The Creator cinematographers Greig Fraser ASC, ACS and Oren Soffer |Cinepod

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • The Cinematography Podcast Episode 235: Greig Fraser and Oren Soffer
    Filmmaker Gareth Edwards and co-cinematographers Greig Fraser and Oren Soffer embraced the unconventional while making the new science fiction movie The Creator. From the camera used, to how it was shot, to the visual effects, the team brought together film techniques both new and old.It’s rare to have two cinematographers working on the same film, but Greig Fraser had a set date to begin prepping for Dune and could not be on location in Thailand for shooting The Creator. Gareth was the co-writer, director and camera operator on the film, and Greig knew Gareth needed support prepping the camera and lighting each location. Greig enjoyed the close collaboration with another cinematographer while shooting the series The Mandalorian and he knew having a second DP would be the ideal situation for shooting The Creator. Cinematographer Oren Soffer was brought in, and Oren, Gareth and Greig all prepped the film together, discussing in detail how Gareth wanted to tell the story. Once shooting began, Greig was tasked with managing the LUT and screening the dailies in a Los Angeles theater, while Gareth and Oren managed the day to day on set. Oren and Greig would talk every day about lighting setups, and they both appreciated having another DP around for feedback and ideas. With a collaborator, they both felt like working on the film was less stressful and it led to better creativity.
    As Greig told us in his interview with The Cinematography Podcast in 2022, The Creator was shot on a Sony FX3. The FX3 is a very affordable, small, lightweight camera that Gareth was familiar with. It was easier for him to move around handheld, explore his shots, and have the freedom to interact with his actors. Gareth’s approach to The Creator was documentary-style, much like his first film, Monsters, but it was important to him that it still looked composed like a film. The FX3 could deliver a quality image at the level they needed for color grading and for visual effects company Industrial Light & Magic to add VFX. For his part, Greig likes to know about all the tools available to tell the story, and he wants to have enough knowledge about what’s possible to pass on to a director when he’s asked.
    For the visual effects on The Creator, Gareth chose to be very sparing in his use of 3D special effects., spending the budget only when it was needed to render detailed objects like the robots. As a big visual effects nerd, Oren says a key component to creating a sci-fi world like this is having a director who knows what they want and having very talented VFX artists such as those at ILM who understand what is needed without wasting time on 3D images when a 2D matte painting would work just as well. The intricate 3D modeling was saved for what is seen in the foreground. An on-set visual effects supervisor gathered information that could be used for 3D modeling later.
    For Oren, the whole experience was life-changing, shooting all over Thailand, in over 80 different locations throughout the country. He’s very proud of the movie, and felt very inspired to work with a director like Gareth, a maverick who’s constantly open to exploring new things. He was also inspired by Greig’s equal openness and creative collaboration.
    The Creator is currently playing in theaters.
    Find Oren Soffer:www.orensoffer...
    Instagram: @orensofferdp
    Find Greig Fraser: greigfraser.com...
    Instagram: @greigfraser_dp
    Close Focus: The Taylor Swift Eras Tour concert film is coming to theaters and it’s already breaking box office records.
    Ben’s short end: Ben recently learned about a 3D visual effect called a “Gaussian splat” or a G -splat on the RUclips channel, Bad Decisions Studio. A drone or camera can take footage of a location, and then it can be rendered into 3D and imported into any environment and look photo-real.
    Illya’s short end: Illya went to CineGear Atlanta and while there, met Richard Jones, the father of Sarah Jones who was killed by a train while filming Midnight Rider. Jones created a foundation called Safety for Sarah, which continues to ensure that set safety protocols are followed.
    Sponsored by Hot Rod Cameras
    www.hotrodcamer...
    Sponsored by Greentree Creative
    www.growwithgr...
    LIKE AND FOLLOW US, send fan mail or suggestions! Rate, review and subscribe on Apple Podcasts!
    Email: editor@camnoir.com
    Facebook:@cinepod
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    Twitter: @ShortEndzPodcast
    Credits:
    Producer: Alana Kode
    / alana-kode-994851149
    All web and social media content written by Alana Kode
    Host and editor in Chief: Illya Friedman
    www.hotrodcamer...
    Instagram: @illyafriedman @hotrodcameras
    Host: Ben Rock
    www.benrock.com/
    Twitter: @neptunesalad
    Instagram: @bejamin_rock
    Editor: Ben Katz
    Composer: Kays Al-Atrakchi
    musicbykays.com/

Комментарии • 13

  • @CritterElectronics
    @CritterElectronics 11 месяцев назад +4

    Sony FX3 is a beast. ISO 12,800. Small form factor. Enough said, end of story.

  • @impatrickt
    @impatrickt 11 месяцев назад +5

    Great episode! Two legends.

  • @PaulSpeziale
    @PaulSpeziale 11 месяцев назад +3

    we need more industry podcast like this. keep the content coming.

  • @esbenjohansen6062
    @esbenjohansen6062 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is great 🎉 Congrats with your first video podcast. Think you’re going to reach a greater audience with these through RUclips. Loved that you showed images as reference to your conversation. I heard about Gareth’s early test shots, but never seen any examples before. I’ve listened to you for years, you always have such great questions and insights🤩

  • @ashwinkakumanu9503
    @ashwinkakumanu9503 11 месяцев назад +2

    Loved this interview. So insightful!

  • @danielboulton922
    @danielboulton922 11 месяцев назад +1

    this was so good.

  • @dravani
    @dravani 11 месяцев назад +1

    I would love to introduce you to Dylan Marchetti - the CEO of Variance FIlms - and the Distributor of Taylor Swift's Eras film event release that you gushed over. It's not a 4 wall event. Rather, there is a tremendous amount of work on the part of an Indie distributor to make it splash as big as it is. I met Dylan in 2008 at AFM in his first year, and have watched his team grow and grind - do the man a favor and give him credit rather than constructing a false narrative of Taylor Swift winging it - she's way too smart for that and he works way too hard for that to be the story. Basically, the truth is even more impressive than a lazy fiction.

    • @TheCinematographyPodcast
      @TheCinematographyPodcast  11 месяцев назад

      We would be delighted to connect with Dylan. Please email us at email@camnoir.com and we'll make it happen.

    • @TheCinematographyPodcast
      @TheCinematographyPodcast  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks, we will correct in the next episode.

  • @davidp158
    @davidp158 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the interview! Good stuff.
    I wonder how they handled follow focus duty, as the FX3 only has HDMI (with latency).

  • @SeniorAdrian
    @SeniorAdrian 11 месяцев назад

    Great episode. Learned a lot and inspired me. Is Davinci Resolve the main color grading software in this movie and in general?