We do a lot of dimming, or a spotlight might come on someone, and it’s a very theatrical way of shooting.” 

WES ANDERSON STYLE & CINEMATIC LANGUAGE

When we watch a Wes Anderson film, we have certain expectations. The composition must be symmetrical and with deep focus. The camera movements should be precise and every shot has a specific purpose. We want 90-degree pivots, swish pans, and plenty of dolly moves. Better yet, blend them all together into one crazy shot! Yeoman credits part of this precision to operating with one camera instead of two or three. 

“A lot of great directors have a distinct style because they believe there’s one place to put a camera and to tell a story, and that’s the place we’re going to commit to,” Yeoman tells MovieMaker. “Whereas other directors might be concerned about getting a lot of coverage and they want two or three cameras. And all of a sudden, the movies start to look alike with an over, single, two shot, whatever. I think that if people just concentrate on one camera, my opinion is you’ll end up with a little more interesting movie.” 

On a Wes Anderson movie set, you will see crew members standing in for the actors, prepping long dolly moves and other blocking, setting marks, and working together as one big family. Many stars appear in Anderson’s films so one of the expectations from the director is to check any big egos at the door. As Yeoman puts it, “Everyone’s there because they want to be.” 

BRECHTIAN DISTANCING EFFECT

Wes Anderson’s use of the Brechtian Distancing Effect in Asteroid City even outdoes his Best Picture-winning The Grand Budapest Hotel, creating an alienating distance from the audience to the character on screen. 

BRECHTIAN DISTANCING EFFECT: A technique used in theater and cinema that prevents the audience from losing itself completely in the narrative, instead making it a conscious and critical observer. —Global Shakespeares

And one can see why the actor Jones Hall (Schwartzman) playing Augie Steenbrook struggles with the meaning he is supposed to feel. Each character, and corresponding actor, contend with their own meaning and place in the play, and therefore, the universe. 

DUELING SCREENS

After the mechanic (Matt Dillon) declares their car useless, Augie and his four kids find themselves effectively stranded at a stargazing convention in the remote, unfinished desert town of Asteroid City. Augie is forced to call his father-in-law Stanley Zak (Tom Hanks) who has no love for him, especially now that his daughter is dead and Augie is a widower. 

Dual Screens of Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Stanely Zak (Tom Hanks)

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Stanley Zak (Tom Hanks) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Wes Anderson conveys this tense moment with dueling screens. Augie, confined in a small phonebooth, and Stanely, at his spacious, luxurious house. 

FRAME WITHIN A FRAME

Augie and Midge’s white wooden residential shacks are next to one another and as they interact, they do so from the isolation of their windows. This frame-within-a-frame approach gives the impression that they are living, breathing portraits. They strike meaningful and evocative poses that are worthy of the work of art they portray on screen. 

Midge Campbell Scarlett Johansson) in Asteroid City

Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

The movement of the camera is done using an intricate dolly system designed by key grip, Sanjay Sami. Sami has been part of Anderson’s troupe since The Darjeeling Limited in 2007. This allowed the filmmakers to not only dolly sideways but also dolly in and out. 

“He has dolly tracks that go back and forth and sideways that he can switch, like a train. Those tracks have to be tightly controlled because it has to be down to the millimeter. There’s a small crosshair on the camera and Wes can see when you didn’t make it. When you land, it has to be very precise, and it’s so fast you couldn’t use a Steadicam or a Technocrane.” —Robert D. Yeoman, IndieWire
Behind the scenes of Asteroid City Dolly Sanjay Sami Behind the scenes of Asteroid City Dolly Sanjay Sami

Sanjay Sami behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Focus Features

It’s far from an easy endeavor and requires the three of them to pull it off. While Yeoman operates, Sami must simultaneously push the dolly and Vincent Scotet pulls focus. Together they can rack focus on the characters both in the foreground and background. 

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COSTUME DESIGN

Asteroid City Costume Design Banner

“With a population of only 87, it might be the best-dressed place per capita in the world, Milena Canonero’s costumes serve as a ready-to-wear fast fashion line that would sell out overnight if it ever hit shelves.” —The Film Stage 

The internet is a-buzz with how well-dressed the entire cast was from Conrad Earp’s jacket covered with cowboy illustrations to a geeky group of outcasts that appear as if they walked off a photo shoot for a high fashion clothing line. In fact, Earp’s was an original design that costume designer Milena Canonero insists is perhaps even more charming in color. 

After reading the script, the fashionista dives into the research. “I do all sorts of research — and I do love research,” she remarks. “Many of the designs come from the artistic desire to bring to the director something new and fresh.” Some of the inspiration for the costuming was taken from iconic images, from Kim Novak to Marlon Brando. 

