Matt Mulcahey | Filmmaker Magazine https://filmmakermagazine.com Publication with a focus on independent film, offering articles, links, and resources. Fri, 19 Jan 2024 00:39:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 “I’ve Never Had a Director Give Me a GIF as a Reference Before”: DP Cristina Dunlap on American Fiction https://filmmakermagazine.com/124631-interview-cinematographer-cristina-dunlap-american-fiction/ Thu, 18 Jan 2024 21:22:36 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=124631

Music videos have been good to Cristina Dunlap. As a photography-obsessed high schooler, a chance meeting landed the L.A. native a gig shooting stills on a music video. It happened to be for Death Cab for Cutie, leading to a run of jobs with influential directors like Hiro Murai and Ace Norton. After working her way up to the role of cinematographer, a Coldplay video collaboration with Dakota Johnson led to Dunlap shooting a pair of features starring the actress, Am I OK? and Cha Cha Real Smooth, both of which premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival. A music […]

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“David Initially Said, ‘What if We Do the Whole Movie Handheld?'”: DP Erik Messerschmidt on The Killer https://filmmakermagazine.com/124199-interview-cinematographer-erik-messerschmidt-david-fincher-the-killer-handheld/ Thu, 11 Jan 2024 21:21:52 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=124199

The Killer begins with an assassin (Michael Fassbender) in a half-completed WeWork office awaiting the arrival of his latest target. As he waits, he details his vocational mantras for the audience in voiceover: stick to the plan. Don’t improvise. Never yield an advantage. Forbid empathy. Fassbender proceeds to miss his shot and spends the rest of the film breaking each and every one of those tenets in the chaotic aftermath. Many of the pieces written about the film have pointed out perceived similarities between the film’s methodical, detail-oriented titular character and the perfectionist reputation of its director, David Fincher. However, […]

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“If I Had Been Working in the 1970s [But With Today’s Technology], I Would Have Used Digital, I Would Have Used LED Technology”: The Holdovers Cinematographer Eigil Bryld https://filmmakermagazine.com/124059-eigil-bryld-the-holdovers/ Fri, 22 Dec 2023 19:51:07 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=124059

In The Holdovers, a professor, a student and a grief-stricken cook are stranded together at a New England boarding school over the holidays. The story takes place in the early 1970s, an era whose films are beloved by both Holdovers director Alexander Payne and cinematographer Eigil Bryld. However, they took opposing philosophical perspectives in imbuing their movie with the spirit of that epoch. Though he looked at the work of Hal Ashby for inspiration – particularly The Landlord and The Last Detail – rather than attempt to replicate it, Payne’s approach found him imaging what kind of film he himself […]

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How to Make Nickelodeon Slime Look Like Oil: Special Effects Coordinator Brandon K. McLaughlin on Killers of the Flower Moon https://filmmakermagazine.com/123788-interview-killers-of-the-flower-moon-special-effects-coordinator-brandon-k-mclaughlin/ Mon, 20 Nov 2023 21:53:37 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=123788

Brandon K. McLaughlin remembers the exact moment he knew he wanted to work in the movie business. It was Halloween night and McLaughlin was eight years old. His uncle—a special effects technician—had invited him to set to watch the Disney adventure The Rocketeer being made. “I got to see them blow up the zeppelin while the Rocketeer was running on top of it,” McLaughlin said. “From that point on, I never wanted to do anything else. I was fascinated with everything that went into the magic of moviemaking, and the special effects department creates that magic, tricking the audience into […]

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“It’s Never Fun to Do Nude Work”: DP Eigil Bryld on No Hard Feelings https://filmmakermagazine.com/123266-interview-cinematographer-eigil-bryld-no-hard-feelings/ Fri, 06 Oct 2023 18:43:22 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=123266

Eigil Bryld must be feeling funny lately. After a career peppered with reality-based dramas (You Don’t Know Jack and The Report), thrillers (Deep Water) and romantic period pieces (Tulip Fever and Becoming Jane), the Danish cinematographer has lightened up with a trio of comedies out this year—The Machine, Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers and No Hard Feelings. In the latter, Jennifer Lawrence plays a Montauk Uber driver who agrees to seduce the son (Andrew Barth Feldman) of a wealthy couple summering in the quaint Long Island enclave in exchange for a used Buick Regal. Bryld spoke to Filmmaker about lensing the […]

