she has important Business to attend to (become covered in cobwebs)
seen from South Korea
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
seen from France
seen from China
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Finland
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Switzerland

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
she has important Business to attend to (become covered in cobwebs)
Spectre’s cinematography: meh.
Larktag asks, did Spectre have a different DP than Skyfall? A-yup; cinematographer on Spectre was Hoyte van Hoytema, who did Interstellar and Her, among others. He suggested to director Sam Mendes that they could get a nostalgic, more romantic feel by using 35 mm film, rather than digital equipment like the Arri Alexa DP Roger Deakins used for Skyfall. Unfortunately, I think it turned out less nostalgic than stultified, less romantic than old-fashioned. The bar was high, though; Roger Deakins is one of the most well-regarded cinematographers, and his genius is all over films like The Shawshank Redemption, A Beautiful Mind, Kundun, and all the Coen Bros’ best (O Brother Where Art Thou?, Fargo, The Big Lebowski, etc.). Three things marked Deakins’ style for me in Skyfall: the gorgeous lighting traversing palettes across locations, the quiet or very smoothly moving camera that didn’t sacrifice clarity for action, and the framing that balances movement within each shot without resorting to the heavy-handed center framing that’s becoming all too common in action films.
While the colors were obvious and striking (the deep blue of the skyscraper scenes in Macau, for instance, or the vibrant reds in Shanghai, or the chilly desaturation on the Scottish moors), the lighting was quietly masterful: this was a film about mirroring and self-reflection, Bond seeing himself in others and examining his own psyche, and it used a constant motif of glass and mirrors to get that across. Nothing puts pressure on lighting design like filming so many glass walls: how the fuck did they get so many shots like this without the camera showing up in a reflection?
TAG YOU'RE IT
Aww, man.... I thought I'd posted this ages ago, but apparently I didn't. Sorry, OTP221b! Thanks for the tag.
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TAG YOU’RE IT
Rules:
•Always post the rules •Answer the questions from the person who tagged you and write 11 new ones. •tag 11 people and link them to the post •actually tell them you tagged them
MY QUESTIONS
1. Drive - too fast or too slow?
Too slow. I've been pulled over for speeding once but for driving too slow twice.
2. Paint - walls or canvas?
Walls. I am NOT an artist.
3. Quick sex or platonic, hour-long massage?
Quick sex. Definitely.
4. Sweet or salty?
Both. A little salt on your chocolate or caramel? Heaven!
5. New York City or the Grand Canyon?
NYC. Free Shakespeare is starting up again this time of year. I've seen some amazing things in the Delacorte.
6. Poetry or prose?
Prose. Poetry can be sublime, but it's prose that really stays with me.
7. Is your second toe longer than your big toe?
Nope. Not even close.
8. Take away or dine in?
Dine in. Let someone else do the dishes.
9. Dress up or dress down?
Dress up at work and dress way down in comfy clothes when I'm at home.
10. Fiction (of any sort) you’re reading now, 5th paragraph, 1st line.
"And when I ask my aunts about my mother, all they will ever say is that she was flighty." (The Girl Who Never Was, by Skylar Dorset.)
11. You’re about to be kidnapped (forever) by (friendly, universe traveling) aliens. You’re allowed to take one inanimate object from your house/flat/hovel to remind you of life on earth. What is it?
An ipod loaded with music and photos.
Okay, here are my questions for the people tagged below:
Summer, winter, spring, or fall?
Baseball: great summer sport or too damn slow?
Your favorite book when you were a child.
Do you polish your nails? Why or why not?
Spring for the organic produce or save the $ for something else?
Most unusual (for you) thing you've ever eaten.
Favorite halloween costume you ever wore.
What song is your musical equivalent of comfort food?
Have you traveled out of country? If so, which other country did you visit first? If not, where would you most like to go?
Stephen Sondheim or Andrew Lloyd Weber?
How many fandoms are you in right now?