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#Australian Cinematographer
cinephilesadeqi · 5 months
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Movie analysis and Review: "Liar Liar" (1997)
Synopsis:“Liar Liar” revolves around conniving attorney Fletcher Reede (Jim Carrey), who excels in the courtroom but finds his personal relationships in shambles due to his dishonesty and workaholic tendencies. His wife, Audrey (Maura Tierney), has left him for a more reliable man, and his son, Max (Justin Cooper), wishes for his dad to stop lying for 24 hours. A magical twist makes Fletcher…
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karingottschalk · 2 years
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Nicola Daley ACS Joins The Ranks of In-Demand Globe-Trotting Australian Directors of Photography with Season 5 of 'The Handmaid's Tale'
Nicola Daley ACS Joins The Ranks of In-Demand Globe-Trotting Australian Directors of Photography with Season 5 of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’
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yourdailyqueer · 2 months
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Bonnie Hart
Gender: Female
Sexuality: N/A
DOB: N/A
Ethnicity: White - Australian
Occupation: Artist, cinematographer, activist, public speaker
Note: Is Intersex
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dialogue-queered · 3 months
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“The American poet Wallace Stevens suggested there were 13 ways of looking at a blackbird but with Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) that barely scrapes the surface. He was conductor, composer, pianist, writer of popular musicals, educator and celebrity. One might devote entire volumes to his identity as a Jew, a homosexual, or a political activist….Like so many creative giants he is clearly bipolar, subject to crushing depressions, bouts of self-hatred and sadness When the pendulum swings the other way, he becomes a social and artistic juggernaut overpowering everything in his path. While Bernstein was clearly homosexual, we can’t dismiss his marriage to Felicia as a cover story…[Nonetheless]….Cooper and his co-writer, Josh singer with help from cinematographer Matthew Libatique have chosen to view their subject through the lense of his sexual proclivities….Instead of seeing Bernstein as a great man or an artistic genius, we take these things for granted and look at the ferment beneath the carapace of fame….A great part of the bond between Felicia and Lenny is her belief in his talent….Apart from the concert sequences, the music is all by Bernstein, so we are subliminally absorbing his creative efforts while we watch the whirlwind of his life play itself out. Maestro’s patchwork narrative will polarise audiences, but…this restless montage…so perfectly echoes the personality of its subject”.
Source: John MacDonald (2023), ‘Maestro Is a Masterwork’, Australian Financial Review Weekend, 16-17 December, p39 (originally from the Washington Post).
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blurban-form · 1 year
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Bluey Magazine Article: Australian Cinematographer Magazine
Really nice long-read article on Bluey, why it looks the way it does...
It is amazing to me how open & how much “behind the scenes” info the makers of Bluey are willing to share. Cool.
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fabien22 · 2 years
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PINK FLOYD'S IMITATION
Many of you will know who the Pink Floyd are. They have created so many hits that have traveled in time, making you feel as flying in the air when listening to them, thanks to their psychedelic vibes. Go listen to their song "Pig"- sit down, relax, and you will understand what I mean !
They created a new style of music, a sort or experimental and psychedelic rock, which barely had been done before them. The band met a huge success, releasing many hit albums : Animals in 1977, Wish You Were Here in 1975, and The Wall in 1979 which even got a cinematographic adaptation in 1982.
After Pink Floyd's success, many bands were formed to try and imitate Pink Floyd's style. But only one of them were near perfect imitation : the Australian Pink Floyd Show, which was formed in 1988. They were even valued by the Pink Floyd's themselves for sounding extremely similar and for creating the same universe. The Times magazine said that they were the "absolute reference and gold standard" when talking about imitating the original band's style. They were so good that they even played at David Gilmour's 50th anniversary party !
Pink Floyd's concert were a big must to see, with many things going making it a show : they had giant inflatables and many lights and lasers on scene. The Australian Pink Floyd Show managed to recreate their shows perfectly, giving the audience a glimpse of what it was to see the band when it was still active. They have made many shows all around the world, and they recently came to the Zenith of Strasbourg in March 2022 to perform at it.
The Australian Pink Floyd Show is a great success. They have sold over four million tickets in 35 different countries, proof of the talent that they have in recreating Pink Floyd's sound. I have personally seen them play live, and was left speechless as I could close my eyes and not hear a difference with the original musics ! If you are a fan of Pink Floyd and have the opportunity to see the Australian Pink Floyd Show, don't sleep on the occasion ! It is worth every single penny of it.
