for RED.com
https://www.red.com/the-suicide-squad
Filmed entirely with IMAX-certified RED cameras, The
Suicide Squad is the explosive return to action of DC Comics’
Super-Villain characters. A completely standalone feature, the Warner Bros.
Pictures release is envisaged by writer-director James Gunn and inspired by the
classic 1967 war movie The Dirty Dozen, among others. “The way that movie
is shot is the way I’ve wanted to shoot every movie but have not been able to
until now,” Gunn declares.
Together with cinematographer Henry Braham BSC, the
filmmakers found a fluidity of movement for the large format canvas that defies
convention. “Nearly every shot in this movie is on the move,” says Gunn, “and
not only that but we wanted to get up close and move around and between people.
The tech has advanced to match what I see with my mind.”
In the film, a task force of convicts, including Harley
Quinn, Bloodsport and Peacemaker, are sent to destroy a Nazi-era facility and
laboratory. The ensemble cast includes Margot Robbie, Idris Elba, John Cena,
Viola Davis and Pete Davidson, among others.
“James conceived the movie as magical realism,” relates
Braham, who collaborated with Gunn on Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2. “It
is a black ops caper with highly dysfunctional Super Heroes. But the flaws in
their characters make them highly relatable to an audience. They have a
humanity to them which is what James is interested in portraying.”
One of the filmmakers’ main goals was to keep the story
visceral and real to create a grounded atmosphere for what are over-the-top and
sometimes ludicrous characters. “Of course, the story is fantastical,” Braham
admits. “We have a walking shark in the movie! So, to make it believable for
the audience, we needed a look and feel for the movie that combined fantasy
with realism.”
Braham points out that King Shark (voiced by Sylvester
Stallone) was created with special effects and prosthetics in keeping with the
desire to keep as much in-camera as possible. Likewise, the filmmakers opted to
shoot jungle scenes on stages at Pinewood (now Trilith) Studios in Atlanta and
beautiful locations in Panama, rather than use virtual production techniques.
Braham lit the giant sets to allow Gunn to design shots from
any angle. “If you can light truthfully, you can move the camera freely no
matter how large a setting,” he explains.
Together, Gunn and Braham evolved a dynamic shooting style
that they agree wasn’t possible before the creation of RED’s latest camera
innovations. “The Suicide Squad is a rollercoaster ride on the big
screen,” Braham says. “You want the smallest physical technology you can
possibly have with the best picture quality you can possibly achieve. That’s
the case with RED.”
The director and DP’s journey with RED began with Guardians
Vol. 2, the first feature film captured on the 8K RED DRAGON VV sensor inside
the WEAPON camera. “Jarred (Land, RED’s CEO) and the team at RED were really
engaged with us on Guardians and in the intervening time they’ve
taken another big step forward,” Braham notes. “For The Suicide Squad, I
needed to bring together two potentially irreconcilable demands: to shoot a
large format 70mm movie with a fluidity of movement that feels alive. It is a
style of filmmaking that gives total freedom to James. The decision to shoot
RED was a slam dunk because the technology serves the idea.”
Braham selected an array of eight REDs including RANGER
MONSTRO 8K VV and WEAPON 8K VV as well as a KOMODO, each mounted in different
ways to offer maximum flexibility on set. “The physicality of these cameras
means you can invent entirely new ways to use them,” Braham says. “It’s like
having an array of musical instruments all tuned in different ways for
different shots. I can put one down and pick another up to achieve the exact
shot we need.”
Braham and his camera team made customized gyrostabilized
mounts to enable genuinely stabilized hand-held movement on The Suicide
Squad. The RANGER MONSTRO was Braham’s primary camera with the KOMODO, then in
prototype, used on select shots. “KOMODO is a great little camera,” he says.
“There are shots in the movie we could only get with something that small that
comes with high-res imagery.”
All the camera configurations were made possible by the form
factor of the cameras, but the moment large lenses are mounted on, the
possibilities diminish. Braham’s choice of Leica M-System glass kept image
quality and maneuverability in mind. “The decision had a lot to do with the lens
geometry combined with the VV sensor which worked incredibly well for what I
needed. I could shoot large format on wide lenses without distortion, or I
could make the camera very intimate with the actors when required.”
Braham partnered with award-winning colorist Stefan Sonnenfeld, co-founder and president at Company 3, to develop the LUT. “I like to use stills and paintings as references,” Braham says. “I’m looking at the quality of color and tone of contrast, as well as the shape of black and the shape of white. For the core visual idea of The Suicide Squad – which is of a colorful, rich but violent war movie – I wanted a lot of color and beauty alongside gritty reality.”
Company 3 also prepped dailies for Gunn and Braham to view
projected on set. “Every day we’d build the look of the movie as it would look
on a big screen in a theater,” Braham says. “What RED has done is come up with
tech that is so small yet perfect for shooting pictures made for IMAX.”
Braham asks us to view this in context of the history of
moviemaking. “Long ago, technology defined the types of movies that got made,”
Braham says. “With the invention of sound, the cameras got huge and the film
stock was very insensitive, so that meant movies had to be made in very
controlled situations. To me, camera size and image quality are everything. RED
is at the vanguard of this. It means that I can begin a creative conversation
with ‘these are the requirements of our movie’ and then determine ‘what are the
technologies we need to do it.’”
Braham counts on RED cameras for their flexibility. “Once
you’ve been bitten by the freedom of filmmaking, it sets directors and actors
free,” Braham says. “That freedom is something that I find fascinating and, for
me, the key to it is the physicality of the camera."
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