IBC
Three-time
Oscar winning DoP Robert Richardson reflects on a career that has spanned 30
years, working with directors such as Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino and
Oliver Stone – and working in formats ranging from digital 3D to ultra-wide
70mm.
There
are few more hot-bloodied or revered auteurs in the last thirty years of cinema
than Oliver Stone, Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino so it must take a cool
head to be the eyes for them all.
“I will always put the director and the story
first. That does not make producers overly happy but I don’t know another way,”
says Robert Richardson, ASC.
His
extraordinary career has seen him craft nine films with Stone, five with
Scorsese and five for Tarantino and counting. He’s experimented with everything
from digital 3D to an ultra-wide 70mm format, landed three Oscars including for JFK, The Aviator and Hugo, and is the DP to whom Robert De Niro, Ben Affleck
and Andy Serkis turned to compose their directorial features (The Good Shepherd, Live By Night, Breathe).
“At
the beginning I was raw - now I offer experience,” he says. “I believe I
understand how to tell a story.”
With
his latest film, A Private War, he has come full
circle with his first film, Salvador. Based on events leading to
the murder in Syria of venerated war correspondent Marie Colvin, A Private War
is documentary filmmaker Matthew Heineman’s narrative debut. Salvador (1986) is a polemic of Reagan-era Central
America conflicts through the lens of gonzo journalist Richard Boyle (James
Woods). It still retains its venom.
The power of the story
“I do feel I’m returning to my roots on this project,” says Richardson of Heineman’s film. “The subject matter aligns quite remarkably [with Salvador]. Both are low budget and both are essentially documentary in style. Of course, I felt blessed to have been asked to make Salvador but now I have the choice.
“I do feel I’m returning to my roots on this project,” says Richardson of Heineman’s film. “The subject matter aligns quite remarkably [with Salvador]. Both are low budget and both are essentially documentary in style. Of course, I felt blessed to have been asked to make Salvador but now I have the choice.
“In
this case, Marie Colvin was a monumental inspiration, her influence is
incalculable. In addition, Matt’s clear willingness to make this film does not
hold back on the truth – Syria, in particular, where genocide continues. He is
an extremely focused and honest filmmaker which is rare. Very rare.”
It
is the chance to shoot a good picture rather than a good-looking picture which
fires Richardson up.
“I
began making movies at a time when the subject material was vital, and with
directors who dealt with material that meant something,” he explains. “I’m
drawn to their work and I’ve been incredibly fortunate to work with them.”
With
Stone he shot Platoon, Wall Street, The
Doors, Born on the Fourth of July and Nixon. For John Sayles, Richardson shot Eight Men Out about an infamous baseball match
fixing scandal while the Errol Morris documentary Standard Operating
Procedure concerned Iraq’s notorious Abu Ghraib prison.
“Today,
the subject matter for major pictures is less vital than its commercial
potential,” he says, sadly.
Pioneering style
Richardson’s search for challenging material is reflected in an adventurous style that has seen him play with acquisition materials, visual textures, and aspect ratios to achieve the right emotional resonance for the story.
Richardson’s search for challenging material is reflected in an adventurous style that has seen him play with acquisition materials, visual textures, and aspect ratios to achieve the right emotional resonance for the story.
“I
don’t ever want to stay the same. I believe technology and technique and
advances in everything from cameras to projectors are there to be used to tell
the story.”
Hugo remains
one of the few mainstream films shot with dual cameras and a mirror to provide
the parallax. “It’s creating true 3D as opposed to a post conversion,” he says.
The
manic visual palette of Stone’s Natural Born
Killers mixed 8mm, 16mm, 35mm colour and black and white with
Betacam video, rear projection and double exposures to mimic the impression of
someone flicking between channels or to alternate subjective viewpoints.
“The
choice of format shifted depending upon the sequence and sometimes altered
within a sequence to provide editorial alternatives to texture,” he explains.
For
Errol Morris’ Fast, Cheap & Out of Control, Richardson
employed a similar fusion of formats as well as Super 8 film, stock footage and
cartoons to create an impressionistic collage of images.
Then
for Kill Bill, his first film with
Tarantino, Richardson duplicated footage over and over again until it attained
the texture of old Kung Fu movies for one scene; shooting the whole film (and
its sequel) with snap zooms, stylised lighting, and lurid colours in reference
to the exploitation movies the director wanted to evoke.
Later
when Tarantino wanted to release The Hateful Eight as
a 70mm movie, Richardson captured the film’s super-widescreen images with Ultra
Panavision 70 lenses that hadn’t been used since 1966’s Khartoum.
“I’m
currently shooting film for Quentin on Once Upon a Time
In Hollywood. He loves film, as do I, because there is a beauty to
it, particularly in the way it captures skin tones. But for me, if film dies as
a medium then so be it. Everything is ultimately released on digital today
anyway. The Hateful Eight was
shot on film, graded on film and released on digital but Quentin couldn’t care
less since he wanted to make a special release on 70mm in theatres.”
He
stresses: “I have no issues with new technologies. In fact, I search them out.”
On
Affleck’s 1920’s gangster picture Live by Night, Richardson
shot some scenes at 2000 ASA on an Arri Alexa 65, sensitivity to low light near
impossible with negative film. Similarly, sequences depicting Homs in A Private War were lit solely with flashlights,
random street lamps or street fires and very little else.
