IBC
Jean-Clément
Soret on the mystery of being a colourist and the different requirements of
grading commercials, film and TV.
The
exceptional light cast on the northern French port of Le Havre is world famous
for inspiring the 19th-century impressionism movement. Growing up there a
century later Jean-Clément Soret couldn’t help but be influenced by this huge
cultural legacy as he pioneered digital colour grading.
“Le
Havre was run by the local communist party at the time I was living there.
“It
meant that public libraries and museums were a big part of the cultural life of
the town. It also meant that the richer bourgeoisie had to pay inheritance tax
on their assets which led many of them to let go of the paintings they had
acquired over the years and gift them to the art gallery. When you are a
student it’s great to have access to all that culture for next to nothing.”
Monet
and fellow painters Pissarro, Sisley and Boudin brought a breath of fresh air
to the discipline through ground-breaking use of lighter colours, the separation
of tones and creation of shape and volume through touches and colour rather
than drawn outlines.
Similar
terminology is often used to describe the craft of the colourist. Colourists
ensure that all shots in each scene match by balancing colour saturation and
luminance. The best graders also understand the psychological effect of colour
to enhance the narrative.
Technician to artist
Jean-Clément, or JC as he is also known, wanted to be a musician. He studied audiovisual technology intending to be a sound engineer but landed his first job in 1987 at Paris laboratory and post-production facility Éclair, where he learned about film stocks, processing and densitometry while working with film colour timers.
Jean-Clément, or JC as he is also known, wanted to be a musician. He studied audiovisual technology intending to be a sound engineer but landed his first job in 1987 at Paris laboratory and post-production facility Éclair, where he learned about film stocks, processing and densitometry while working with film colour timers.
“The
telecine equipment was analogue but at the cutting edge,” says Soret. “It was
on the point of transitioning from technical transfer of the print to rudimentary
colour correction. I could see the potential, that the technology was going to
get more sophisticated and that it was just a matter of time before the process
would no longer need a technician but an artist.”
Most
of his time was spent transferring prints to video tape exposing him to a
treasure trove of different film stocks including flammable nitrate, processing
techniques such as dye-transfer and aesthetics from contemporary French movies
to Russian classics of the 1930s.
“I
was careful to take all of this in so when it came to do colour correction
myself I had all this vast library of images to reference and apply to the
job.”
A
stint working at post house Duran on music videos introduced him to VFX and
machines like Quantel Harry, bringing him into contact with experimental
photographers and directors like Stephane Sednaoui, Michel Gondry, Frederic
Planchon, J.P. Jeunet and Darius Khondji.
It
was this work that got him noticed abroad and in 1997 he was offered a position
at MPC as creative head of colour grading. He’s been there ever since, a
fixture on the London post scene culminating in being named global creative
director of colour grading at the facility as well as supervising digital
intermediate colourist at Technicolor Post in London.
Commercials winner
Along the way he has picked up numerous outstanding industry accolades. He is a five-time winner of Best Colourist at the British Arrow Craft Awards and was voted Best UK Colourist four years in a row and Best UK VFX artist by Televisual Magazine. He also received a Fellowship award at the British Arrow Craft Awards in 2013.
Along the way he has picked up numerous outstanding industry accolades. He is a five-time winner of Best Colourist at the British Arrow Craft Awards and was voted Best UK Colourist four years in a row and Best UK VFX artist by Televisual Magazine. He also received a Fellowship award at the British Arrow Craft Awards in 2013.
His
iconic commercials work includes Levis Pharmacy,
Honda Cog, Three Mobile The Pony, Channel 4’s Paralympic’s Superhumans and several John Lewis Christmas
campaigns including The Long Wait, Snowman and Buster the boxer.
“Working on an ad campaign
is a bit like composing a jingle,” says Soret. “Every second has to be very
efficient. You are aware that product or message needs to get noticed one way
or another because you need to grab the attention of your audience.
“A
lot depends on the client. Some are very open minded, others know exactly what
they want. It’s up to the colourist to judge the room and take the decision
forward.”
Movies,
on the other hand, are more like conducting a symphony.
“You
know you have the attention of the audience who have paid to see the work. You
can use the darkness to suggest rather than showing everything. You are allowed
more subtly in the image.”
There
are different ways of approaching long and short form material too. “With spots
you can spend a day or two maximising every last pixel of a frame but because
of the volume needed to grade for film you don’t have that level of
refinement.”
The
other significant difference is that commercials grading tends to be directed
by the spot’s director or creative agency. With feature film the director of
photography is more likely to be involved.
Soret
has graded numerous features including The Other Boleyn
Girl, Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom, Snatch and Lynne Ramsay’s You Were Never Really Hereand Serenity, a forthcoming thriller directed by Steve
Knight, lensed by cinematographer Jess Hall, and starring Matthew McConaughay.
Working with Anthony Dod Mantle
His
most established and rewarding collaboration has been with director Danny Boyle
and cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle. Soret worked on the multiple Academy
Award-winning Slumdog Millionaire, and all of
Danny Boyle’s projects since 28 Days Later. He also graded other
projects for Dod Mantle including director Ron Howard’s In the Heart of the Sea, and Kursk director
Thomas Vinterberg’s take on the Russian submarine disaster. All this, plus time
to fit in TV work Babylon, Midnight Sun and Black Mirror.
“A lot of what a colourist does are things a
DP wished they were able to do on set but couldn’t, perhaps because of lack of
time,” says Soret. “We can’t relight scenes but we can emulate some effects –
using a vignette to brighten the foreground and darken the background is
routine, for example. Some projects are about enhanced colour timing, some
about photography improvement, others about turning everything upside down.”
His
belief that colour grading has become an extension of the cinematographer’s
work is exemplified in his work with Dod Mantle.
“He
is with me all the time on a project looking in detail at every image. We
create camera moves together, change depths-of-field, colour, contrast and
saturation and vary the texture effects. Sometimes I would have done the
opposite – but when you watch the sequence back you understand why he chose a
certain look. We are in the same territory.”
The
films of which he is most proud are both shot by Dod Mantle, directed by Boyle; Sunshine, the 2007 sci-fi and Steve Jobs which used 16mm, 35mm and digital film
to tell its story over three distinct time periods.
Boyle
was recently announced as director of the 25th Bond starring Daniel Craig.
Logically, he would call on his regular cinematography and grader. “I would love
to work on a Bond but there are a lot of politics,” says Soret.
Colour
grading used to be known as a post production’s dark art, where astonishing
images were conjured by some sort of alchemy in a windowless suite.
“I
feel that a colourist still carries a little mystery - less so than before
perhaps, but there’s still an element of unpredictability that is attractive,”
says Soret. “If you give me the same image and brief one day to the next you
would not get the same result as I did the day before.
“That’s
what I find interesting– that colourists are still able to put a lot of
themselves into the image.”
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