Tag Archives: The End of the Affair

A Fine Grade

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We shot Jadoo on beautiful 35mm, Kodak stock.  But in the brave new digital world it’s the first and last time the picture is on a physical medium.

When the cut is done, and the picture is “locked”, those sections of the original negative that we’ve used in the film are scanned, frame-by-frame, into a digital format. And at such a density that each and every frame – and there’s about 120,000 of them – is its own 12 megabyte file. (A standard DVD holds about 4.7 megabytes.) They are massive, beautiful and highly adaptable.

This allows the director, Amit Gupta, and Cinematographer, Roger Pratt, to balance, smooth and, occasionally, revisit a shot – to adapt it to the narrative in a really precise way.

We are grading with Paul Ensby at Technicolor in Lexington Street, W1. Paul is the calm, highly-skilled and hugely experienced colourist of such features as Senna, Salmon Fishing In The Yemen and Kingdom Of Heaven.

And he goes back a way with Roger having graded the very beautiful Dorian Gray and Closing the Ring.

(And Paul’s dad, the legendary John Ensby, goes back even further, having been the lab colourist over the last the last twenty years on Roger’s films such as Shadowlands, The End Of The Affair for which Roger received his Oscar nomination, two Harry Potters, Troy, etc. But that’s another story.)

The team sits together in a darkened studio and, first up, watches the film through – ungraded, raw and without stopping. During the next, quick-ish pass, the worst offenders are ironed out – glitches in the scan, bumpy transitions between shots, jumps in light intensity between scenes. Anything that, as a first time viewer, might throw you out of the story.

And then the film is gone through reel-by-reel, section-by-section, scene-by-scene and, lastly, shot-by-shot. It’s an intense and focusing process. There’s a constant dialogue between Paul, Roger and Amit. And, apart from the first and last run-throughs it’s done mute, in total silence just staring at the light, colours and contrast.

What’s really heartening is how funny the film remains, even when watched without dialogue. And it’s only when you see each and every moment, in silence, again and again, that you realise how bloody marvellous our cast are… just firing on all cylinders in every scene, even when they are in the back of frame.

We’re recording the score with our Oscar-winning composer, Stephen Warbeck next. Still pinching ourselves.

 

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35mm film

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We’re shooting Jadoo on film. To make a film-film you need people who love 35mm Eastman Kodak negative.

Roger Pratt BSC, our Oscar-nominated Cinematographer, wears a badge on his lapel that states, “Film Forever”. He truly understands film and all its extraordinary qualities having shot, in no particular order: Brazil, Mona Lisa, Tim Burton’s Batman, The Fisher King, Shadowlands, Twelve Monkeys, Chocolat, Iris, The End of the Affair…

(It’s odd writing a list of films and knowing with some certainty that, if you’re a film buff, at least one of your top-ten-best-looking-films-of-all-time is on that roster.)

But Roger is also modest enough to tell you that to capture the light that he designs with such aplomb you need a team that includes:

A Camera Operator – we have Rob Hart, a physically powerful young man who can frame a shot on a conventional head and move a Steadicam with equally sensitive ease.

A Focus Puller – a role that requires a bewildering mixture of mathematical precision, obsessive measuring and – if we’re honest – a dab of magic to make sure every actor’s nuanced look is pin-sharp. Sam Renton’s got the fingers, as they say.

An Electrical Team – whose role it is to make Roger’s lighting plans a reality: hoisting lamps, clipping on gels, flagging-off recalcitrant beams whilst making everything safe for cast, crew and Joe Public. Our team – and we are still pinching ourselves – is lead by Gaffer, Tommy Finch and his brother, Rigging Gaffer, Chuck Finch. Listing their credits would double the length of this Blog but suffice it to say, in 2006 Chuck won a BAFTA for his lifetime achievements in film industry. It really is worth typing their names into IMdb and letting your jaw fall open.

Right behind the Gaffers are Paul McDermott, Steven Wood and Ben Coldwell; constantly of the move, two-steps ahead, making this set tidy and then next ready to shoot.

Steve Weightman, our Grip, moves the camera with real grace.  Tommy Holman, our Clapper Loader, is always there with the next lens, the fresh film mag, the chalk… almost before they’re requested. The whole team ably serviced by the indefatigable Harry Gamble, our Camera Assistant and Ken Price, the Camera Car driver.

Every day Tommy Holman calmly accepts his unique, terrifying responsibility – even though he’s one of the youngest members of the unit – and unloads the negative that’s captured all Roger’s beautiful light into thin-metals cans before despatching them to Technicolor to be stuck-fast forever. Six days a week, for five weeks. No pressure.

And every night Amit Gupta, the writer/director, sits with Roger and the team watching the rushes; giggling like schoolboys at the dialogue, making mental notes about actors’ best angles and marvelling at the beauty of 35mm film.