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Creative Reactions: Cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema on Oppenheimer

A man in lab glasses stands in front of a porthole, through which a blinding light shines.Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer

When it comes to the machinery of moviemaking, cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema refuses to be constrained by the bounds of technological precedent. For van Hoytema, “That doesn’t exist” or “That’s never been done” isn’t the end of a conversation, but…  Read more

By Dec 15, 2023

Lessons from the AI Filmmaking Rabbit Hole: Holly Willis on Teaching During Rapid Technological Change

An AI Dreams of Dogfish

I recently found myself sitting between three tech bros on my right and three cinephiles on my left. The film festival panel was meant to be a discussion about AI in the film industry; instead, it was an exasperating—if entertaining—demonstration…  Read more

By Dec 15, 2023

Behind Closed Doors: Production Designer Kevin Thompson on Maestro

Two women sing as a man conducts a full orchestra behind them in a church.Isabel Leonard, Rosa Feola and Bradley Cooper in Maestro (Photo by Jason McDonald, courtesy of Netflix)

In making Maestro, his magisterial portrait of Leonard Bernstein, Bradley Cooper set out to explore the life of the legendary American conductor and composer through the lens of his complicated relationship with wife Felicia Montealegre, which lasted from the 1940s…  Read more

By Dec 15, 2023

Tone and Rhythm: Editor Hilda Rasula on American Fiction

Two black men sit and talk on a porch at night.Jeffrey Wright and Sterling K. Brown in American Fiction (courtesy of Orion Pictures)

Cord Jefferson’s American Fiction, a satire of the publishing world and modern race relations, stars Jeffrey Wright as Thelonious “Monk” Ellison, an English professor and novelist frustrated by what he sees as the literary establishment’s exploitation of Black stereotypes for…  Read more

By Dec 15, 2023


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