“I
shot at 1600 ASA (on Arri Alexa Mini) with Zeiss Super Speeds and used standard
light bulbs on strings to give additional light where necessary. It was far
more minimal than I generally work with but this is the direction the future
will take as digital capture improves in both range and fidelity of skin tone.”
He
is also keen to experiment with high speed cinematography, an aesthetic
explored by directors Peter Jackson and Ang Lee but which has yet to find
either an audience or the right story.
“I
met with Ang Lee to discuss shooting The Thrilla in
Manila, [a project about Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier’s legendary
boxing clash] in 120fps HDR,” he explains. “I was looking forward to it because
I think this is a visual step that has to been addressed. I would love to
understand whether 120 can work to tell a story. It does deliver absolute
clarity, almost like you can step into the picture. At the same time it means
that production design, costume, make-up all need to catch up because it will
show any imperfection. You can’t lie with this system.”
“It
may be the case that you can play with the speed of different scenes as part of
the grammar to storytelling,” he muses. “You could choose to shoot the boxing
action at 24 frames and switch between 24, 96 back to 48 or 120 where it suited
the story. You could do it subtly such that an audience wouldn’t be aware of
what you were doing other than having the scene emotionally resonate with them.
That’s my feeling about 3D too - that if done well it can be a subtle
enhancement to the narrative and organic to film language.”
Richardson
was also lined up to shoot Disney’s live action The Lion King before
a conflicting schedule denied him. Like director Jon Favreau’s VFX-Oscar
winning smash The Jungle Book, this is being
filmed using virtual production techniques – green screen sets with minimal
live action elements integrated seamlessly into photoreal computer generated
environments and animations.
“I
would have loved to have made that film,” he says. “I am really excited by the
possibilities of the technology.”
Background and influences
Born in
Massachusetts in 1955, Richardson developed an interest in photography while
studying at the University of Vermont, but it was films like Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey and
in particular the work of Swedish auteur Ingmar Bergman (Persona, The
Seventh Seal) that altered his perception.
“I
dropped everything to concentrate on film. I didn’t feel I was capable or
mature enough to be a director but I was fascinated by creating stories and
began to appreciate more and more that doing so needed the craft of a
cinematographer. I made a decision to go in that direction.”
He
joined the film department at the Rhode Island School of Design and continued
studies at the American Film Institute [AFI] in LA where he was apprenticed
with Bergman’s cinematographer Sven Nykvist and Nestor Almendros, the Spanish
DP who lensed the films of French director Eric Rohmer as well as American new
wave classics like Terence Malick’s Days of Heaven.
He
says being on set with Nykvist shooting Canary Row (1982)
and then much later with iconic Bergman actor
Max von Sydow on Shutter Island (2010) was like
“touching upon the time of gods.”
He
had done some second unit work, notably on Alex Cox’s cult classic Repo Man (1984) and several documentaries
including one for PBS on the civil war in El Salvador, but in 1985 when gung-ho
writer/director Oliver Stone invited him to Mexico, it was both adrenalin rush
and gamble. It was first sole DP feature credit.
“On Salvador I really didn’t know a great deal but
Oliver and I collaborated intuitively and learned as we went along.”
Immediately
afterward they went to the Philippines to shoot Platoon.
Both films released in the same year with the controversial Vietnam pic, also
shot semi-documentary style, landing the 1987 Best Picture Oscar and
Richardson’s first Academy Award.
“We
worked on successive films by each putting together our thoughts on the whole
script. I would storyboard or shot list the entire script and present it as my
thinking and I would get a negative or positive response. We did that for every
film, always balance and adjusting feedback from each other, fine-tuning the
story.”
When
Martin Scorsese asked Richardson to shoot his Vegas-set mob opus Casino, Richardson tried the same approach.
“Before
shooting I was called into the production office. Marty said he hadn’t read my
ideas and nor was he going to until he was happy with the script. He said,
‘When I’m happy with the script I will give you every shot in the movie [to
devise]’. Which he did. This transformed my vision substantially. Here I was
responsible for lighting, framing and operating every shot on the movie. This
was a massive learning lesson for me and for my crew also.”
It’s
worth highlighting his crew, since for three decades Richardson has worked, by
and large, with the same key grip, Chris Centrella, and gaffer, Ian Kincaid,
and for fifteen years with camera assistant Gregor Tavenner; “They are all
masters of their craft,” he says.
Aside
from Nykvist he singles out John Alton’s composition and stylised lighting in
work for director Anthony Mann in the 1940’s (T-Men, Raw Deal,
Reign of Terror) as key influences but it is Vittorio Storaro (The Conformist, Apocalypse Now, Reds, The Last Emperor)
who he reveres as the greatest ever cinematographer.
There
is, though, one shot of his own making with which Richardson is deeply in love
– and it is not one you’d necessarily pick. It’s the final sequence from Platoon, shot from a helicopter as the injured Chris
(Charlie Sheen) leaves the hell of Vietnam behind.
“He
is looking down, in shock, trying to comprehend the experience of all the lost
lives and everything that is destroyed below. This wasn’t a hard shot,
technically, but something about it still resonates with me - and not
everything does that.”
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