Editor’s Note: For his directorial debut, James Schamus chose to adapt Philip Roth’s “Indignation,” which tells the story of a Jewish boy who leaves home to go to college in Ohio during the Korean War. To help create the early 1950s period feel of the film, Schamus turned to cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt (“Night Moves” and “Low Down”). IndieWire recently asked Blauvelt to breakdown the process of how he created the film’s understated and elegant look. What he supplied was a detailed description of how he used today’s cutting edge digital technology to simulate the Kodachrome film stock that defined the era’s color photography.
Read More: ‘Indignation’ Review: James Schamus’ Philip Roth Adaptation, Starring Logan Lerman and Sarah Gadon, Resurrects the Focus Features Legacy
Reversal Film Stock
The starting point in conversations with James about the look of “Indignation” was Gordon Parks’ color photography from the ’40s and ’50s.
Read More: ‘Indignation’ Review: James Schamus’ Philip Roth Adaptation, Starring Logan Lerman and Sarah Gadon, Resurrects the Focus Features Legacy
Reversal Film Stock
The starting point in conversations with James about the look of “Indignation” was Gordon Parks’ color photography from the ’40s and ’50s.
- 8/31/2016
- by Chris O'Falt
- Indiewire
The 17th annual Boston Underground Film Festival is set to explode all over the Brattle Theater in Harvard Square on March 25-29.
Opening Night: The fun kicks off on the 25th at 7:30 p.m. with the exciting new flick from the always amazing Astron-6 collective, The Editor, an homage to the brutal Giallo movies of the ’70s and ’80s directed by Adam Brooks and Matthew Kennedy. This will be followed by the restored version of the legendary cult classic Gone With the Pope by the notorious Duke Mitchell.
Closing Night: Goodnight Mommy the debut feature film by Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, will screen at 8:30 p.m. on the 29th and is a nightmarish vision of familial dread when twin brothers believe their cosmetically altered mother is literally not the woman she used to be.
Other features include a mix of horror, like Matt O’Mahoney’s...
Opening Night: The fun kicks off on the 25th at 7:30 p.m. with the exciting new flick from the always amazing Astron-6 collective, The Editor, an homage to the brutal Giallo movies of the ’70s and ’80s directed by Adam Brooks and Matthew Kennedy. This will be followed by the restored version of the legendary cult classic Gone With the Pope by the notorious Duke Mitchell.
Closing Night: Goodnight Mommy the debut feature film by Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, will screen at 8:30 p.m. on the 29th and is a nightmarish vision of familial dread when twin brothers believe their cosmetically altered mother is literally not the woman she used to be.
Other features include a mix of horror, like Matt O’Mahoney’s...
- 3/12/2015
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
Detroit's music scene comes out of the dive bar and onto the TV screen with the documentary series New American Noise.
The series by Nokia Music is comprised of six short films investigating the music scenes of Detroit, New Orleans, Atlanta, New York, Los Angeles and Portland. It premiered on the Sundance Channel Friday. Detroit's segment, which ruminates on the multiple genres that inform the city's sound through the eyes of locals, was directed by Somesuch and Co.'s Bob Harlow.
"There's definitely not 'a sound' from Detroit. It's also been really diverse," one of the interview subjects says in a voice-over.
Harlow spends the most time with Lord Scrummage, Deastro and Lo & Behold Records and Books in Hamtramck, Mich. And with slowed-down scenes of bike rides at dusk and packed house party shows, all set to an addictive local soundtrack, the city has never looked so fun.
Check out...
The series by Nokia Music is comprised of six short films investigating the music scenes of Detroit, New Orleans, Atlanta, New York, Los Angeles and Portland. It premiered on the Sundance Channel Friday. Detroit's segment, which ruminates on the multiple genres that inform the city's sound through the eyes of locals, was directed by Somesuch and Co.'s Bob Harlow.
"There's definitely not 'a sound' from Detroit. It's also been really diverse," one of the interview subjects says in a voice-over.
Harlow spends the most time with Lord Scrummage, Deastro and Lo & Behold Records and Books in Hamtramck, Mich. And with slowed-down scenes of bike rides at dusk and packed house party shows, all set to an addictive local soundtrack, the city has never looked so fun.
Check out...
- 1/22/2013
- by Kate Abbey-Lambertz
- Huffington Post
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