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. ...