When talking about his days as a young artist, Anderson says, “The thing at the center of it for us — if you kind of break it down — is Elia Kazan. We were so interested in Marlon Brando, James Dean, Montgomery Clift, and the world of these new voices in the movies of the ‘50s. It was so resonant. When I think about it now, how odd it is that while we loved the movies of the ’70s — we had all our guys from that period — the ’50s was really at the center of it for us. As much as it was about Kazan, it was also about the repercussions of Marlon Brando walking onto the stage.”

The Wardrobe Process

Canonero sourced the costumes in mainly two ways. She searches for and buys period clothing when possible — at times even from a collector. Although, she is not unfamiliar with creating similar fabrics. “In this movie,” says Canonero, “I designed various original patterns to be hand-painted by textile artists.” 

Since the sets and costumes are carefully linked, Canonero coordinated quite a bit with production designer Adam Stockhausen. Although, there’s far more than just their surroundings the characters contend with. In fact, the psychology of the characters can be found in the film’s costume design. 

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City

Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Take Augie Steenbeck. He’s a war photographer with shrapnel lodged in the back of his head and wears a smart-looking safari outfit and wields a vintage Muller Schmid Swiss Mountain Camera with a 50mm f/2 Combat Lens. The Casual Photophile did some digging and found that the fictional camera is a Kiev 4M with probably a Jupiter 8a lens. 

The Psychology Behind the Fabric

When writing the script, Wes Anderson told co-writer Roman Coppola that these characters, especially the older generation, suffered PTSD from the worst war in human history. And they inflict that PTSD on the next generation which will result in the Hippy movement and Woodstock. 

You probably noticed the pistol tucked away in Stanley Zak’s (Tom Hanks) sweater wrapped around his waist like some country club outlaw. Or how Augie’s outfit is fitting for a child’s idea of what a photographer might wear. The pistols the actors wear may symbolize the desire for both physical and emotional protection or a yearning to return to a time of America’s frontier past. Or both.

Asteroid City BTS with Wes Anderson directing Tom Hanks and Jason Schwartzman

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh

However, this melancholy isn’t just reserved for those on the front lines. Midge Campbell laments her volatile history with men from her father, brothers, uncles, and ex-husband. She displays this deep anguish within her character with a painted-on black eye. For that, she is resigned to admitting that she isn’t the best mother to her children. 

The nostalgia impressed upon the hair and makeup was thanks to Julie Dartnell. It’s thanks to her tireless work that the cast is made timeless in classy Golden Age charm. 

STOP-MOTION ANIMATION

Asteroid City Stop-Motion Animation Banner

With Fantastic Mr. Fox and Isle of Dogs, Anderson proved that stop-motion animation can be cinematic. For a medium where every movement and nuance is crafted meticulously by the artist, one can see how this could appeal to a director of Anderson’s proclivities. 

Asteroid City spaceship in green light

Alien spaceship in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

But mixing elements of animation with live action is an interesting choice and one that seems to fascinate the director. After all, it’s that spark that an actor brings with them to live action that isn’t necessarily captured in stop-motion. At least, not in the same way. And it’s something about the nature of that creative ‘spark’ that Anderson cannot help but illustrate in Asteroid City. 

Asteroid City BTS of miniature train station

Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon

The director’s love of stop-motion animation is exhibited from the spacecraft to the roadrunner, setting a youthful tone as we enter the Junior Stargazer Convention on Asteroid Day. For the animated elements of Asteroid City, the visionary director collaborated once again with puppet maker Andy Gent. Altogether they worked for two years on the project. 

The lanky alien who descends upon the ensemble of characters amidst a viewing of the astronomical ellipses is one of their stop-motion creations. It appears as if it was peeled off the pages of a children’s storybook. 

Model Maker Simon Weisse on the set of Asteroid City

Asteroid City behind the scenes of stop animation crater

Model Maker Simon Weisse on the set of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Wes Anderson had a very specific look in mind for the alien and employed the assistance of illustrator Victor Georgiev to convey his vision. 

The images below are part of the collection “Asteroid City, The Alien 2021.” 

Asteroid City alien 3D model Asteroid City alien blueprint with Jeff Goldblum's body scan

In its caption on artstation.com, it reads that this 3D model was sculpted from Jeff Goldblum’s body scan. The practical costume was built by Coulier Creatures Fx. 

