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Kubrick and Eyes Wide Shut


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Hi all,

 

I know that it's not the case for all of you, but Eyes Wide Shut is one of my favorite cinematography ever. Also, I'm asking myself questions about the colors and contrasts in this film.

Larry Smith said that they pushed the 5298 by 2 stops and underexposed it by only 1 1/3 of a stop.

 

Even if the film was pushed, the colors are not so saturated and the contrasts are quite soft, especially for the blacks.

Do you know how that was achieved? Is it only a result of the overeposure of the film or is there something else?

Did Kubrick used lon con filters like in Barry Lyndon (he also pushed the whole film by one stop and it's very soft)? Low con print stock?

 

Cheers!

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In my opinion, "Eyes Wide Shut" has a strong color saturation; take a look at the reds during the orgy scenes, the different colors of the christmas lights, Ziegler's pool table or the blue moonlight coming through the windows on night interiors.

 

I have seen it projected in 35mm a few times, and I own the Blu-ray as well, and I believe the soft contrast comes from the fact that they used a lot of practicals and very soft fill light, though some scenes are harder looking than others (i.e. Cruise talking to the daughter at his dead pacient's house). The blacks are very weak, and no black at all.

 

Definetly, some low-con filters were used here and there, mostly for night interiors (i.e. the ballroom at Ziegler's, but there also some glowing highlights in other scenes) and older lenses too, like Zeiss Superspeeds (which are not too sharp when used wide-open) and a Cooke 20-100mm zoom.

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Personally, I found the chosen approach to 5298 very suitable if not ingenious for the film's visual concept.

 

However, I found it very difficult to reproduce these visuals even the slightest (no doubt due to my cinematographic ineptitude), so beware if you want to recreate that look for a project of your own.

 

From all of Stanley's films, Eyes wide shut has the deepest colour saturation found throughout his oeuvre.

 

At the same time the idea was to keep the texture of the contrast not "soft" but rather "as least harsh as possible". That might sound like a semantic non-difference, but it actually were the subtleties in which Stanley thought for his "percepts".

 

The atmosphere this conveys really is so greatly deriving the mood that you can experience yourself in the upper societal echelons of NY or London or Vienna, it's almost like if you were there.

 

In that respect, EWS is a stroke of genius and maybe even underrated in some respects.

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You're right that the saturation i still strong and the colors, I think, quite pure. I meant not "so saturated" compared to other films pushed by 2 stops which are more 'in your face'.

As you mentionned, the blacks are very weak but I guess it's a result of the overexposure. But it really participates to the dream-like aspect of the film.

 

The lights participate to the softness inside but i'm surprised to see that even for the exteriors, the result is quite soft. One example is when Cruise go to the mansion at day, colors like the greens are not very strong.

 

Thanks for the informations, especially for the lenses, I had no idea that they used Cooke lenses as well.

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The transfer done for the EWS DVD is terrible and doubtlessly the worst out of the entire original Kubrick Collection on DVD.

 

I got a mighty shock when I bought it as I expected it to be the other way around:

Although neither Kubrick nor Harlan nor any other member of the family participated in the supervision of it, I kinda believed that the talent and then-new technology involved with the transfer plus the wider latitude paired with a cautious respect for Stanley's work after his death would have assured a sterling outcome.

 

Well, as it happens to be: not at all!! 20-30 years older 2001 or Barry Lyndon got a better treatment despite featuring much more difficult cinematographic conditions for a transfer to DVD.

 

I was really saddened by that as I hoped to relife the same cinematic joy I had watching the film in cinema.

 

As I havn't shelled-out for a Blu-ray system, could anyone briefly comment - without going too off-topic - how the Blu-ray transfer and the DVD transfer differ visually?

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I agree about the DVD: while it looks pretty good, it doesn't represent the original look of the film. It looks too clean and has better blacks than the four different 35mm prints that I've seen of this film. The Blu-ray version is obviously sharper than the DVD and retains more film grain and texture, though it's not as grainy as the 35mm prints. I feel the blacks on the Blu-ray are not as deep, and thus closer to the theatrical version, and it's also framed at the film's 1.85:1 theatrical aspect ratio.

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agree about the DVD: while it looks pretty good, it doesn't represent the original look of the film.

 

I'm glad you said this. I over the years have seen many a film both in the theater and at home and the differences in the looks of a projected film vs a video dub of a film can be staggering so any discussion of a film and it's look must include in the discussion the source. I did see this film both in theater and on video and found it quite a different experience. In the theater the film had far more death while at home that depth was translated to flat lifeless, colorless, almost "foggy" images.

 

I think one of the most recent films I saw in both contexts was Collateral. The difference was that it looked like it was two different movies when compared to me. The subtlety of the projection was completely lost on home video. The differences in formats used stood out like someone inserted shots years later in the theater presentation to the point of being jarring, but was lost for the most part on DVD in comparison.

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Just now on a trip to Berlin, I came across an independent theatre that showed EWS. Being reminded of this thread, I went in to doublecheck what we discussed here a while ago. Later at the rented flat, I watched the DVD file off my PowerBook on a Sony Bravia flat screen tv (renting holiday flats as accommodation is getting better and better than going to a soulless business hotel - and cheaper, too! :D ).

