The Road To Perdition |
On What Makes Collaboration Work
It’s about having a very strong ego that’s properly
placed rather than misplaced. Properly placed is when it’s honest.
Don’t be a “winner;” be a collaborator for everything you think
is the best thing to do, but not because it was your idea.
On Working With First-Time Directors
When you find yourself being condescending, you better
do what Annette Bening did in American Beauty and give yourself
a good slap. (laughs) “I will sell this house!”
On a DP’s Most Important Tools
The ability to pay attention and to listen. Focus.
Know the script the way that you read it; listen to other people
and the way that they see it. See where the divergent beliefs are
on the material, paying particular attention to where the director
is coming from.
The physical tools are your crew. You need the best
crew you can possibly get—the best camera operator; the best assistants.
On Leading a Crew to Their Best
I involve everybody and I always have because I get
so much from them. I get ideas from them; we are all a team. It’s
not just me doing the cinematography out there: it’s us doing
the cinematography. The grips, the electrical and the camera: we
are a unit that the director can count on to bring out his visuals.
On the Merits of New Technology
They are very helpful, but you don’t want to overuse
them. When the zoom lens came in, people—myself included—overused
it. As a craftsperson, I don’t know all the situations that will
come about. Maybe they will write rain in suddenly; I need to have
the lighting tools, the camera tools that will enable me to really
do a good job on a film.