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readytospock · 2 years
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How do you dig for cool and good films? I am curious.
Sorry about the late response! I’ll try to be as helpful as possible! I am writing this quite late before I forget abt it so don’t hesitate to ask for clarification!
For film recommendations, a good place to start is with film festival lineups - there are genre specific ones, probably local ones near you, and there are also the more well known international ones like Cannes and Sundance etc. As a film nerd, sometimes I just like seeing what people make videos/articles/papers about and checking those out too! Once you find a screenwriter/director/producer/actor or even a cinematographer you like you can always look further into their catalogue for more films!
If you are at a university, or even if not, check to see if there are film societies you could join. I promise you most people aren’t weird Joker-obsessed dudes (lol) and it’s a good way to make friends and get recommendations
Accessing more films
Here’s the (sorta) harder part. Now, some indie films and even critically acclaimed ones may be available on YouTube (short films especially) but there are other places you can try:
Public libraries are the best! Most classic films will hopefully be available to borrow or request from your local library, and it’s good to support them :)
Check to see if your libraries or university (if applicable) are signed up to kanopy or any similar streaming services. I access kanopy through my uni, and it’s full of interesting films, series and documentaries about all sorts of topics from all over the world. It’s a great way to get watching films that aren’t in english (the subtitles are so comprehensive ahhhh <3) and lesser known critically acclaimed films too. There’s also so many great documentaries about so many interesting topics. In a similar vein is SBS on demand, which unfortunately is an Australian only free streaming service from the broadcaster SBS. It’s got things in a pretty similar vein to kanopy, as well as international news and SBS’s own news coverage and programs. It’s accessible outside Australia with a VPN, but protonVPN (the only worthwhile free VPN) slows down your speeds too much to make streaming video (or too many browser tabs) any fun :( I suppose if you’re willing to you could get a paid vpn but idk how worth it it is - though it does let you access what all streaming services have available in different countries…
Obviously these specific services I’ve mentioned above^^ mightn’t be available to you, but it’s worth seeing whether any local institutions or broadcasters offer anything similar! At least in Australia, lots of broadcasters now have free streaming services where you can stream their programs as well as a few other morsels, and looking back my high school even access to some ~educational~ streaming service… it did have a max of like. 480p to 720p resolution for most things but there were some great films on there!
Even on the more mainstream streaming services, it’s worth having a look beyond the algorithmic recommendations. Most services will have a few gems on them for a few months at a time, and even if your pick is a bit of a miss it can be nice to change things up. As a bit of a film nerd I usually find something worthwhile in everything I watch, and can appreciate good craftsmanship even if i don’t necessarily enjoy watching a film, but if that’s not you don’t feel bad for turning something off - there are plenty of films I’ve never finished and it doesn’t make me a bad person.
Getting into stuff that’s more stylised and less polished/quippy/fast paced/attention grabbing can be an adjustment, especially if I’ve not sat down to watch something in full for a bit and have just spent snippets of my spare time scrolling through social media and the like.
Also there’s the good old skull and crossbones method (if you catch my drift 🏴‍☠️☠️…). It will likely be harder to find non English films with subtitles or dubbed though, as well as indie films.
That being said, I am a proud barbie movie enthusiast and trekkie, so I don’t have a media diet of like. Fine Cinema™️ only.