WATCH ASTEROID CITY

Watch Asteroid City Banner

Released in the middle of an industrywide writer’s strike, Asteroid City even examines themes that parallel concerns that artists today warn about, such as the all-too-willing application of AI technology into moviemaking. AI is great for streamlining tedious work and cutting costs, but could AI replace human writers and performers?

Here are our two cents. AI could never replace the spontaneity of human performance or understand the impulsive act of, say, burning one’s hand. Needless to say, the very nature of art is the act of human expression. It requires experiences within the world. And at its best, the art created by AI would only ever be a hollow shell based on original work created by humans. And one thing is certain, there’s no AI algorithm that could ever create the film that is Asteroid City

“It has something to do with actors and this strange thing that they do,” Anderson says to AP News of his new film. “What does it mean when you give a performance? If somebody has probably written something and then you study it and learn and you have an interpretation, but essentially you take yourself and put it in the movie. And then you take a bunch of people taking themselves and putting themselves in the movie. They have their faces and their voices, and they’re more complex than anything than even the AI is going to come up with. The AI has to know them to invent them. They do all these emotional things that are usually a mystery to me. I usually stand back and watch and it’s always quite moving.”

Asteroid City is currently playing in theaters. After that, it will be available on your friendly neighborhood streaming service. 

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Augie Steenbeck Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Asteroid City movie poster Asteroid City Tech Specs World of Asteroid City Atomic Bomb Test Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Junior Stargazers Junior Stargazers in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Wes Anderson Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh Wim Wenders American West Wim Wenders American West Production Design Color Palette Color palette Brian Cranston Black and White Bad-Day-at-Black-Rock Kiss-Me-Stupid Asteroid City Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Behind the Scenes Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Asteroid City Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Vending Machines Asteroid City Exhibition, London Production Design Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Large Miniature mountains Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Production Design Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Cinematography-Blog-CTA-Banner Cinematography Asteroid City movie Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Aspect ratio Comparison Southwest and Northeast in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Wes Anderson filmmaking Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh Skylights Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Robert D. Yeoman, ASC Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh Dualing Screens Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) and Stanley Zak (Tom Hanks) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Midge Campbell Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Dolly Grip Sanjay Sami Dolly Grip Sanjay Sami Costume Design Augie Steenbeck Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Directing BTS Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo credit: Roger Do Minh Asteroid City Stop-Motion Animation Green light Alien spaceship in Asteroid City, shot by DP Robert Yeoman. Photo courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Miniature Train Station Behind the scenes of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Valerie Saudon Crater Model Maker Simon Weisse on the set of Asteroid City. Photo Credit: Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features Asteroid City alien Asteroid City alien Watch Asteroid City Blog-CTA-Banner
The Look of Avatar: The Way Of Water https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-the-look-of-avatar-the-way-of-water/ Mon, 09 Jan 2023 20:42:51 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=98197 After 13 years of nail-chomping anticipation, James Cameron’s Avatar sequel finally premiered with an epic splash! Just like the original film, it transports audiences to a world of breathtaking beauty and wonder. Avatar: The Way of Water picks up 15 years after the events of the first film on the moon, Pandora.  Now, we follow […]

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After 13 years of nail-chomping anticipation, James Cameron’s Avatar sequel finally premiered with an epic splash! Just like the original film, it transports audiences to a world of breathtaking beauty and wonder. Avatar: The Way of Water picks up 15 years after the events of the first film on the moon, Pandora. 

Now, we follow the Sully family, comprising Ney’tiri (Zoe Saldaña), Jake Sully (Sam Worthington), and their five children, as they travel from the jungle of the first film to an underwater paradise. With the return of the resource-hungry humans determined to reclaim what they lost, the Sully family together with the Metkayina (Na’vi who reside in the water region) fight to protect their home and way of life. 

Sully family in Avatar 2 The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

While the first film was 162 minutes, The Way of Water is a 192-minute technical marvel that improves upon the groundbreaking 3D technology and motion-capture CGI of the original. James Cameron returns to the themes of environmentalism and anti-colonialism while focusing on another region of Pandora’s lush and abundant world. 

The Advances of the Avatar Sequel

The visionary director is obsessed with topping each film and did not disappoint with The Way of Water. Cameron and his army of filmmakers pushed the bar of digital cinematography, performance capture, and VFX technology to bring audiences as close to the underwater world as the screen could possibly allow. 

Avatar The Way of Water poster

With all the sequels out there, audiences are not used to waiting over a decade for their next fix. However, Cameron needed the blueprint (script) for the next five films of the Avatar franchise before he could commit to production. And over the course of the past 13 years, Cameron and company not only shot one movie but all of three and the first act of a fourth film. So, at least you probably won’t have to wait for another decade-plus for a follow-up film. Fingers crossed. 

