Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Top-10: Ones & Zeroes

When movies started to be shot digitally in the late 90s, I was very resistant. They didn't look like movies. They were grainy/too clear, the colors were weird and often the frame-rate caused them to look like bad television. Sometimes this was able to work. If the filmmaker needed a "rough"/faux-documentary look or if it was a movie about the media, this new aesthetic became somewhat acceptable. But these were exceptions, right? Digital could never replace film! Could it?

What a difference a decade makes. Today, many of the world's greatest filmmakers have embraced the new technology with arms wide open. Film is now the exception held on to by a few loyal "fetishists" like Christopher Nolan and Paul Thomas Anderson. Back in July I even wrote an editorial addressing my conflicted feelings on the matter. But as they say: The Only Constant Is Change. And so as an act of good faith, here is a personal list of the photographically greatest digitally-shot movies and the artists who shot them. You might even notice a few names in common with the list of black and white films from last week...

Zodiac - Harris Savides

Che - Steven Soderbergh

Tetro - Mihai Malaimare Jr.

Bamboozled - Ellen Kuras

Dancer In The Dark - Robby Müller

Hugo - Robert Richardson

Collateral - Dion Beebe & Paul Cameron

Antichrist - Anthony Dod Mantle

Rachel Getting Married - Declan Quinn

Inland Empire - David Lynch

3 comments:

  1. For my own personal aesthetic enjoyment I didn't find Inland Empire very appealing but I definitely agree that digital has come on in leaps and bounds and some beautiful cinematography is being achieved with it, now.

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  2. John Carlos McMasterFebruary 7, 2013 at 1:47 PM

    I expected to see Zodiac and Hugo on here but I'm very happy to see Collateral make the list.

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  3. I almost didn't put it on there cause the daylight portions were shot on film, but that accounts for very little screen time so I let it slide. The scenes of Che speaking at the UN in The Argentine we're film as well but once again the majority was digital. The minstrel show scenes in Bamboozled were 16mm. Oh the insignificant things I sweat.

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