Also, the attitude of “old films good modern movies bad” is also pretty wrong because many films that are remembered don’t necessarily break the box office or top earnings lists. Many don’t even make it into top ratings lists and rankings, only to come back with a vengeance down the track. Just like how a lot of pop music charts and then fades into obscurity while sticking to a predictable formula, lots of movies do similar things and achieve differing levels of success. The fact that we remember the good ones is no accident, but it’s also no reason to get too pessimistic about the present. also yes capitalism is messing things up as always but I promise you so many ppl are trying tl work against it
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notalwaysright · 2 years
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https://notalwaysright.com/?p=259458 My friend is a cinematographer, usually working on small, independent movies. They were filming out in the country, so had out a country pub for accommodation, and had breakfast and dinner there. Because so many of the crew was vegetarian, they asked for vegetarian food for everyone. Australian country pubs, at least when the story is set, served mostly “meat & 2 veg” as standard fare, with fish and chips and probably one vegan pasta on the menu. The first night at dinner, the buffet was covered with an impressive variety of tasty looking vegetarian dishes. On closer inspection, every single dish was sprinkled with chopped bacon! When asked why, they said they wanted to make it tastier. My friend is a vegetarian. He was telling this story with affection, because of the genuine wish the staff had to make the best meal they could and because of how spectacularly they failed at the final hurdle. Source: https://notalwaysright.com/?p=259458
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cvm-jpfilm · 3 months
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Ichikawa - The Burmese Harp (1956)
What a heartbreaking and touching film. When you know that you're watching a war movie, you usually know it's going to turn out sad, but I was really touched by self-sacrifice portrayed in this film. As opposed to feeling sad at seeing horrific events happen on screen, I was moved by the personal struggle that Mizushima underwent throughout the film. Cinematographically, I really liked the use of a flashback after meeting monk Mizushima. The tension and suspense built up from not knowing his POV and only the group's really makes the change all the more heartbreaking.
I think the film's probably a commentary on the rebuilding and healing of Japan after the war. On a literal level, Mizushima is a critique on the Burmese campaign by the Japanese, a comparatively smaller confrontation amongst the numerous fronts and invasions on the Pacific front in WW2. The specific use of Burma relates to the grievances of campaigns like Burma's where Japanese soldiers would be abandoned in foreign territory with no certainty of their future. Many would continue fighting like how we saw in the movie with the holed up Japanese military unit. I think in this regard the movie heavily critiques the way the government treated it's soldiers and citizens, not only leaving them to dry but also unable to pass on. An even bigger part of the movie focuses on the unburied remains of soldiers left in Burma. This movie certainly makes it as striking and horrifying ordeal. Warning! This is accurate, I will show a comparison of a horrowing shot in the movie compared to a real photograph from the Australian War Memorial.
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Movie ^; Real Life below:
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The movie's critique of the scars of war, of the nation's inability to move past that tragedy goes beyond just soldiers. I think Ichikawa, through the discarded soldiers, was commentating on the state of Japan. Unable to move from the past due to unburied regrets and ghosts. If Japan wants to continue on, they must make piece with their history.
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denimbex1986 · 4 months
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'Generations, culture, loneliness, and grief in queer culture and how true love transcends the mortal coil.
“The power of love A force from above A sky-scraping dove Flame on burn desire Love with tongues of fire Purge the soul Make love your goal”
The Power of Love by Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Andrew Haigh’s exquisite queer ghost story and romance is adapted from Strangers a 1987 novel by Japanese author Taichi Yamada, but it is also indebted to the 1984 song The Power of Love by Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Even in 1984 there was little mistaking (unless willingly done) that Holly Johnson and his band were openly queer. It is fitting then, that Andrew Haigh uses the musical motif in his time slipping story: moving the protagonist, Adam (Andrew Scott) between his present life overlooking central London to Croydon in 1980s and his childhood home.
Adam lives in an almost empty high-rise apartment complex. He is a television screenwriter in his forties. He observes the world at a removed distance from his solitary existence. He speaks to no one. He watches old music clips from the 1980s. His sole outlet is his writing, yet he’s struggling to create something personal. Andrew Haigh and cinematographer Jamie Ramsay, and production designer Sarah Finlay define Adam’s isolation, depression, and nostalgia with immediate effect. Adam is both inside and outside of London. He is careless with his appearance and eating habits. He sleeps on the couch. He is listless and incarnated in something akin to a half-life.
A fire alarm goes off in his building which seems almost absurd as there is no one there to set a fire. He shuffles out his door, down the empty corridor, to an empty elevator and stands outside until it stops. The apartment is a dwelling where Adam exists as a ghost haunting the uncanny modern space.
A dishevelled but handsome young man named Harry (Paul Mescal) knocks on his door. Harry is drunk and suggests Adam was looking at him from outside the building. Perhaps he would like some company. Surely Adam would like company, they are the only two people in the place. He’s flirtatious but also mildly desperate. “I’ve got vampires at my door,” he tells Adam – he also has a bottle of liquor and pleading eyes. Adam is so shocked that anyone would disturb his habitual solitude he gently rebuffs Harry. Another time, perhaps?