  • Tech Specs
  • The World 
  • Production Design
  • Costume Design
  • Cinematography
  • VFX 

 

THE WAY OF WATER TECH SPECS

Tech Specs Avatar 2 The Way of Water

  • Runtime: 3 hours 12 minutes (192 minutes)
  • Color: Color
  • Aspect Ratio: 
    • 1.85 : 1 (3-D version)
    • 1.85 : 1 (IMAX version) 
    • 2.39 : 1 (theatrical ratio)
  • Camera: Sony CineAlta VENICE 3D
  • Negative Format: X-OCN RAW
  • Cinematographic Process: 
    • Digital Intermediate (4K) (Master Format) 
    • X-OCN RAW (common-third) (source format)
  • Printed Film Format: 
    • D-Cinema (also 3-D version)
    • DCP Digital Cinema Package (4K)

 

THE WORLD 

The world of Avatar 2 The Way of Water

Pandora is a paradise full of nature and lifeforms that mirrors the best parts of Earth. There’s an incorruptible bond between Pandora and its inhabitants. While it looks and feels like a planet, Pandora is actually a moon in the Alpha Centauri System. Cameron describes it best: “the Garden of Eden with teeth and claws.” 

What truly makes this world magical is what the Na’vi understand as Eywa — their deity. All the tree and plant life on Pandora communicates through a neuron-like communication system that effectively functions like a massive brain that has achieved moon-wide sentience. 

In the first Avatar movie, the story was set in the jungle region home to the Omaticaya clan where the humans settled to extract its precious resources. However, The Way of Water is much different from the jungle, with an entirely new environment full of diverse flora and fauna, including a new clan of Na’vi known as the Metkayina. 

Metkayina tribe in Avatar 2

20th Century Studios

Yet, the wonderment and awe established within the first film not only continue into the sequel but blossom in an entirely fresh and authentic way. Everything from the wildlife and foliage to the culture and craftwork of the Na’vi is completely unique to the water environment and adds yet another rich layer to the world.

 Kiri tapping into Pandora in Avatar 2

A Culture in Harmony with Water

The beauty of this kind of world-building is how authentic it feels. Even though this is a sci-fi film full of alien species, it feels like the filmmakers shot right on-site. You can’t see the seams between the digitally created sets and the live-action performances thanks to top-notch performance-capture technology. 

If audiences don’t look away from the screen, they will actually believe that they are submerged deep underwater with a whale-like creature swimming right at them. That’s the power of high frame rate 3D. And that’s the magic of the visual effects coupled with the expert lighting that creates a gorgeous underwater glow from the Director of Photography Russell Carpenter

When talking about what ‘the way of water’ means to GeekCulture, producer Jon Landau described it as a cultural philosophy of the Metkayina clan.

“They live in harmony with the water, they exist based on the way of water, something that has the ability to give life, to take life.”  

Navi vs humanity in Avatar 2

20th Century Studios

The filmmakers wanted to present this philosophy to their audience to help them consider how we should treat our own oceans. The exotic underwater world of Pandora is a new destination but also a way to show how to live in harmony with water. 

 

PRODUCTION DESIGN

Underwater Production Design in Avatar 2 The Way of Water

Production designer Dylan Cole and co-production designer Ben Procter split the enormous load that the Avatar sequels demanded. Cole took on the monumental task of building the world of Pandora while Procter was in charge of the design for Earth. 

However, both came together to construct vehicles, ships, and animals, in addition to the worlds. In the first film, the jungle was inspired by the life in the oceans while this ocean-dominant ecosystem is motivated by land-based life. 

“We amplified the coral and played with scale,” Cole tells Variety.

The sapphire color palette was obviously motivated by the ocean so other colors had to shine bright for color differentiation. 

 

SEA CREATURES

The Metkayina clan bonds with the tulkun sea creatures not unlike the Na’vi of the first movie who paired with the dragon-like mountain banshees. Like a cross between whales, seals, and sea turtles, the tulkun are highly intelligent and emotional creatures that can also carry a tune with their Na’vi counterparts.

Great leonopteryx Avatar 2 Sea Creatures Avatar 2

The art department created a practical fin for the actors to work with and a spot for the eyes to provide an eye line. 

Kiri riding an ilu in Avatar 2

“Sometimes we were dragging the fin through the water so you could have the proper resistance,” Cole tells IndieWire,” and then other times when all the kids are climbing on him, we built a set that approximated his back with the blowholes and the plating, so that we could set that in the tank and they could perform on that.”

