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Alex Moore Niemi

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About Alex Moore Niemi

  • Birthday 04/10/1986

Profile Information

  • Occupation
    Student
  • Location
    Boston, MA
  • Specialties
    art, ale, philosophy, and spicy vegetarian food

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://www.fifthace.net
  1. Looking to shoot a short student production with a RED to finish up my degree. I had some questions to figure out if the RED is a good camera for me, and what it's like to work with. Any other general advice is appreciated, but do forgive me being a noob. My big question is: how well does RED perform for night shooting? What build would you recommend for that? What lenses? (I assume primes, but other than that--?) I know there are some issues using steadicam with RED. Any advice, experiences, or links? Finally, what's the experience doing post with the RED if you want to down-res? My hope was to down-res a version to 1080i to edit, and project on a digital projector at the museum where we show our work. But I'm also thinking of trying to keep a higher quality version, apply for a grant, and get it transferred onto film. Any thoughts on that process? Pain in the butt? Pipe dream? Viable option? I'm probably going to ask all this on reduser.net, too, but thought I'd tap broader resources. Thanks guys!
  2. Hello! I'm an Emerson BFA student whose DP has dropped out on him due to some scheduling issues. I am directing a short production: a surreal story about a brother who loses his sister at night and goes on a Orpheus-ian journey to get her back. I have the script, I have the money, I am casting actors right now. I am going to rent a Red for the production which I want to shoot the last weekend of August and the first weekend of September, if possible. I'm having trouble finding someone experienced with the Red willing to shoot my piece. If you might be interested please PM me or reply, and I can send you the script and budget details. Thanks! Alex
  3. Barry Lyndon is gorgeous, that's true. 300 and Sin City were a big deal not just because of the cinematography but the CG work. But then, do you consider that part of the cinematographer's scope? It's interesting to me that when 300 and Sin City came out everyone talked about how pioneering they were, for essentially borrowing from other art forms and translating them into film.
  4. I'm an Emerson undergrad. Unfortunately we actually call it the "Emerson mafia", which sounds a bit tacky to me. How are my fellow alumni doing for you? I'm curious what our reputation is. I have a lot of issues with Emerson, but ultimately I went on scholarship and am learning a lot in the BFA program. So I'd have to rate my experience positively.
  5. So maybe this is stretching the guidelines a tiny bit for my first post, but I hope that's okay! I do want to talk about specific cinematographers... While I was watching Pride & Prejudice (2005) DoP Roman Osin (dir. Joe Wright) I noticed a lot of the shots from the film reminded me greatly of compositions and subjects I'd seen in rural and landscape painting from the 18th and 19th century. (Which sort of is a duh, because that's the set period.) I wondered while I was watching it if Osin had been influenced at all in his style and shots by the way that time period portrayed itself in its art. I can't find any articles on him explaining his logic nor can I find my back issue of AC (which I remember had Knightley on the cover I think?). Does anyone recall him talking about what inspired his choices? I'd be curious to hear if he used art as inspiration at all. Now, the next thing is sort of the sketchier thing: what do you guys think of Bill Viola's work? I know he's more technically an artist than a cinematographer. I'm thinking specifically of his Passions series. Now, I don't mean specifically just the sort of portraits of anguish/ecstasy he did with studio photography lights, but more the bigger compositions he did utilizing ideas from medieval Books of Hours. If you haven't seen it for yourself, he'd basically use very big static wide shots and sort of force perspective in some ways, mostly so that he could catch extended action in one shot. For instance, in one he starts with a close up that keeps moving out into a wide of a couple getting dressed, then it moves out further to show the house they're in (it's a set piece, so the house has an open wall on one side for us to see through), and then we see the house is on a hill, and then--still moving wider--we see them go down the hill and a boat on a shore comes into our view until he maxes out at a super wide shot and they get in the boat. (Whew!! Long sentence! Did you follow?) Anyway, I really actually love the way he uses space, and he explained it was inspired by the bizarre way that medieval painters used space due to different expectations of perspective. Namely that perspective was used more for emphasis than for realistic proportion or naturalism. I just thought that was pretty mega cool... So I was wondering, what other examples do you guys have or know of where a cinematographer informed his craft by tips from another art? The obvious example is photography, but I'd really love to hear about any lessons learned from less obvious sources: painting, sculpture, etc. Hope this was on topic enough! Looking forward to your replies! :)
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