Time itself in All of Us Strangers is a collapsing concept. Adam gets on the train to return to his childhood home to find inspiration for his screenplay. His clothing is reminiscent of mid-eighties wear. The train ride itself is almost an inverse experience to Jimmy Sommerville’s in Bronksi Beat’s Smalltown Boy (no Bronksi Beat songs are on the soundtrack but fellow London Records band Fine Young Cannibals’ Johnny Won’t You Come on Home appears instead). He looks into the window of his former home and a young boy is watching him. Wandering from a playground to a heath he is approached by a man (Jamie Bell) who beckons him to follow him. What at first glance could appear to be an anonymous hook-up is something else entirely. The man is his deceased father, and he is inviting him home.
Adam registers something between passivity and shock as his mother (Claire Foy) fusses over him and embraces him. They are all aware that the meeting is impossible as both parents died in 1987 at Christmas time. And yet, they are there together, and Adam and his family get the opportunity to meet as both parents and child and as adults who must reintroduce themselves. “You must come back,” they tell him. “One of us will be in.”
Back in London and the present moment Adam sees Harry looking up at him from outside his apartment. This time Adam does invite him in and the two begin a tentative but erotogenic sexual relationship which grows into deep intimacy where they share their feelings of dislocation. Haigh’s script peels back the generation gap between the men. Adam, a product of Generation X and the homophobia and fear associated with the AIDs crisis reveals how he remained mostly single. Gen Z Harry’s lack of a partner comes from something else – perhaps a lack of being able to care for himself. Despite his family being relatively accepting he has been side-lined as the son who hasn’t brought his parents grandchildren. There was nothing overt and he was never unwelcomed; he just slipped away from his Dorking family and moved to London to experience the wider world (again echoes of Smalltown Boy).
Adam moves between the present (and possible future) with Harry, and the past with his parents. Again, a generation gap is present. When his excited and proud mother speaks to him about a possible marriage or girlfriend, Adam tells her he is gay. Something as a child he never had the opportunity to express despite his bedroom being somewhat a shrine to indeterminate gay culture in the 1980s (Erasure albums, posters of Frankie Goes to Hollywood). There was a specific blindness working and middle-class British people indulged in when it came to queer culture in the 80s. Even the most obvious examples of queer music and art such as Soft Cell and The Pet Shop Boys could be folded into the mainstream as long as no-one mentioned what was apparent.
Mum’s reaction to the news that her son is gay is typical of the period. Somewhere between shock, fear, anger, and concern. Foy’s exuberance for her son turns into almost cold revulsion as he grills him about that terrible disease and asks him why he would choose to be lonely and childless. Adam has to patiently explain to her that things have changed. AIDs is no longer the crisis it once was. Queer people can marry and have children. “Isn’t that like having your cake and eating it too?” she asks. She balks at even touching what Adam has. Homophobia was so ingrained for her that she believes that she can contract a disease just by being near a gay man. She doesn’t understand, he isn’t a hairdresser – he’s a writer. Aren’t people nasty to him? Every cliché of the period is reiterated to Adam and he becomes once again a small boy maintaining a secret that his peers clocked, but not his parents.
In the present Adam and Harry are finding a new liberation together. Their lovemaking, domestic routines, and breaking out into the world of clubbing and drugs is the kind of life they both thought that they would experience when they left their respective small towns (Adam was adopted by his maternal grandparents and raised in Ireland). Yet despite their passion for each other there is something fragile about both men. Adam can’t trust that Harry is truly attracted to him because he is older. Harry is on a path of low-key self-destruction. They find and nurture each other – soothing their individual insecurities. Yet there is a brokenness in both men. For Adam it is his overwhelming grief. For Harry it is something akin to self-loathing nihilism. A nightclub scene and train ride becomes a distorted nightmare. The pulsing strobes and neon lights whirl as Adam becomes feverish.
Adam splits his time between two “homes,” the house he grew up in and the home he is making with Harry. Adam’s father explains that he knew that there was something different about him. “You could never throw a ball” he says. “You’re making me sound like a cliché,” Adam laughs. He still can’t throw a ball. The deeper conversation between them reveals that Dad knew he was being bullied at school and Adam was a bit “tutti fruitti,” but he didn’t want to confront Adam’s probable sexuality because he understood that he was just as ignorant as the boys who bullied him. Dad knows that the casual jokes of the time about a teacher being a bit limp wristed or telling Adam to not cross his legs like a girl damaged his son. Adam tries to absolve him but they both recognise that Adam was a stranger to himself and to an extent his parents because he couldn’t let them know who he was.