Payakan and Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) in Avatar The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

There’s also a Jonah and the whale moment of the story where one of Sully’s sons enters the inside of one of the tulkuns. The experience is like “an enchanted cave from old fantasy stories,” only it’s alive. 

Loak and Pankayan in Avatar 2 gif

Dylan Cole quote about Avatar The Way of Water

It was up to Cole to bring such fantastical creatures to life and essential to building this other section of Pandora’s world. He had to consider everything from how they would move in the water to how they functioned in the ecosystem with predators like the akula, a shark-like beast.

Akula in Avatar The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

Cole took inspiration from the creatures of Earth. Snakes terrify the production designer so he allowed this fear to motivate his design of the akula. That’s why the akula’s mouth accentuates like that of a rattlesnake, and as it opens the top bifurcates. 

 

VEHICLES

When it came to the construction of the vehicles, the large “sea dragon” vehicle appealed as a technological and predatory metaphor. Procter was the mastermind behind the design. The main challenge: getting them to float. 

Submarine vehicle - Avatar 2

The look was only part of the equation while buoyancy took some time and plenty of tests. Cameron not only wanted one of the boats to run but jump waves. So, Procter and team made a 1K-horsepower, 42-knot boat that was used for photography. The data taken from the tests was implemented into the computer-generated dynamics. 

 

COSTUME DESIGN

Costume Design Avatar 2

Deborah L. Scott returned to Pandora as its costume designer for The Way of Water. Not only has Scott worked with Cameron before, but she won the Academy Award for Best Costume Design for her work on Titanic and dressed such icons as Marty McFly and the Amazing Spider-Man. 

All together, Scott’s work on the Avatar sequel took about two and a half years. For a project of this scale, that may come as little surprise. Scott began designing the costumes for the film just 8 months before performance capture. 

Over the course of past Cameron productions, Scott developed a short hand with the director in their collaborative process. So, when Scott jumped into the project, she was prepared to hit the ground running. In fact, while working on Avatar 2, she was simultaneously working on Avatar 3

Kiri sleeping in Avatar 2

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

Scott constructed digital costumes for every character. In an interview with Looper, she says, “The clothing is quite complex — it’s got a lot of layers. It’s a 3D map that we handed them.” Scott and her team (of 100 artisans and designers at its largest) conducted research into indigenous cultures while considering how her original design would function underwater. They crafted everything including costumes, props, accessories, and wigs. In the end, each and every garment took 200 hours per design. 

In an interview with Filmmakers Academy, Scott outlined the differences between the Omaticayan (forest clan) of the first movie and the Metkayina (ocean clan) of TWOW. While both Na’vi cultures weave, the Met style of weaving for the Omaticayan is more complex and decorative.

Since both cultures pull from their environments such as skins and grass, they are different from one another. And the Metkayina use seaweed, coral, and shells whereas the Omaticayan use bark, pinecones, and seeds. The tattoos of the Metkayina are unique to them and while both clans have black hair and similar eyes, the ocean clan stands out with wavier hair and different color eyes. 

 

The designs for Pandora are all grounded in our world here on Earth. Scott and her team used human ingenuity to inform their designs.

“Once you understand your cultures and use our true, well-researched, real-world to inform,” she says, “you can use the depth of your imagination and the imagination of the people that you are creating to go anywhere.” 

In the nature of indigenous peoples, the textiles are hand-crafted. They used the natural materials that they could find as well as what Scott calls “natural fantasy.” For instance, a flower is a flower to humans but the flowers of Pandora are unique and individual. This same concept was the basis of all other materials — i.e. the skin of a beast on Pandora has its roots in earthly leathers.

COSTUME DESIGN WITH PERFORMANCE CAPTURE

“When you shoot performance capture for so long,” says Scott, “you need to make sure that the actors know if they interact with their clothing. They have to know what they’re touching. It’s not like a T-shirt; the costumes are more complex, so if they need to hold their shawl or whatever, they need to have those reference pieces.” 

Tuk in Avatar The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

During her research, she discovered what materials to use for each specific costume — “front, back, and center.” With the evolution of performance capture technology, the costumes had to accommodate it. While developing the technology for markers to track the performances, Scott realized that they would be able to read every bead and knot.

“It gave me this freedom to make the costumes as complex or simple as I wanted.”

— Deborah L. Scott

During the performance capture process, the costumes weren’t necessarily fully realized. However, Cameron would give each actor an idea of what their character looked like and what they were wearing. Then, they provided reference costumes such as ponchos and capes to inform their performance and how they moved. 

They bounced back and forth between CG and live-action performances, sometimes concentrating on one or the other. Since they were shooting two movies out of order, they had to adhere to deadlines for both.

