A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night: The Geography of Illusion

When a filmmaker has no money, geography is usually destiny. If you are shooting in California, your film looks like California. But in A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, Ana Lily Amirpour executes a masterful act of geographic illusion. She shot the “first Iranian vampire Western” not in the Middle East, but entirely within the bleak, industrial oil towns of Taft, California. The Anamorphic Disguise Amirpour bypassed the ruinous cost of international shooting by weaponizing her camera. Working with cinematographer Lyle Vincent, she utilized anamorphic lenses and aggressive, high-contrast black-and-white photography. By stripping the color from the California desert, she removed its recognizable identity. ...

March 27, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

It Follows: The Paranoia of the Wide Angle

The modern horror film is obsessed with the jump scare. The camera frames a character tightly, the music drops to silence, and something loud jumps out from just off-screen. It is cheap, biological manipulation. David Robert Mitchell’s It Follows rejects this entirely. It generates terror not by hiding the monster, but by showing you exactly where the monster is, in a massive, inescapable frame. The Deep-Focus Threat Mitchell and cinematographer Mike Gioulakis abandoned traditional, tight horror framing in favor of extreme wide-angle lenses and deep-focus photography. By holding these tableau-like shots for agonizingly long durations, they weaponize the audience’s own eyes. You are forced into a state of active paranoia. You stop looking at the actors in the foreground and start obsessively scanning the deep background, looking for anyone walking at a steady, inexorable pace. ...

March 22, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Tangerine: The Liberation of the Smartphone Sensor

The camera is a tool of exclusion. A standard Panavision package costs more to rent for a week than most independent filmmakers will raise in a lifetime. When Sean Baker set out to make Tangerine with a restrictive $100,000 budget, he did not settle for a cheap prosumer camera. He made a radical, liberating choice: he shot a feature film on three iPhone 5s units. Engineering the Aesthetic Baker understood that shooting on a phone would be dismissed as a gimmick if it looked like a phone. To combat this, he engineered a highly specific workflow. He attached Moondog Labs anamorphic lens adapters directly to the iPhones. This instantly forced the clinical, square digital sensor into a classic, “cinemascope” widescreen geometry. ...

March 19, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Krisha: The Aspect Ratio as a Weapon

In modern cinema, changing an aspect ratio mid-film is usually a pretentious gimmick. It is a director waving their hands, desperate to prove they have a visual style. Trey Edward Shults, however, utilizes shifting aspect ratios not as a flourish, but as a structural weapon. In his $30,000 debut feature, Krisha, the shape of the frame is the antagonist. The Economy of the Living Room Shults eliminated the ruinous overhead of traditional filmmaking by shooting entirely in his own home over nine days. He did not hire actors; he cast his actual extended family, including his aunt in the agonizing lead role. ...

March 18, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Lady Bird: The Aesthetic of the Xerox Copy

Digital cinema is often too clean. The ARRI Alexa Mini, natively, produces an image so sharp and vivid that it leaves no room for the fuzziness of human memory. When Greta Gerwig and cinematographer Sam Levy approached Lady Bird, a film entirely about the unreliability and nostalgia of adolescence, they knew they had to aggressively break the digital image. The Xerox Concept During pre-production, Levy found inspiration in physical degradation. By running reference photographs through a color photocopier multiple times, he watched the image lose “generations” of quality. The resulting texture—faded, slightly distorted, a copy of a copy—became the foundational visual language of the film. To teenagers in the early 2000s, the world was experienced through these exact kinds of cheap, analog reproductions taped to bedroom walls. ...

March 12, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Good Time: The Anxiety of the Neon Frame

There is a sanitized, overly polished look to modern cinema that removes all sense of danger from the screen. A perfectly lit room is a safe room. The Safdie Brothers, conversely, understand that true cinematic anxiety requires dirt, shadow, and unpredictability. Good Time is a masterpiece of making the audience physically uncomfortable through sheer production mechanics. Stealing the Shot To capture this frenetic energy, the Safdie Brothers and cinematographer Sean Price Williams shot the film on Kodak 2-perf 35mm. The lightweight ARRI LT allowed them to execute a “guerrilla” street-shooting mentality. They embedded Robert Pattinson into uncontrolled New York environments—active malls and rush-hour subway trains—intentionally blurring the line between scripted narrative and documentary reality. The camera moves like a panicked animal because the production itself was constantly in motion. ...

March 9, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

The Florida Project: 35mm Realism and the iPhone Fracture

Poverty on film is almost always aggressively desaturated. Directors love to slather their “gritty” social dramas in gray and brown filters to signal to the audience that life is hard. Sean Baker, correctly, rejects this miserable cliché. In The Florida Project, the tragedy of the margins is bathed in the hyper-saturated, pastel sunlight of an Orlando summer. Embedding in the Magic Castle To capture this vibrant reality on a mere $2 million budget, Baker refused to compromise on format. He shot primarily on 35mm film (anamorphic 2.40:1) using Panavision E-Series lenses. This was not a luxury; it was a mandate to elevate the subject matter. ...

March 8, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Columbus: The Oppressive Weight of Modernism

Too many filmmakers treat architecture as mere geography—a pretty background to stand in front of while reciting dialogue. Kogonada, in his debut feature Columbus, understands that a building is a structural mandate. Modernist architecture does not simply house human beings; it dictates their movements and dwarfs their emotions. The Geometry of Isolation Kogonada and cinematographer Elisha Christian approached the modernist mecca of Columbus, Indiana, not with a handheld camera looking for gritty realism, but with a tripod and an obsession with geometry. During pre-production, they took exhaustive photographs of every location, mapping the specific lines, negative spaces, and symmetries of the buildings. ...

March 7, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

First Reformed: The Violence of the Static Frame

A moving camera is an editorializing camera. When you pan, when you push in, you are holding the audience by the hand and telling them exactly what to feel and where to look. Paul Schrader, in executing his masterful First Reformed, refused to offer that comfort. He established a merciless rule for his cinematography team: “No tilt. No pan. Locked-off camera.” The Architecture of Despair To understand First Reformed, you must understand the 1.33:1 (4:3) aspect ratio. The boxy frame is not a nostalgic Instagram filter; it is an inescapable architectural metaphor. Reverend Toller is a man suffocating under the weight of existential dread, environmental collapse, and his own self-imposed, ascetic austerity. The 4:3 frame literally boxes him in. It restricts the horizontal landscape, forcing the viewer to confront the verticality of the human body trapped within rigid, unyielding walls. ...

March 5, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Blindspotting: The Architecture of Erasure

It is one thing to write a screenplay about a changing city. It is another thing entirely to attempt to film it and realize the city has already vanished. This was the brutal reality that faced writers and stars Daveed Diggs and Rafael Casal during the pre-production of Blindspotting. The script was rooted in highly specific Oakland locations, crafted over years. But by the time director Carlos López Estrada and his crew arrived to shoot, many of those locations had already been erased by rapid, aggressive gentrification. The production was forced to adapt to the very displacement they were trying to document. ...

March 4, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette