IBC
Steve
McQueen’s acclaimed series about the West
Indian experience in 1970s London doesn’t so much rewrite
history as write the community into British history.
Shabier Kirchner had never been to Carnival
outside of Trinidad and Antigua, so when he went to Notting Hill
in 2019 he made the most of it. The cinematographer had just
shot Mangrove for director Steve McQueen and was about to
embark on Lovers Rock, another in the five films that comprises the
acclaimed BBC miniseries Small Axe.
“It was just hot and sweaty with so many black
people fully expressing themselves and the love for each other, and the love
for the culture,” Kirchner says of Notting Hill. “I went to a house party
afterwards and the party was bathed in the craziest light. I woke up
the next morning still drunk from the night before. It was a bank holiday
but Steve had called us in for a meeting.”
McQueen wanted to discuss Lovers Rock. They
had scouted the location found by the art department,
but had never spoken about the film’s visual language.
“I walked in and Steve took one look at me and he
was like, ‘You were at a mashup last night, weren’t
you?’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, man. I was’. He’s
like, ‘I can smell the booze coming off of you’. And I was like, ‘But
Steve, listen… ’
“I proceeded to tell him about the energy of what I
had experienced. The whole birth of Lovers Rock was that
conversation. How do we transform that feeling of literal intoxication
visually?”
The film will resonate with
anyone who has attended a house party thanks to Kirchner’s camera which moves
rhythmically with the partygoers and to the reggae music. It was named by Sight
& Sound as the best film of 2020.
The impetus was “not rewriting history, but writing
us into history,” Kirchner explained to Sight & Sound. “When you ask Steve
why he made Small Axe for television, he says it’s because he
wanted his mum to see it. He wants her to switch on the BBC and see our stories
there on the screen in the living room. That is something that black
people got robbed of the chance of seeing.”
How Kirchner came to shoot Small Axe
Created, directed and co-written by
McQueen, each Small Axe drama about London’s West Indian
community is treated individually and shot with different film or digital
formats. They are kaleidoscopic in showing characters impacted but not defined
by racism with equal weight given to a nostalgic and personal celebration of
family, friendship and Black British culture from 1969 to the mid-1980s.
Kirchner proved the perfect collaborator for
McQueen but, if not quite plucked out of nowhere, the Antiguan was
not the obvious choice.
“It was Shabier’s showreel that first
struck me,” McQueen’s regular cinematographer, Sean Bobbitt BSC, tells IBC365.
“When we met in London he told me we’d met before on a Skype call
when I was tutoring at the NFTS [National Film & Television School].
He had applied but the school didn’t accept him because he was so far advanced
there was no way he was going to gain from attending. But no-one ever told him
that.”
Mostly self-taught, Kirchner was highlighted in
2018 by Variety as a ‘Cinematographer to Watch’, having made a name
filming several shorts and indie features, including Skate Kitchen (2018),
about teen girl skateboarders.
“His attitude was impressive,” Bobbitt says. “It
was that, and that he doesn’t just do drama but art installations, that
felt like he would be a really good match for Steve. It was only later that I
learned he was from Antigua.”
Bobbitt who had worked with the director on
such films as Shame, 12 Years a Slave and Widows,
was unavailable for Small Axe but was asked by McQueen to recommend
someone
“I had wanted to find a
young British black camera person,” he says. “The stories are
powerful but from a privileged white
middle-class background they don’t mean the same to me as
they do to someone who has actually suffered racism. What was
shocking was that I couldn’t find that person in the UK. A lot more
needs to be done in terms of diversity and opening up the industry here.”
Individual film packages
The longest film in the series, Mangrove – a
true story centering on the Mangrove Caribbean restaurant in Notting
Hill and the 1971 trial of the so-called Mangrove Nine – moves from
street demonstrations to courtroom drama. Kirchner chose to use 2-perf 35mm
Kodak stock (500T 5219) on Arricam LTs using Cooke
Speed Panchro lenses.
The exposed negative was
push-processed to increase grain and contrast in the image and to make
colours such as red and orange stand out. The intent was to feel more handmade,
textured and “community built”, than smooth and digital.
Red, White and Blue, the true story
of how black police officer Leroy Logan tried to change the institutional
racism of the Met by joining the force, was shot on three-perf 35mm with an
unfussy style that focused on John Boyega’s Golden Globe-winning performance.