The actors were very involved in the costuming strategy, as well. For instance, Stephen Lang helped develop the military unit patch design for “Project Deja Blue” with Scott and Cameron. Sigourney Weaver would get lost in Scott’s office, which functioned like a showroom, and imagine what certain objects and textiles meant to her character. 

According to Scott, while the designs were inspired by indigenous cultures, they weren’t focused on any one tribe. They conducted research on cultures that live by water all across the world and found similarities between coastal regions in India to Africa. Their jumping-off point, however, was Fiji, Polynesia, Tonga, and Hawaii. 

 

THE WAY OF WATER CINEMATOGRAPHY

Avatar 2 Cinematography

Avatar: The Way of Water is a spectacular visual marvel that was the result of new cameras, technical methodologies, and algorithms to pull off. In fact, the technical achievements outshine the story to such an extent, it’s the experience of the world that truly mesmerizes audiences. 

The cinematography of the film is a combination of carefully crafted camera moves, lighting, and layers of animation with algorithms by Wētā — some of which we will highlight below. All together, Cameron considers the process a “template.” 

The film sparks the next chapter into the 3D format. (So, if possible, you should really make an effort to see the film in theaters.) The stereoscopic 3D system for the Avatar sequel was created by bolting together multiple Sony Venice cameras that deliver high dynamic range. 

Swimming in Avatar 2 The Way of Water gif

The Way of Water was lensed by DP Russell Carpenter, who worked with Cameron on his other top-grossing movie of all time (Titanic). Carpenter brought the sci-fi fantasy to life with an army of animators, motion capture artists, and graphics experts. 

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Cinematographer Russell Carpenter in Avatar 2

20th Century Studios

While films have traditionally shot at 24fps, Avatar 2 was shot at both a high frame rate (HFR) in addition to 3D to provide the realism needed to make the world come off the screen. Now, this isn’t the first film to shoot at HFR for that ultra-realistic look. Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy was the first film with a wide release to be filmed at HFR. 

The Hobbit high frame rate with Gandalf and Radagast Jake Sully high frame rate in Avatar 2

HFR is traditionally valued more in the video game space where upward of 60fps is preferred. Where the HFR of the Hobbit films was criticized as it didn’t fit the Middle Earth aesthetic, it serves much better with a sci-fi world that is placed in our own distant reality. The way Cameron employs the HFR is sparing, using it for high-octane action sequences but shifting down to 24fps for dialogue exchanges. 

There were many challenges that the filmmakers faced with 3D. HFR is a method to help combat such challenges, however. For instance, fast camera moves don’t work well and CGI doesn’t look as good under the bright conditions needed for 3D glasses and muddy imagery. Shooting at 48fps fixes this problem by increasing the clearness and smoothness of motion in darker, frenzied circumstances.

 

CAMERA & LENSES

The camera system was constructed for a pristine 3D IMAX underwater experience free of distortions, artifacts, and aberrations. In addition to the Sony Venice, the camera system to capture underwater performances was devised by cinematographer Pawel Achtel from the 3D submersible beam splitter, DeepX 3D. 

For the ultimate results, they chose Nikonos 15mm lenses. What makes the Nikonos stand out is that they are tried and true lenses designed by Nikon specifically for underwater photography. There’s no need for a lens mount, lens servo motors, or lens ports as the camera is attached inside the house and the lenses are mounted outside. 

Pawel described the reasoning behind the Nikonos to Y.M. Cinema Magazine

Pawell quote about Avatar The Way of Water

Avatar 2 Camera test

Achtel DeepX 3D Beam Splitter. Photo by Pawel Achtel, ACS

Traditional underwater cinematography faces limitations in resolution with dome and flat ports and heavyweight that required the use of cranes to get in the water. 

Rather than an underwater beam splitter system housed behind a flat port, the filmmakers submerge the DeepX 3D completely underwater for optimal sharpness without chromatic aberrations or geometric distortions. And the imagery can meet and surpass 4K.  

Learn the finer details of Cameras & Lenses as a member of Filmmakers Academy!

 

UNDERWATER CINEMATOGRAPHY

Historically, the challenge of replicating water through CGI was an imperfect solution to the real thing. And today, it still isn’t perfect. We know how water looks and feels and can even perceive the most subtle differences between computer-generated water and real water. 

Rather than suffer any lack of detail through digitizing water, James Cameron implemented a reliable workaround that would yield the results he demanded. This involved shooting their motion-capture performances underwater. 