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The Focus Pulling Olympics: DP Oren Soffer on The Creator https://filmmakermagazine.com/123241-interview-cinematographer-oren-soffer-the-creator/ Thu, 05 Oct 2023 20:25:11 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=123241

On big budget spectacles, the tail of VFX often wags the dog of principal photography. With The Creator—an $80 million sci-fi epic about a war between mankind and humanoid AI starring John David Washington—director Gareth Edwards sought to reverse that arrangement. The Monsters and Rogue One filmmaker has described the process of meticulously recreating previs on set as painting a target on the wall and trying to fire an arrow into the bullseye. With The Creator, Edwards wanted to fire the arrow first, then paint the target around it, with VFX ideation occurring later in the pipeline after being inspired by […]

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“Each Episode is Like Its Own Movie”: DP Benji Bakshi on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds https://filmmakermagazine.com/122716-interview-cinematographer-benji-bakshi-star-trek-strange-new-worlds/ Thu, 31 Aug 2023 20:19:31 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=122716

In December of 1964, principal photography finished on the pilot of Star Trek, featuring captain Christopher Pike (played by The Searchers’ Jeffrey Hunter) as the commander of the Enterprise. When the show’s first episode finally aired almost two years later, Pike was nowhere to be found. The initial pilot had been scrapped and re-shot, with William Shatner’s James T. Kirk taking the helm and a different crew boldly going where no man had gone before. However, that wasn’t the end of Christopher Pike. The character returned as a Kirk mentor in the J.J. Abrams-directed reboot films. Now, with the Paramount […]

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“I Spent Nearly 14 hours Staring At That Lamp”: DP Paul Yee on Joy Ride https://filmmakermagazine.com/122467-interview-dp-paul-yee-joy-ride/ Wed, 09 Aug 2023 13:30:26 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=122467

When you make your living in production, the relationship between work and time off can be a complicated one. After months of Fraturdays and Second Meal pizza at 2 a.m., you need to rest, decompress and resume the parts of your life that have been essentially paused during shooting. But stay off set too long and dread can fester—a fear of dwindling bank accounts, falling short on days for insurance and being usurped in your market’s hiring hierarchy. Cinematographer Paul Yee is acutely aware of that delicate balance and how it feels when the equilibrium becomes askew. He took a self-imposed […]

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DP Markus Mentzer on Shooting Six Episodes of I Think You Should Leave in 24 Days https://filmmakermagazine.com/122030-interview-i-think-you-should-leave-cinematographer-markus-mentzer/ Thu, 06 Jul 2023 16:33:11 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=122030

With only 24 days to capture nearly 30 sketches, the average I Think You Should Leave bit is shot in roughly six to eight hours. That might be for the best. When you’re slopping up steaks or shooting body after body busting out of cheap wood and hitting pavement, probably wise not to linger at a location for too long. Cinematographer Markus Mentzer, who has been behind the camera for all three seasons of the Netflix show, breaks down the newest crop of sketches for Filmmaker. Filmmaker: Your first three camera department credits on IMDB are Out of Time, In […]

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“TV Shows are Like Better Funded Independent Films”: DP Larkin Seiple on Beef https://filmmakermagazine.com/121712-interview-cinematographer-larkin-seiple-beef/ Thu, 08 Jun 2023 20:11:02 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=121712

In the new Netflix series Beef, a struggling contractor (Steven Yeun) and an affluent entrepreneur (Ali Wong) become embroiled in an escalating feud following a road rage incident.  The series fits snuggly into a very specific quadrant of cinematographer Larkin Seiple’s wheelhouse— hard-to-classify A24 projects. Though his filmography includes sports biopics (Bleed for This), thrillers (Cop Car) and prestige dramas (To Leslie and Emmy-nominated work on Gaslit), Seiple’s most distinct work has come in A24’s Swiss Army Man, Everything Everywhere All at Once and now the studio’s Beef. With the full series streaming on Netflix, Seiple spoke to Filmmaker about Incubus clinching […]

