So neat this shelf..
will byers stan first human second
noise dept.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
macklin celebrini has autism
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

roma★

oozey mess

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Peter Solarz
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
taylor price

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occasionally subtle

izzy's playlists!
$LAYYYTER
Sade Olutola

tannertan36
d e v o n
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

pixel skylines

seen from Iraq
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seen from India

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@kasiej
So neat this shelf..
We have our first correction here at Movies In Color and it came as a very pleasant surprise. Jean-Louis Bompoint (cinematographer for The Science of Sleep, New York I Love You, Grace is Gone, and The Thorn In The Heart among others) was kind enough to email and point me in the right direction concerning color and grading on The Science of Sleep. He provided me with the correct still and color chart, and I’ve used it to replace the old one. I also wanted to post some of the insights he shared with me about the film as well as color grading in general. An excerpt from his email is below.
Concerning the shooting of The Science of Sleep, you have to know this…
On this film, I was the first DoP in the world to have used 35mm - FUJI-500 ETERNA film stock for the first time.
Film lab was ECLAIR and my color grader was Khadija Fatmi. When I met Khadija for the first time I said to her:
1) Telecine Operators/Color Gaders will not have to judge by themselves how to grade the picture from the original 35mm negative film to video/digital file.
2) They MUST only follow every color chart which will be shot at the beginning of each scene.
3) Following this methodology, 2 rules must be followed by Telecine Operators/Color Graders to obtain a correct color grading:
Obtain the most perfect BLACK color from the color chart.
Obtain the most perfect WHITE color from the color chart.
Adjust the CONTRAST until obtaining pure BLACK & WHITE from the color chart.
4) By this method, all the other colors of the spectrum will follow naturally by themselves and we only need to do a “one light" positive Telecine with a perfect color grading.
5) Every color chart of every chosen scene for the final cut must be kept in memory by the Telecine Operator for a last adjustment on the final grading with the Film Director & the Director of Photography.
NOTE: If these technical requests are not respected, the photographic style of the film will be destroyed and injured. Added color and grading corrections must only be requested and confirmed by the Film Director and the Director of Photography.
Khadija Fatmi has followed my instructions and did very good work on my pictures. I continue to thank her for her wonderful collaboration with me. She is the best color grader in the world!
I consider the new “Y” color grader’s generation as dangerous. Trusting only curves and other gadgets and less the original picture well-exposed & lighted by a director of photography. You have to know I never have quite any color grading on all the pictures I have shot during my 30 years’ experience as DoP.
Some very detailed and great insight on an amazing film! I really appreciate the attention to detail as well as the effort to capture a well-exposed and well-lit image. Especially with such original production design, both the production designer and DoP have to work together to accurately place you in the world of the film.
A huge thank you to Jean-Louis Bompoint for writing in and sharing his process!
A new poster for In the Heart of the Sea.
Hot Fuzz | Edgar Wright | 2007
There Will Be Blood | Paul Thomas Anderson | 2007
Watch the first trailer for Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster.
We’ll miss you, Jordy
There Will Be Blood | Paul Thomas Anderson | 2007
After working together on Gangs of New York, The Aviator, The Departed, Shutter Island and The Wolf of Wall Street, they've set their sixth collaboration.
It Follows (David Robert Mitchell; 2015)
Listen to our discussion and more.
Behold! The best picture of Pluto you have ever seen. It was taken yesterday by the New Horizons space probe.
Here’s my video poem celebrating the New Horizons mission!
And here’s a 1 MINUTE summary of the space probe’s journey.
I might have shed a tear during the video poem. Check it out! - Aggi
→ Green Bay Packers in the NFL Top 100 Players of 2015
Henri Cartier-Bresson, Isabelle Huppert, 1966
The best films of 2015 so far.
Mia Hansen-Løve’s brilliant analysis of the true meaning of Inside Llewyn Davis:
I really have this obsession with this film, because of the similarities [with Eden]. I know it’s not the same film at all, and I don’t pretend to make films that look like Coen brothers films. There’s nothing pretentious about that, but it’s true that there is a connection in this parallel you have in both films. Two artists, one who is successful and the other who fails, in a way. The first time I’ve heard about the Coen brothers film was through Greta Gerwig, who had just read my script, and she had also read their script, for some reason, and she was the first one who was really struck by the similarities. I started to, I was like, “Oh, yeah?” She said, “I know. It’s really weird, because I just read the Coen brothers film, and there’s this parallel.” Because I love their work, I was immediately, like, appealed. “Oh, what is this film about?” There was this connection.
Then I saw the trailer, and I was even more fascinated — and then I saw the film, and, honestly, I was devastated. I love the film very much. I love it. I think it’s a masterpiece, for reasons that have to do with what my own film is about, but also for reasons that have nothing to do with it, because, for me, it’s a film about them. I think one thing that moved me so much about it was that, as I understand it, the process of the film, I feel very connected to this kind of process, because me, I make films to remember the people I love and care about.
For me, Inside Llewyn Davis is a film about them, the two brothers, asking themselves, “What if one of you would die? Would I survive?” I really saw the film like that. “What is one of us died? How could I exist without you?” I thought it was so beautiful that they actually made the film. It’s like a dialogue between one another. You could say the film could be from both of their perspectives, you know? It’s about the possibility of losing, about grief in advance. Anyway. [Laughs] When I start talking about Inside Llewyn Davis… it’s a film that really was very important for me, and that I do think there is a very similar parallel between Bob Dylan in Llewyn Davis and Daft Punk with Felix / Paul in my film.
Read our full conversation.
A video essay on the influence of German Expressionism in Tim Burton‘s films.