Underwater cinematography on Avatar The Way of Water

Photo: 20th Century Studios

When describing the process, Cameron explains, “The key to it was to actually shoot underwater and at the surface of the water so people were swimming properly, getting out of the water properly, diving in properly. It looks real because the motion was real and the emotion was real.” 

Cameron hired Peter Zuccarini, one of the most prolific underwater cameramen to swim the oceans. On the underwater adventure, Into the Blue (lensed by Shane Hurlbut, ASC), Zuccarini was dragged by a shark and swam into the cursed crocodile-infested waters of the Amazon while filming The Motorcycle Diaries

While Cameron employed futuristic camera systems, like the Virtual Camera, to choose angles and compositions, he still wanted a real camera operator for a “baseline of reality” as Zuccarini describes

Zuccarini wielded the 180lb 3D Sony Venice camera system developed specifically for the film. The camera system employed two Venices in a box that shot through a beam splitter. 

Underwater cinematography on Avatar 2

Photo: 20th Century Studios

Peter Zuccarini quote about Avatar The Way of Water 2

The grips helped with the weight of the rig with lines to time the stops. 

 

UNDERWATER PERFORMANCE CAPTURE

The filmmakers wanted the experience for their actors to be as authentic as possible so they could get real performances. They didn’t want to do “dry for wet” and instead decided to be the first to work with performance capture underwater. 

What started as experiments at home, then to Landau’s swimming pool, moved to Landau and Cameron’s Lightstorm Entertainment production company at Manhattan Beach Studios. They constructed two special kinds of tanks that recreated oceanic conditions. The larger of the two was massive in size — 120 feet long x 60 feet wide x 30 feet deep, and it could hold upward of 250,000 gallons of water. A 10-knot current was driven by a system comprised of two ship propellers (6 feet in diameter) anointed “the racetrack.” This allowed them to also work with waves. 

Avatar 2 set BTS

Photo: 20th Century Studios

Sully family in Avatar 2 The Way of Water Underwater Cinematography Tank - Avatar 2

Through trial and error, they discovered how light absorbs infrared underwater. Since motion capture typically uses infrared, this posed a problem for the filmmakers. They then went with ultraviolet light in order for the camera sensor to pick up while also disseminating through the water. 

Infrared light in water
They placed performance capture cameras around the tanks along with safety cameras to monitor everyone working in the water. To help control the reflection of light, they added a layer of white ping-pong-sized balls that floated at the surface.

Sully family in Avatar 2 The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

James Cameron quote about Avatar The Way of Water

The Challenges of Underwater Cinematography

In fact, everyone who entered the tank learned how to hold their breath for extended periods of time. From the actors to the camera operators to the person holding the light, they had to be able to hold their breath for a sufficient amount of time. So, they hired world-class freediving camera operators. 

That’s because scuba gear was out of the question since it caused too many air bubbles that acted like “wiggling mirrors” according to Cameron. This also made it impossible for the performance capture technology to read the marker dots on the actors’ bodies since it couldn’t distinguish between bubbles and dots. 

James Cameron quote about Avatar The Way of Water 2

VIRTUAL CAMERA TECHNOLOGY

When it was all said and done, Cameron had devised two unique volumes (performance-capture stages) — one for the water and one for the air that sat on top of one another. Then in real-time, the computer processes data from both volumes, fusing them together, and integrates the information into Cameron’s Virtual Camera. 

Virtual Camera on Avatar The Way of Water Virtual Camera in Avatar 2

The Virtual Camera is a camera system far before its time. Once Cameron chose his favorite performances with the editorial team, he used the Virtual Camera to shoot scenes “within a computer-generated world.” He could see the actors as their characters and provide direction in real-time over the diver address system. 

Underwater camera op Peter Zuccarini likens his contributions to ingredients in a soup that will later be constructed by Cameron in post: 

Peter Zuccarini quote about Avatar The Way of Water

It was essential that the filmmakers convey the physics of the water correctly. The artists at Wētā used much of Zuccarini’s camera moves when building shots and markers were placed on the camera operator and his camera just like the actors. That way, they could build from his natural movements rather than from scratch. 

 

UNDERWATER STUNTS

Underwater Stunts Avatar 2 The Way of Water

Since much of the film takes place underwater, the cast underwent training with professional free diver, Kirk Krack. Much like the cast of another blockbuster this year, Top Gun: Maverick, the cast of Avatar 2 were responsible for performing under trying conditions and even switching on their own cameras. 

Learn more about the Look of Top Gun: Maverick. 

