British Cinematographer
The period gangster
epic Peaky Blinders is an established global hit drama and not one that
showrunner Steven Knight is going to alter lightly. Yet as seasons five pushes
the saga into darker territory, the show’s lead creatives felt the time was
ripe for a subtle shift in visual storytelling.
“There was a lot of
pressure we put on ourselves to make this as good as it’s ever been and also to
try and elevate it,” says DP Si Bell, who previously worked with series
director Anthony Byrne on TV projects such as Ripper Street and
the feature thriller In Darkness.
“We both wanted to stay true to what has made Peaky such a
success but also bring a different energy to the story.”
Principally, this involved moving away from fast
cuts in favour of devising a number of single developing shots in which the
camera is choreographed to move around and with the actors according to the
motivation in the scene. Bell likens it to a ballet – which was literally the
case in one set-piece scene.
Season 5 picks up in the aftermath of
the 1929 stock market crash. The world is thrown into turmoil with opportunity
and misfortune – perfect for the Shelby family led by Tommy Shelby (Cillian
Murphy) who is now an MP, but also for the forces of fascism, represented by
the leader of the British fascist movement Oswald Mosley (Sam Claflin). Mainly
set in 1930s Birmingham, the six-hour drama was shot in studios in Manchester
with location work in Manchester, Stoke, Rochdale, Bradford and Liverpool.
“The story has
moved on, so we needed to reflect that,” says Bell, “but we also wanted our
version of Peaky to
retain the stylised lighting set by George Steel in the original series. We
watched all the previous episodes and worked out the lighting choices,
including the slightly OTT style of large beams of light, lots of atmosphere,
fire, explosions, and ramped-up speed. We weren’t going to change those
elements.
“We did, though, want to cover more scenes in a
progressive shot,” he continues. “It’s all about the energy of camera movement
and having the ability to move the camera with the actors to try and tell the
story in the most economical and interesting way. Plus, we wanted to use zooms
and anamorphic lenses which are both new stylistic choices for this show.”
All previous Peaky Blinders were
shot with ARRI cameras but Netflix was asking for “a true 4K deliverable,”
reports Bell. “To me that meant only one thing: Red.”
Bell sought the
advice of Sam McCurdy BSC, who at the time was shooting the Netflix drama Lost in Space on
Red’s Monstro sensor.
“I totally respect Sam. He’s a friend
and we discuss things quite a bit. He said his experience with Helium, which I
first asked about, was good but he urged me to test the Monstro. I was
sceptical, since I didn’t think that shooting Anamorphic would work with such a
large sensor, but I trust Sam’s judgement, so I set up some tests.”
Bell went back to the lab – actually,
his home – and shot side-by-side tests with the same lens on Red camera bodies
housing Helium, Monstro and Gemini sensors.
“I was already impressed with the
Helium sensor from previous tests and knew that the Red camera body would give
us the flexibility we needed for operating. What I didn’t know, until I did
some super low-light tests with candles, was just how much I could push the
Monstro sensor and see how it would hold up. To be honest, I was blown away. It
was really impressive how clean the image was in low light. Its quality of skin
tones and colour detail are really mind blowing.”
The conundrum remained: how to fit an
Anamorphic lens onto a full-frame (40.96 mm x 21.60 mm) sensor. “We tested this
further and found a mode perfect for us. If we shot 4K at 1:1 aspect ratio, we
could use the maximum amount of the image circle of the lens. We shot the full
height of the sensor and this allowed us to get a square anamorphic picture
from the sensor. We’d de-squeeze the anamorphic to the 2:1 delivery aspect
ratio and outputted an 8K x 4000 image.”
He adds, “This was perfect for us in every way,
creatively and operationally.”
Initially, Bell was less keen than
the director about switching from spherical to Anamorphic glass. “I’ve never
shot anything on anamorphic before and I was a little worried how this would
work in combination with developing shots. We went through a crazy amount of
lens tests in pre-production testing Canon K35, Leica, Lumilux, Panavision C
Series and old Cooke lenses. Once we’d done that, I was much more confident
that we could get the look we wanted and shoot it on schedule.”
The crunch was finding a macro lens
that could capture an extreme close-up moving to a wide and back to a close-up
in a single shot. In the end, Bell landed on a Cooke anamorphic /i Look 65mm
T2.6 along with a full set of Cooke primes (25, 32, 40, 50, 75, 100 and 135mm).
“We used the 25mm for certain
sequences but the lenses we lived on were 32 and 40, with the 65 macro for
developing shots,” notes the DP. For more stylised moments using contra zooms
and slow motion he selected an Angénieux Optimo 24-290mm spherical glass and
Angénieux Optimo Anamorphic 56-152mm Zoom.
Bell teamed with regular Peaky
Blinders colourist Simone Grattarola at Time Based Arts to maintain the show’s
continuity of look with the Red rushes. He worked with DIT James Shovlar to
test shoot different looks for various series’ locations and used these as
reference for Grattarola to work from in the grade. Colour space was managed
from camera to post within Red’s image processing pipeline (IPP2) recorded in
RedCode 5:1.
“IPP2 worked extremely smoothly, protecting the
highlights and allowing us more latitude to tweak the image in post,” says
Bell. “I really enjoyed the workflow with Simone. We were all blown away by how
great it looked.”
A Tiffen 1/4 black satin filter was
deployed most of the time with NDs and rotating polarisers “just to take the
shine and reflections off certain things.”
For Bell and Bryne, the proof of what
they were trying to achieve lay in creating the developing shots. Much of these
were moved on ARRI’s Trinity rig on a Garfield mount or dolly executed by
Steadicam operator Andrew Fletcher with Bell on the wheels controlling the
tilt.
“With (grip) Paul Kemp we worked a
way of getting the camera from floor level to 11 feet in the air, moving the
rig around the set without needing to put down any boards. Basically, we could
move the camera where we wanted to. I’d control tilt from the monitor, Andrew
controlled the movement up and down, and Paul moved the dolly and jib arm so it
was a real team effort,” explains Bell.
Audiences won’t have to wait long for
one of the series’ signature shots since the opening sequence of episode one
does just this by establishing the Shelby clan in the iconic Garrison Pub.
“We enter the bar from the point of
view of a messenger boy and move past the bar up and over the top of the snug
(where the gang wheels and deals),” describes Bell. “We see people scattering
from snug and then we see Tommy approach from below. We move up to his eyeline,
then to his hand and back to Tommy’s face, then out to a wide and it develops
180-degrees to follow Tommy moving toward the windows of the pub where we end
on a group shot of all the family. It’s one shot covering eight pages of script
and it was really challenging to choreograph and particularly to light. There
was nowhere to hide lights apart from the ceiling where we put softboxes and
flags.
“Since I wasn’t used to the Monstro, I was cautious
at first about how well it would really capture the details in the shadows of
locations like the Garrison Pub,” Bell adds. “As we saw dailies, I started to
push more and more, and push the ISO more and eventually I got really confident
with it and became braver in my choices. I pushed it as far as I dared, and I
wasn’t let down.”
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