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February 2024 Issue of American Cinematographer

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February 2024 Issue of American Cinematographer

February 2024 Issue of American Cinematographer


The February 2024 issue presents a special focus on lighting that includes coverage of Griselda, Drive-Away Dolls and The Taste of Things. Also featured are an analysis of the art of the music video; reportage from Kyiv on filmmaking in Ukraine; a discussion of working with HDR; and a look at visual effects in I’m a Virgo.

 

  • President’s Desk: ASC President Shelly Johnson considers the unique qualities of the ASC family that make the Clubhouse a true home.

 

  • Armando Salas, ASC and director AndrĂ©s Baiz discuss their work on the period crime drama Griselda, and Salas details his lighting strategy for the nightclub that serves as the epicenter of the action.

 

  • Cinematographer Ari Wegner, ASC, ACS, director/co-writer Ethan Coen and co-writer/editor Tricia Cooke offer their perspectives on creating a B-movie aesthetic for the action-comedy Drive-Away Dolls — and Coen and Wegner also share how lighting factored into the approach.

 

  • Jonathan Ricquebourg, AFC explains how lighting key spaces in Tráş§n Anh HĂąng’s A Taste of Things contributes to the period drama’s tactile quality, and he and gaffer Georges Harnack reveal how they approached an especially romantic sequence.

 

  • Six-time MTV Video Music Award nominee Christopher Probst, ASC introduces a look at the art of the music video that includes interviews with ASC cinematographers Crescenzo Notarile, Natasha Braier and Marcell RĂ©v. Notarile and director Meiert Avis recall creating a spontaneous look for U2’s classic video “Where the Streets Have No Name”; Braier discusses how she emphasized naturalism in Ed Sheeran’s “Eyes Closed”; and RĂ©v explains how he shot Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers” at a singular L.A. location.

 

  • AC visits Kyiv to explore how the Ukrainian cinematography community is navigating the war.

 

  • Shot Craft: An overview of high dynamic range — including interviews with ASC members Craig Kief, Armando Salas and Erik Messerschmidt — illuminates why cinematographers must understand the technology.

 

  • The VFX Perspective: Visual-effects supervisor Todd Perry explains how his team created a teenage giant and situated him in downtown Oakland, Calif., for I’m a Virgo.

 

  • Clubhouse News: The latest bulletins from the Society feature new member Eben Bolter, ASC, BSC; the Society’s bicoastal holiday gatherings, including the unveiling of a vintage PathĂ© Studio camera used by Billy Bitzer; James Neihouse’s election to the Giant Screen Cinema Association board of directors; Clubhouse Conversations on Oppenheimer, Napoleon, Poor Things and The Zone of Interest; the Society’s lighting demo for the IATSE Latinx Caucus; an ASC panel at Cine Gear Atlanta; and an Education & Outreach event with Loyola Marymount University.

 

  • Wrap Shot: Smith Goes to Washington (1939), shot by Joseph B. Walker, ASC and directed by Frank Capra.

 

 

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    The February 2024 issue presents a special focus on lighting that includes coverage of Griselda, Drive-Away Dolls and The Taste of Things. Also featured are an analysis of the art of the music video; reportage from Kyiv on filmmaking in Ukraine; a discussion of working with HDR; and a look at visual effects in I’m a Virgo.

     

    • President’s Desk: ASC President Shelly Johnson considers the unique qualities of the ASC family that make the Clubhouse a true home.

     

    • Armando Salas, ASC and director AndrĂ©s Baiz discuss their work on the period crime drama Griselda, and Salas details his lighting strategy for the nightclub that serves as the epicenter of the action.

     

    • Cinematographer Ari Wegner, ASC, ACS, director/co-writer Ethan Coen and co-writer/editor Tricia Cooke offer their perspectives on creating a B-movie aesthetic for the action-comedy Drive-Away Dolls — and Coen and Wegner also share how lighting factored into the approach.

     

    • Jonathan Ricquebourg, AFC explains how lighting key spaces in Tráş§n Anh HĂąng’s A Taste of Things contributes to the period drama’s tactile quality, and he and gaffer Georges Harnack reveal how they approached an especially romantic sequence.

     

    • Six-time MTV Video Music Award nominee Christopher Probst, ASC introduces a look at the art of the music video that includes interviews with ASC cinematographers Crescenzo Notarile, Natasha Braier and Marcell RĂ©v. Notarile and director Meiert Avis recall creating a spontaneous look for U2’s classic video “Where the Streets Have No Name”; Braier discusses how she emphasized naturalism in Ed Sheeran’s “Eyes Closed”; and RĂ©v explains how he shot Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers” at a singular L.A. location.

     

    • AC visits Kyiv to explore how the Ukrainian cinematography community is navigating the war.

     

    • Shot Craft: An overview of high dynamic range — including interviews with ASC members Craig Kief, Armando Salas and Erik Messerschmidt — illuminates why cinematographers must understand the technology.

     

    • The VFX Perspective: Visual-effects supervisor Todd Perry explains how his team created a teenage giant and situated him in downtown Oakland, Calif., for I’m a Virgo.

     

    • Clubhouse News: The latest bulletins from the Society feature new member Eben Bolter, ASC, BSC; the Society’s bicoastal holiday gatherings, including the unveiling of a vintage PathĂ© Studio camera used by Billy Bitzer; James Neihouse’s election to the Giant Screen Cinema Association board of directors; Clubhouse Conversations on Oppenheimer, Napoleon, Poor Things and The Zone of Interest; the Society’s lighting demo for the IATSE Latinx Caucus; an ASC panel at Cine Gear Atlanta; and an Education & Outreach event with Loyola Marymount University.

     

    • Wrap Shot: Smith Goes to Washington (1939), shot by Joseph B. Walker, ASC and directed by Frank Capra.

     

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