Kirchner mounted Cooke S4 glass
on Arricam LT and Arriflex 235 cameras to give a sharper
and cleaner-looking result than Mangrove.
Education, an account of the injustices of the
schooling system through the experience of a young boy, was shot handheld
on Arriflex 416 Super16mm to suggest BBC drama of
the period, such as those about working-class characters
directed by Alan Clarke, Ken Loach and Mike Leigh.
Alex Wheatle, a biopic of the early life
of the DJ-turned-novelist set against the backdrop of the New Cross
Massacre and the 1981 Brixton riots, is filmed on the Sony Venice.
The camera’s larger field of view allowed Kirchner to “frame Alex in a
beautiful close up but see the entire world around him at the same time”.
Lovers Rock was
also digitally shot, on Alexa Mini, partly so they wouldn’t have to cut and
change film reels every 11 minutes. A lighting rig over the main dance room
allowed the DP and the actors to move freely in the space for long takes. “We
changed the lighting according to the narrative, the emotion of what was
happening. We wanted it to feel quite contemporary in its feel, but also a
spiritual representation of Black love.”
Kirchner says he was conscious of the
responsibility of bringing these stories of West Indian heritage to screen.
During production he even badged the film camera magazines with the flag of a
different Caribbean country.
“I’m becoming less and less interested in the
parameters we’ve been told filmmakers should operate in by Western culture,” he
said. “For me, this isn’t cinema, this is ancestral. In a time when our
histories are fading, I want to be able to keep making choices that preserve
that in any way possible.”
Small Axe: Production Design
For production designer Helen Scott (A Very
English Scandal) the main challenge was unpacking five distinct scripts in
a compressed timeframe. Mangrove was shot over seven weeks. The rest of
the films took between two and four weeks each, with filming interspersed with
breaks for rest, recces and prep.
“We wanted a clear divide between each episode
and that drove the location scouting,” Scott says. “The time scales were
so tight. Quite often we made decisions without Steve while he was busy
filming.”
Parts of Kilburn were dressed to double as Notting
Hill. Goldthorn Avenue in suburban Wolverhampton stood
in for the (now gentrified) boroughs of Hornsey and Hackney. The
modern building used for Hendon police college was in
Shrewsbury.
“Steve wanted authenticity and accuracy and would
challenge us with that – sometimes quite unexpectedly,” she says. “For example,
for Mangrove he was very keen to know exactly what the
shops were on the All Saints Road at the time, what the street layout
was and how each building sat alongside each other.”
Jonathan Barker’s photographs of West
London from the era provided a reference point. “The photos no
longer represent reality, of course, so the challenge was in finding
locations that hadn’t been developed, crowded with buildings and trees, where
there should really be gaps left from the bombings. Ultimately, we had to
construct our own version of that era.”
Alongside researching national archives, family
photo albums, newspapers and periodicals, Scott also had the opportunity to
talk to Leroy Logan and musician Leee John, a friend of Logan’s who
shared insight into his character. She also spoke with Alex Wheatle,
who visited the set.
“Research and facts are your bones and the things
you work with to give the design an overall look,” she says. “On top of that
you have to overlay tone.”
She adds: “Steve and I
talked of Mangrove being a story about the written word with written
messages standing for the unheard voices. We chose to convey this
graphically, placing banners and graffiti in the
design. With Shabier we talked about how that part of
London felt dusty and parched but that a vibrancy was emerging and the Mangrove was
the hub and lifeblood of that. That’s where the colour palette came in. The
Mangrove appears hot and rich in colour contrasted to the streets outside which
are drained of colour. I wanted that sense of urgency, unambiguity and clarity
in the design.”
Lovers Rock was
less about a place, she says, and more about creating a frisson between
people and the detail of what they were feeling and doing. “Creating atmosphere
was much more important than the party house and its walls,” she says. “The accuracy
felt less important as what we were creating was the bubble of a world, a
fairy tale. The breath and sensuality of that along with the smoke and
dancing established the space more than anything.”
The most challenging part of this film was creating
an accurate journey between Ealing and the party in Notting
Hill, and the journey the romantic couple take on his
bike home afterwards.
“Steve had visual anchors along the way which had
to be effectively described, but ultimately, he has the ability to simplify the
journey and draw our focus making it just about them and their story,” Scott
says.
“Each script had a set of
characters, locations and time zones that are different
and with no physical continuity
but nonetheless they are all connected,” she says. “It was about
trying to find the nuance of each film.”
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