British Cinematographer
Jarred Land has spent his career in close
collaboration and connection with filmmakers, supporting the execution of their
vision with powerful and ground-breaking tools.
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Jarred
Land runs RED Digital Cinema, the company whose 4K camera went from scepticism to
admiration on a run of prestige movies like David Fincher’s Oscar-winning Mank and series like The Queen’s Gambit. Since
2013, Land has led a team focused on precedent-setting technology for
filmmakers.
Land didn’t found RED but joined Jim Jannard before the launch of the
first camera and during the hardcore, technology banging sleepless nights part
of the story, where a small group failed, learned, succeeded. From the first
conversation Land had with Jannard and still today, the focus is on providing a
more complete tool for filmmakers.
Born in Edmonton, Canada, Land’s father ran gas stations and shopping
malls, imbuing in him an entrepreneurial spirit. The teenage Land’s passion was
mountain biking which he segued into his own bike courier company in Vancouver.
A chance encounter with a client inspired him to take up videography
using the Panasonic tape camcorder DVX100. “I couldn’t go to film school
because I was running my company and biking 100km a day, so I set up a bulletin
board for help,” he says.
Basic by today’s standards (and pre-YouTube), these text-based forums
attracted communities to discuss all sorts of topics. Land created DVXuser.com
(for which in those early internet days he had to build the server in his
closet) “just so I could ask questions.”
The
site became one of the world’s largest online communities, making Land a
powerful influencer. Leaving the bike business in the hands of friends, he
began to learn cinematography as camera crew on documentaries and features (he
is credited as additional footage cinematographer on Steven Spielberg’s Munich, 2005). While snowboarding, he met the son of a
Vision Research executive. In those pre-Phantom days when it was primarily a
crash cam, Land was offered a role sharing their technology with filmmakers,
but he and his friend Nick Bicanic decided they’d rather take a Vision Research
camera and experiment with it further, diving into a realm where frame rates
were not locked down.
On
return from filming a documentary in Sierra Leone (Shadow Company,
2006), he got a call from Jannard, founder of Oakley sunglasses, inviting him
to come to its Lake Forest headquarters.
Jannard had joined DVXuser and recognised in Land a fellow film
enthusiast who could make things happen. Not just an avid camera collector,
Jannard shot most of Oakley’s commercials and was unsatisfied with the
direction digital cameras were headed.
“When I met Jim, he was designing a watch. It was the most incredible
thing I’d seen. It may seem rather trivial, but that watch convinced me I
wanted to be part of anything that man was thinking of creating,” Land says.
“We had no real idea how to make a camera. Graeme Nattress (still RED’s CTO)
was with us, Stuart English was there, and we hired consultants and just
started the process. We were a small, totally obsessed group that really wanted
to create this camera. We literally slept under our desks, Jim included, in a
large industrial warehouse. We started bringing a prototype camera alive; we
aptly named it ‘Franky’ after a few revisions.”
The RED One launched in 2007. While it wasn’t the first 4K digital cine
camera (that was Dalsa’s Origin), it was more compact, more affordable and
devised a new way of marketing to the community, using reservations to gain
attention. It worked.
“Our motivation wasn’t disruption, it was simply to make something
better than what was out there, respecting film in the process,” says Land,
“and making something much more accessible to filmmakers.
“Even though camera technology was trending away from film and had
seemed to settle on 1080p as good enough, we felt like it just wasn’t a
suitable replacement for 35mm. We knew we had to make a massive push and start
at 4K.
“Recording a frame of 4K was cool but recording it at 24p, let alone
60p, takes an enormous amount of data. That’s why we devised REDCODE as a way
to process it, which was one of our most important developments. Everything
we’ve released since has been built on the edge of what is possible,” he notes.
“Luckily, advances in GPU acceleration led by companies like Nvidia have
propelled file editing from our cameras forward. It’s much easier now to
process 4K, 8K, and beyond thanks to companies that brought horsepower to the
table. They played a hand in pushing cinematography forward.”
RED has long been accused of being fixated on resolution. “All pictures
filmed on 35mm or 65mm had more resolution than the filmmaker probably needed,”
he says. “But at the start of digital filmmaking, you were stuck with 720p, or
if you were lucky, 1080p. Many deemed 4K unnecessary when we started, but fast
forward to today and you can’t even go to the store to buy a 1080p TV. We don’t
want resolution to be the story,” he insists. “We just want you to not have to
think about it. And that goes for frame rates and dynamic range too.”
RED’s
position proved compelling, influencing every other camera manufacturer to
release higher resolution imagers. Arguably the market’s hand was forced by
Netflix’s demand for its originals to be shot in 4K – a bold move that followed
the debut of House of Cards in 2013, made
by Fincher with a RED Epic Dragon.
Fincher
had made The Social Network a few years earlier, an
award-winner and first major Hollywood picture shot digitally and on RED by
Jeff Cronenweth ASC. The director has used RED on every picture since and
continues to play a pivotal role in the company’s R&D.
“Fincher
is really one of the biggest keys to our success,” says Land. “Just when I get
comfortable, he pushes me further. He knows more about technology than any
other director that I have worked with, and he understands its role in telling
a story better than anyone. With House of Cards, he
pushed Netflix towards their current direction (of high spec deliverables).
That was the moment when everybody really had to start thinking about 4K – and
I’m sure the same will happen to 8K.” says Land.
“Fincher will tell us exactly what he wants. The first camera we made
with him, he rejected in the end because of a strong aversion to the number of
wires dangling around the camera. So, we started over. The original camera was
incredible, and eventually became the Panavision DXL. It was perfect for 99% of
filmmakers, just not the 1% of Fincher.”
Land
notes Fincher was also the inspiration for RED’s monochrome sensor, which he
wanted for a commercial. It became a low volume staple in RED’s line-up with
every new design. A few generations forward, Erik Messerschmidt ASC used the
monochrome sensor on Mank, for which he
received the Oscar in 2021.
Land’s abiding relationship with filmmakers has guided the development
of the industry-changing tools for which RED is known. His focus on the
advancement of creative technology includes over 50 patents to his name.
“At heart, I want this to remain a garage operation with a can-do
attitude. Engineering is by far our biggest expense. We have FPGA and ASIC
teams, mechanical and electrical engineers, and an incredible product team that
makes creating things much easier than relying solely on outside parties. When
it’s time to create something new, we have the in-house talent and that gives
us a good shot at getting it done.”
Land believes when it comes to the image, the sensor and the glass are
the most important things about the camera. “You need great internals to make
sure you are recording all the information correctly in the most efficient way
possible. But the actual mechanical camera body is what you become most
intimate with. The body should start small, and you build it up, whether for
studio or handheld.”
RED’s Komodo features a global shutter which took the firm three years
to perfect. “We knew directors had a problem shooting cine quality pictures
with crash cams and fast-moving footage because they told us so. Global shutter
is the answer, but traditionally with a global shutter you lose too much
dynamic range. Our team cracked it, so now the DR between a global and rolling
shutter is about the same.”
The recently launched Raptor gives filmmakers something else they asked
for: more frame rates. Raptor is capable of 120 fps 8K. “Often we’re solving
little problems that some filmmakers didn’t even know they had, and that leads
to a much bigger vision in the future. Every innovation we create is truly in
service of the filmmaker, giving them abundance instead of just good enough so
they can focus on the image telling the story, and not being confined by the
limitations of technology.”
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