Haigh gives Adam the chance to reconstruct his childhood. The more time he spends with Mum and Dad, the more of a child he becomes. Somehow he can wear his pyjamas from his pre-teen self and slip into bed with his parents as he once did. The Christmas tree is decorated. They sing the Pet Shop Boys version of You Were Always on My Mind a song Mum loves, performed by a queer duo (which she becomes aware of) and the famous ode to love, regret, and the longing to make amends. Mum and Dad are younger than Adam. They never had the chance to live a full life – to get to know their son and see the man they are proud of (even if Adam feels they have nothing to be proud of him for). Yet, at some stage the reunion will have to end. Adam will never properly grow up if he lives in the liminal space between his past and present. For anyone who has lost someone they love, especially if that loss came far too early; will never be adequate time to be with them and let them go with grace. Just one moment more…
What cures loneliness born of trauma? When Adam tells Harry of his parents’ death (and the gruesome details surrounding the crash) he admits, “I was always lonely. But this was new. It was a terror. Like I would always be lonely.” What cures loneliness born of never feeling completely accepted? Harry talks about how he inevitably drifted outside his heteronormative family, “I’ve always felt like a stranger in my own family. Coming out just puts an edge on that. It’s not really anyone’s fault.” How easy it becomes to stop caring about yourself – whether that be by drowning in booze and drugs or closing off your future because the past was painful. Andrew Haigh’s superlative film finds the answer in “undying, death-defying love.”
Rarely does a film come along where every element works to the level of perfection of All of Us Strangers. From Andrew Scott’s vulnerable and quietly humorous performance where his face and body are the locus for all of Adam’s anxieties, desires, his aching need to give and receive love and solace. It is impossible not to transfixed by his restrained and phenomenally powerful acting. Jamie Bell, so often overlooked as a prestigious adult actor, puts to rest any notion that he will permanently in some regard be the grown up “Billy Elliot.” After Paul Mescal’s award-nominated performance in Aftersun he proves that, despite some lesser recent roles, he is an actor of astounding merit. Claire Foy needs no introduction as an accomplished and chameleonic performer. Her “Mum” echoes so many mothers of the period. Her acceptance and love for her “kind and gentle boy,” who is a continuation of her father, herself, and her husband speaks to what closes any generational gap. The reminder that we all exist in each other.
Technically, Haigh’s direction is seamless. The film conveys distance, isolation, looking through glass at the world. Reflections can be ominous but also metaphors for intimacy and love. The art direction and costuming are so authentically and aesthetically mid to late eighties that Adam’s experiences with Mum and Dad are real despite their logical impossibility. The music supervision and song choices are so integral that they not only inform the narrative, they create it.
All of Us Strangers is a constellation where stars that have died years ago still fill the skies with light and wonder. Where there is love, there is eternity. No matter who you are: queer, straight, mother, father, daughter, son, or lover – All of Us Strangers reaches out to embrace whatever notion of a soul you ascribe to. There are life experiences that are purely universal. Fill the silence in life with truth.'
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impact24pr · 5 months
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karingottschalk · 8 months
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We have been working on The Robert Krasker Project
Regular readers will have noticed that new articles have been few and far between here for some time and the main reason for that we have been working diligently on research and content for The Robert Krasker Project.  Robert Krasker, BSC was the greatest ever Australian cinematographer and Director Photography, photographing major feature films in colour and black-and-white with some of the…
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1205241 · 9 months
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Bill Buckle - Automotive Designer and Dealer from Powerhouse on Vimeo.
“This is the story of the Dart Goggomobil”
Between 1957 and 1961, Bill Buckle produced the Goggomobil Dart bodies in Sydney. Australian Goggomobil cars were fitted with lightweight fibreglass bodies in place of their German counterparts’ steel bodies.
Object Lesson is a Powerhouse digital content series that upends and inverts the legacy of a set of lesson cards held in the collection since 1880. Named for English educator. Elizabeth Mayo’s 1831 publication Lessons on Objects, the series is underpinned by a desire to learn more about the objects in our collection from people and communities who have special relationships with them. 