 

I just wanted to point out that what we had discussed so far from memory here is what I experienced again: the DVD version is not capturing at all what even a rather battered print showed. And this doesn't have anything to do with it being on a tv box and not on a huge screen. It's also not only due to the huge compression on the DVD that transforms some subtleties of cine-film into mere noise. But it's also a problem with the quality of the transfer to the DVD, as I posted earlier.

 

The print had a visibly grainy texture, yet also soft and aloof tones and a beautiful saturated colour palette without coming across all artificial (as you would find on oversaturated films, or with TechniColor - not that that would be bad, as that is artifical looking by intend!).

 

Thus Anthony's forest shot in daylight around the mansion gives a leafy green, and not an intense plastic xmas tree green that you are likely to find when Shrek himself does the DI of the generic teenage-Firstfu**/Slasher-Movie "in every multiplex now". On the DVD, the green comes out as a washed-up mix of grey-green with blobs of white.

 

The blacks during the night ext. shots on the DVD are way too dense than those on the print - I guess it's because the grains' movements lighten up those areas in the picture. This "greying unrest" goes bad on the DVD, as they probably chose to darken that area down to avoid noise. Unfortunately, this cleans up the entire visual experience as well, and it comes across occassionally like soft-to-foggy video footage.

 

Also, I guess the "blacktron"-mania of the current generation of blacker-than-black tv screens might have played in at depicting those blacks even darker than usual (just a guess, though, as I am not a home-cinema-hack anymore ... lost interest in that since that "HD ready" markting BS started). Anyway, maybe that's the difference between the dense blacks Ignacio described watching the DVD, and the depth that Walter found missing on it, too.

 

I really can't replicate that look at all with test reels and lab work, but I know they didn't doctore around "in post"... shooting all this in camera and with simple processing really is cinematography as art. Gosh, Kubrick was a master... -_-

 

Anyway, my scribble's just a personal closure with this thread B)

 

 

 

EDIT: some springcleaning done with grammar, typos and paragraphs ;) .

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:D

 

John, you are to film grain what Winston Churchill was to the Battle of Britain: drawing a line in the sand and saying: to here, and no further!

Thank the Gods for that! :)

 

A great week-end to you,

 

-Michael

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Same to you Michael have two tickets for court one Wimbledon tomorrow , bet it rains . Take care .

 

John: don't 'get near the pidgeons! :unsure:

 

Let us no if your pessimism was justified with an actual rainfall. . .

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Same to you Michael have two tickets for court one Wimbledon tomorrow , bet it rains . Take care .

 

Hi John,

 

well, (as you said already, Max), unless London south of the Thames was in a different climate zone than my North London, your pessimism was crushed like a tennis ball that thought it could flirt with Venus Williams (who played Sanchez on Court One, didn't she? You lucky chap! :) )

 

Gourgeous weather all the way 'til today, making strawberries scream for cream. One just disappeared in me right now... (on sale at Lidl, what can I say in my defence?!)

 

I am sure you had a great week-end outing! Tomorrow: heavy rain. A round of sorrow for everyone who has exterior shots scheduled ;)

 

Cheers, -Michael

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  • 2 weeks later...

I really love the saturated look of EWS. Since the 5298 stock has been discontinued, is there any other stock that will grant the same results if pushed? I want to create this saturation for my next film, I'll be shooting with S16 but still.

Edited by Hampus Bystrom
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If you want a saturated picture you can shoot reversal stock such as Ektachrome by Kodak. If you prefer to shoot negative I prefer something with a lower speed. Go to kodak.com and look up the different stocks. I'm not plugging Kodak here but I'm from western NY and have a loyalty to it. :P

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If you want a saturated picture you can shoot reversal stock such as Ektachrome by Kodak. If you prefer to shoot negative I prefer something with a lower speed. Go to kodak.com and look up the different stocks. I'm not plugging Kodak here but I'm from western NY and have a loyalty to it. :P

 

Yeah maybe I'll do that, how is reversal for pushing?

Well I often get free films from Kodak so I'm not complaining either!

Cheers man

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Hampus, be aware, however, that saturated colours are one thing. The colour palette in question, plus the granularity and the resulting overall texture of the cine-film is another.

 

Do not expect Ektachrome to come in with similar results like '98 did in EWS due to Ekta's latitude and RMS value. I didn't like Kodak's S8 Ektas over the years, and VNF for 16 wasn't desirable, either; for my purposes, at least.

 

EXR-500 was a beautiful filmstock, as was EXR-50 ('45). Their tonality and palette of colour reproduction on one side, grain and latitude on the other, and the resulting texture was I think the best recipe by Kodak, where they struck the balance really well: a perfect compromise

for a visible cine-film appearance while advancing the resolving power and "sharpness" of the image. With the Vision family, film grain starts to disappear increasingly, and even if you work with push during development, you never get the grainy appearance of "naturally" exposed grain of the film stock in line with its recommended E.I.

It always looks forced.

 

But as I said, this is my experience and aesthetic taste, so many here might well have other viewpoints. I personally gave up on attempting to approach EWS looks with test films. I don't have the means, context and abobe all talent for that.

 

-Michael

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Might be worth while to look into what the '19 gives you. I has a good deal of characteristics of the '18, but more latitude and is "friendlier," to scan. Point being that you can get close the the EWS look (though by NO means exactly) in color correction with a good colorist.

 

Some testing is in order to find the best route.

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