PostPerspective
Audiences were
amazed by the depth of deception exposed in the Netflix true-crime story The Tinder Swindler. The film follows the victims of
perpetrator Shimon Hayut, aka Simon Leviev, who posed as a billionaire diamond
mogul on dating apps. He met multiple women and conned them out of thousands of
dollars.
article here
“These women fall
into a trap thinking that someone is in love with them,” says cinematographer
Edgar Dubrovskiy. “Shimon Hayut is brutal, telling these women for months that
they will buy a house together and have kids.”
The Tinder Swindler was produced
for Netflix by Raw TV, the British indie that is credited with delivering
cinematic production value to tough documentary stories.
Dubrovskiy and
director Felicity Morris chose to acquire on Red, making this the first show
for Netflix of any kind shot on the Komodo camera system. It was mastered in
HDR in a predominantly ACES color-managed Dolby Vision workflow.
The doc’s central
story is told in interviews with Hayut’s victims, filmed in Sweden, Norway,
Amsterdam, London and the United States. Interview footage was rounded out with
stock footage, archive footage and dramatization, plus graphics of social media
posts. Post production went through Molinare, where
senior colorist Ross Baker handled the grade in FilmLight Baselight 4.
“From the first
scene, it was clear Felicity and Edgar wanted to embrace a romantic and
evocative world,” says Baker. “They achieved this with the soft warm tones from
the interviews, using very minimal lighting. Edgar opted to just use practicals
in the interviews to light the scene. The Komodo handled this with very little
noise.”
Dubrovskiy sent
Baker SDR stills as references for an approach that would distinguish the look
between the victims and the journalists. Baker translated the SDR stills into
HDR grade.
“Using Molinare’s
proprietary streaming software, MoliStream, we shared the output with Edgar and
explored our options, discussing the look live,” Baker says. “Here, we delved
into how we could treat the images in different ways and how this would be
perceived in each dynamic range.”
As many documentary
filmmakers are experiencing HDR in production for the first time, it can
be a massive learning curve for all involved. Baker says the extra dynamic
range can sometimes be too much as it natively appears in ACES and
HDR. “Edgar liked the IPP2 roll-off that you see from the Red in SDR
when you apply the soft tone-mapping and low-contrast options. This played
nicely to the desired cinematic style required by Felicity. As these
options are not available in ACES, I created a curve that would give
us the same result while allowing a little extra head room to the
highlights. I created a custom-grade stack that allows me to work with SDR
content and push it to 1,000 nits (if desired) without breaking the images
apart.”
Dubrovskiy shot 6K
RAW to fit Netflix deliverables, with the data overhead allowing Molinare’s
finishing team to punch into the image as required.
“Blending the
Komodo footage alongside a wide range of sources is always going to be tricky
as image sensor quality and lens choices play a massive part in the final
look,” Baker says. “I’m fortunate to have worked on many documentaries that
have used lots of different media sources, so I’m able to draw on years of
experience on what works.
“A big part of
making the sources work together without compromising the ‘hero’ camera is to
understand the difference in contrast and chroma and try to align them all
together. It’s never plain sailing but with the Baselight you have the tools at
hand to make the adjustments needed.”
For example, the
social media posts and text messages, which assist in driving the story,
shouldn’t jump out of the edit. “The graphics are predominantly bright white
screens that could be jarring. Controlling the luminance and softly vignetting
with a small amount of grain helped to maintain consistency with the interviews
and reconstructions.”
Baker adds, “This
was my first time working with Edgar, and he is a very creative and technically
minded DP. He was very passionate that the right look be achieved.”
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