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“Annoying, Finicky Placement Stuff”: DP Jody Lee Lipes on Shooting Two Rachel Weiszs for Dead Ringers https://filmmakermagazine.com/121570-interview-cinematographer-jody-lee-lipes-dead-ringers/ Wed, 31 May 2023 13:00:04 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=121570

Cinematographer Jody Lee Lipes says that shooting an actor playing twins is like learning a new filmmaking language. By now, he’s fluent. Lipes lensed all six episodes of the 2020 HBO miniseries I Know This Much Is True, with Mark Ruffalo playing identical twins. As an added complication, the coverage of each brother was shot months apart as Ruffalo took a hiatus to gain 30 pounds to physically transform himself into the other sibling. On the new Amazon series Dead Ringers, it’s Rachel Weisz starring as twin New York City gynecologists who meet a tragic end. The show is a […]

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When the Fungus Catches the Light: DP Karim Hussain on Infinity Pool https://filmmakermagazine.com/121480-interview-cinematographer-karim-hussain-infinity-pool/ Fri, 26 May 2023 16:50:44 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=121480

With Antiviral, Possessor and Infinity Pool, filmmaker Brandon Cronenberg has expeditiously carved out a distinct, experimental aesthetic for his work. However, he has followed in the footsteps of his legendary father David in one respect—forging a lasting alliance with his cinematographer. All but three of the elder Cronenberg’s 20 features films were shot by either Mark Irwin or Peter Suschitzky. All of Brandon’s efforts thus far bear the name of Canadian DP Karim Hussain. Hussain begin writing, directing and shooting low budget genre films while still a teenager, before eventually opting to focus solely on the latter of those roles. He […]

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“A Kick is Like a Line of Dialogue”: Editor Nathan Orloff on John Wick: Chapter 4 https://filmmakermagazine.com/121071-interview-editor-nathan-orloff-john-wick-chapter-4/ Wed, 03 May 2023 17:00:55 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=121071

Though it hasn’t reached the fever pitch of absurdity of The Fast and the Furious franchise just yet—a series that began as a Point Break riff but now includes nuclear submarines and Pontiac Fieros in space —the John Wick saga has certainly expanded from its humble beginnings. Produced independently and shot in New York on a budget in the mid-$20 million range, the original film found its titular assassin (played by Keanu Reeves) emerging from retirement to avenge the death of his dog. Four chapters later, Reeves is hopping between New York City, Osaka, Berlin, Paris and the Wadi Rum […]

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“Friday Morning Donald Called Me and Said, ‘We’re Shooting Film'”: DP Drew Daniels on Swarm https://filmmakermagazine.com/121006-interview-cinematographer-drew-danielsa-swarm-35mm/ Mon, 01 May 2023 15:36:37 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=121006

In the new Amazon series Swarm, a fanatical devotee of a Beyoncé-esque pop star embarks on a quest to meet the singer, with a few stops along the way to dispose of those who have disparaged her idol online. Created by Donald Glover and Janine Nabers, the show hops around between Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, Seattle and L.A., but was shot largely in Atlanta by Drew Daniels. The Red Rocket and Krisha DP spoke to Filmmaker about the influence of Michael Haneke, the beauty of imperfect camera moves and Swarm’s extremely last-minute switch to 35mm film.  Filmmaker: Let’s start with some […]

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Ghostface Takes Brooklyn: DP Brett Jutkiewicz on Scream VI https://filmmakermagazine.com/120540-interview-cinematographer-brett-jutkiewicz-scream-vi/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 19:41:22 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120540

In 1989, Friday the 13th transplanted its hockey-masked slasher from summer camp to concrete jungle for the franchise’s eighth installment, Jason Takes Manhattan. That titular promise was not fully delivered upon: Manhattan was mostly Vancouver and Jason spent much of the running time on a boat full of high schoolers traveling to the city. The newest Scream offers up a similar relocation as Ghostface follows the previous chapter’s survivors from Woodsboro to college. Again, a Canadian city (this time Montreal) stands in for New York. But this time, the killer actually spends the entire running time chasing his victims through […]