‘Knowledge stems not only from teacher or institution or object alone — but at the intersection of all.’ - Agatha Gothe-Snape, Powerhouse artistic associate
Director: Yeoseop Yoon Cinematographer: Christopher Miles
Commissioned and Produced by the Powerhouse
Commissioning Editor: Lisa Havilah Creative Director: Callum Cooper Creative Producer: Cara Stewart Production Assistant: Georgina Veneziani Curator: Damian McDonald Curatorial Project Coordinator: Jane Latief
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arkhamcharacterasylum · 10 months
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Omega Verse Candidates
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B E N I C I O J O A Q U I N V I L L A R R E A L
Hot headed | Passionate | Brave | Violent | Secretive | Quick-witted | Competitive
36 | Masoleil Vampire | Racer with the vampire league | Latin American | Miamian| Slight Hispanic Accent | Full on Spanglish | Nearly trilingual: English, Spanish & German | Pansexual | Single | At last accepting of his vampirism | Tries to be the best little brother to Mimi | Transformers & Gladiator geek | Cosplayer | Borderline sex addict | FC: Cristiano Ronaldo
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C A D E N H O W L E T T
Strong willed | Gentleman | Ambitious | Diplomatic | Introspective | Detached | Overbearing
29 | Alpha Werepanther (born) | Commercial Real Estate & Entrepreneur | Welsh | Welsh accent | Heteroflexible | Rich | Comes from an influential family | Owns a real estate company focusing on hospitality including: hotels & restaurants | Recently opened a whiskey brewery for both humans and lycans | Loves too deeply | Workaholic | Keeps himself busy to keep himself from feeling | FC: Henry Cavill
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D I E G A N S T . A N D O S
Undaunted | Devout | Confident | Hypnotic | Sadistic | Ruthless | Blunt
31 | Witch (closeted) | Retrocognition | Hunter | Aviation pilot | Spanish | Mix accent of Spanish and his father's British | Pansexual | Single | Carries his mother's grimoire wherever he goes |  Estranged from his father | Believes witches are a stain on humanity and hunts them with little impunity | Has a serious love for turtles & naturally TMNT | FC: Josh Hartnett
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H A R D Y K I N G S T O N
Sarcastic | Crass | Deviant | Impish | Possessive | Bullheaded | Persistent
259 | 6'5" | Vampire | L'Homme Dans Le Masque de Fer | Cinematographer | Falcon Entertainment (porn company) | Drug dealer | Australian | Australian accent | Bisexual | Single | Smoker & Drinker | Cat lover | Collects ancient coins | Particularly loves what he can't have | Has a thing for proving people wrong even at a steep cost | FC: Joel Kinnaman
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N I K A N O S T H R A C I E N
Controlling | Manipulative | Cunning | Secretive | Jealous | Sadist | Persuasive
Ancient | Crossroads Demon | Music Producer | 'Greco-Roman' | British with a tinge of Greek accent | Pansexual | Owns a jazz club called All That Jazz | Loves Jazz & Motown | Fine cuisine aficionado | Known to groom his partners/lovers/slaves through the ages | FC: Hugh Jackman
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cutehomeart · 11 months
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Since the early days of cinema, directors have turned to Vermeer for visual inspiration. A pioneer in this respect was the silent film director D.W. Griffith, who, in his 1919 film 'Broken Blossoms,' utilized Vermeer-like interior shots with soft lighting to underscore the poetic mood of the narrative.
Perhaps one of the most notable examples of Vermeer's legacy on the silver screen is in Peter Weir's 1985 film 'Witness.' In this movie, the Australian director frequently uses light in a way that harks back to Vermeer's distinct style. A key scene where Kelly McGillis stands in the doorway, bathed in the soft glow of morning light, is reminiscent of many a Vermeer painting.
But Weir is not alone in his homage to the Dutch master. The 2002 drama 'Girl with a Pearl Earring' takes it a step further. As the film is directly about Vermeer, it appropriately adopts a visual style that mimics his paintings. Dutch-born cinematographer Eduardo Serra has been credited for his exquisite use of natural light to create a truly 'Vermeer-esque' cinematic environment.
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rithebard · 11 months
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Tomorrow at 7pm pt; #ChattingWithSherri welcomes back #awardwinning #Cinematographer #RogerLanser on 6/29/23 at 7pm pt; http://tobtr.com/s/12239444 #interview
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