When describing the Avatar sequel compared to other water-centric movies, Krack says, “It’s the biggest diving movie of all time because it’s shot wet for wet — this isn’t Aquaman hanging on a wire with a fan in their hair. This isn’t some [VFX artist] programming what they think swimming looks like… There’s never been a movie that has done what this underwater unit did to the level we did it, to the realism of the reality we’ve done.”

Sully family in Avatar 2 The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

In addition to instructing cast members on how to hold their breath for prolonged amounts of time, he also advised that they use enriched oxygen mixtures to reduce hypoxia and speed their recovery. 

Alongside the actors, they developed motions for how the characters would move in the ocean. There they worked on rehearsing scenes and establishing a workflow, which involved the actors switching on their cameras, adhering to safety procedures, and finding their marks. 

Virtual production supervisor Ryan Champney likened it to the moments before a rocket launch: “Safety team go, reference cameras go, hydraulics go — is everyone good?” 

Krack translated the direction from Cameron with non-verbal cues. Altogether, the actors and crew, including Krack’s team, logged over 250,000 free dives! They captured over three movies worth of performances, after all. 

 

THE WAY OF WATER VFX

Sigourney Weaver in Avatar The Way of Water

James Cameron trailblazed new VFX technology and techniques from his earliest successes with The Terminator and Terminator 2. Some techniques Cameron perfected over the course of multiple films. For instance, the liquid metal villain from the Terminator sequel resulted from cutting-edge special effects first implemented in The Abyss. 

For all his efforts, Cameron received awards such as an honorary doctorate degree from the University of Southhampton for his contributions to underwater filmmaking and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Visual Effects Society.  

The original Avatar was filmed in photorealistic “stereoscopic 3D.” There was a 60/40 percent split between CGI imagery and traditional live-action imagery. Much of the CG animation implemented new motion-capture techniques with physical actors who wear suits outfitted with markers. That way,  computers and overlay digital animation recorded their movements.

Jake Sully and Neytirir in Avatar 2 The Way of Water Quaritch Avatar The Way of Water
Spider in the water - Avatar 2 The Way of Water Kiri in Avatar The Way of Water

The most convincing CGI merges the real with the fake, whether it’s real people or places. You could apply this concept to lighting, as well. Take Dune, and how they shot in the deserts of Jordan and Abu Dhabi for authentic lighting with sand screen (instead of green screen) and used helicopters to inform their sci-fi flying vehicles.

Learn more about how the filmmakers achieved the look of Dune!

While there are layers of animation and algorithms employed to bring the Na’vi and their world to life, it’s far from pure animation. More specifically, the real world informs the animations and the performances. In an interview with GQ, Cameron explains that previously captured data involved steps powered by artificial intelligence to translate into 3D-CG characters.  

This was not a simple process and took an incredible amount of time and trial and error. One legendary example involves a single effects shot going through over 400 revisions. This kind of attention to detail ramped the cost excessively high and propelled the film’s late release. 

James Cameron directing Spider in Avatar The Way of Water

20th Century Studios

James Cameron quote about Avatar The Way of Water 3

Facial performance replacement (FPR) lets Cameron digitally rework and select facial movements best suited for the performance. The technicians transfer the data from the physical performances to their digital counterparts. This technique also allows filmmakers to change lines of dialogue following principle photography without reshooting scenes.  

Post-Production Collaboration

Picking up from the process with the Virtual Camera, the technicians organized the shots into cut sequences with Nuke, After Effects, and other proprietary project files. Then, the filmmakers sent the files to the experts at Wētā FX for implementation. Their senior effects supervisor Joe Letteri and Richard Baneham of Lightstorm collaborated with a team to preserve the performances frame by frame. 

James Cameron in the edit bay of Avatar 2

20th Century Studios

Cantina Creative collaborated with Ben Procter to conceptualize graphics and stereoscopic holograms to populate Pandora and the RDA. Early in the process, they assisted with laying out the sets and blocking action. This allowed the humans and CG characters to interact effectively with holograms, like the HoloFloor, a primary feature of the RDA’s Op Center. 

Jon Landau BTS of Avatar The Way of Water

Producer Jon Landau behind-the-scenes of Avatar: The Way of Water

According to the film’s producer Jon Landau, the first film was about being photographic and didn’t necessarily need to be photo-real in the sci-fi world of Pandora. However, with advancements over the last decade, they realized they must raise the bar and “deliver something that is 100% photo-real.” 

 

WATCH AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER

Neytiri in Avatar 2 The Way of Water

Avatar: The Way of Water is currently playing in theaters. After that, it will most likely be available on your friendly neighborhood streaming service. 

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WORK CITED: 

The post The Look of Avatar: The Way Of Water appeared first on Filmmakers Academy.

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