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“I Would’ve Shot the Telephone Directory of New York If Todd Had Asked Me To”: DP Florian Hoffmeister on TÁR https://filmmakermagazine.com/120184-interview-dp-florian-hoffmeister-tar/ Thu, 09 Mar 2023 21:14:36 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120184

According to cinematographer Florian Hoffmeister, writer/director Todd Field often expressed his desired aesthetic for TÁR in a series of repeated Field-isms: Let’s just witness. Don’t gild the lily. Don’t make it look like a movie with a capital “M.” In other words, make the style invisible. However, Hoffmeister’s work was far from invisible to his peers, who bestowed an Oscar nomination upon the German DP for his work on the film. TÁR—Field’s first feature in more than 15 years—follows the downfall of a composer/conductor played by Cate Blanchett as she prepares a career-capping performance of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony with the Berlin Philharmonic. […]

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“… A 7mm Difference Between Lenses is Actually Quite a Huge Amount…”: DP James Friend on All Quiet on the Western Front https://filmmakermagazine.com/120031-interview-dp-james-friend-all-quiet-on-the-western-front/ Sat, 04 Mar 2023 15:00:43 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120031

War is young men dying and old men talking. The former lies at the heart of Erich Maria Remarque’s 1928 novel All Quiet on the Western Front, based on the German writer’s experiences in the trenches of World War I. In Netflix’s new adaptation, the latter half of that axiom is also represented with the addition of a subplot centered on the armistice negotiations that ultimately ended fighting on the Western Front. As in Remarque’s novel, the story is principally told through the eyes of Paul Bäumer, a teenager who—propelled by patriotic fervor—enlists alongside his schoolmates only to be disillusioned […]

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“Anamorphic’s Biggest Fan”: DP Autumn Durald Arkapaw on Black Panther: Wakanda Forever https://filmmakermagazine.com/119993-interview-cinematographer-autumn-durald-arkapaw-black-panther-wakanda-forever/ Wed, 01 Mar 2023 21:08:36 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=119993

Upon release in 2018, the first Black Panther became the highest grossing standalone super hero movie in history, while achieving a lasting cultural relevance exceedingly rare even among the box office juggernauts of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But with the passing of Chadwick Boseman, the actor behind the titular hero, maintaining the status quo in the sequel was an impossibility. For Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, the story’s throughline became grief and the narrative center shifted from Boseman’s T’Challa to his sister Shuri (Letitia Wright) and mother Queen Ramonda (Angela Bassett, who received an Oscar nomination for the part). That new focus […]

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“Which One is the Real Doll and Which One is the Actress?” DP Peter McCaffrey on M3gan https://filmmakermagazine.com/118898-interview-cinematographer-peter-mccaffrey-m3gan/ Thu, 26 Jan 2023 20:45:46 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=118898

When Peter McCaffrey left the processing lab at New Zealand’s National Film Unit in the early 1980s to become a freelance camera assistant, his bosses told him he’d be asking for his job back in two weeks. There was no such thing as a film industry in New Zealand, they warned. 35 years later, McCaffrey still hasn’t looked back. Climbing the ranks from clapper loader to focus puller to camera operator, McCaffrey has built an impressive resume of large-scale credits including The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and Thor: Ragnarok. Now, he has […]

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“Cameras are Like Film Stocks Now”: DP Peter Deming on The Menu https://filmmakermagazine.com/118133-interview-cinematographer-peter-deming-the-menu/ Fri, 06 Jan 2023 15:00:17 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=118133

In The Menu, entitled dinner guests get more than they bargained for when they travel to a remote island to feast upon the culinary delights of a disillusioned celebrity chef (Ralph Fiennes). Despite being surrounded by exquisite works of gastronomical artistry during the shoot, cinematographer Peter Deming did not partake. “I didn’t taste any of it. I’m not a big food person,” said Deming. “I’ve actually talked to a number of people who said the first thing they did after seeing the movie was go have a cheeseburger.” While Deming may not have an appetite for ornate cuisine, the cinematographer certainly knows […]

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