Kubrick being a photographer before getting into cinema is 100% one of the reasons his cinematography is so insane. Every shot could be an amazing still photo
I’ve always thought photography is way harder than doing video. If you’re a great photographer, you’ll probably be great with video - not so much vice versa.
To clarify about pushing the film stock: in the case of 5294, it was rated at 400 ASA, so they pushed a stop, by exposing it at 800. You then compensate in the development of the film, by leaving it in longer in the developer. This is also why it’s crucial to note on the film cans when film has been pushed, as if it’s developed incorrectly, it would be way too dark. This essentially allows you to get twice as much light, but with the downside being you get more grain, less saturation and blacks take on a greyer quality, all something Kubrick wanted.
This also has the side effect of shifting your dynamic range, favoring highlights. There’s also the opposite of pushing, which is pulling the film. This is when you purposefully overexpose the film and then light it less in the development, to compensate. This has the effect of giving you less grain and a dynamic range favoring shadows.
But to me (as a professional stills photographer of forty years), when you see the movie it doesn't look like it was shot "wide open" and it doesn't look like the stock was pushed. What am I missing? Especially (as far as I know) as cinematographers always shoot negative film and then create a "print" by making what I would call an "interneg" which loses you about half a stop and some dynamic range. Happy to be educated.
@@BoredOfBills totally agree. They shot everything wide open for “more depth of field” was stated in this video. Um that would be less depth of field. How did they get the razor sharp focus in foreground and back? I don’t think he used split diopters. An f1.4 50mm lens isn’t going to focus at 6 ft and infinity. Unless it’s stopped way down.
Kubrick made art in his own vision. An absolute master at his craft. As an audience member I appreciate his work ethic and attention to detail as it makes the overall experience of his movies so much more than what we get today with the garbage being made
Spielberg said something similar about Kubrick when he visited the set of The Shining. He had a custom periscope made that he could put inside the model of the hotel and show people how it was supposed to look on camera with lighting, production design, etc. Apparently Steven was very impressed.
@@reinforcedpenisstem yes they were friends. Kubrick gave the movie a.i to Spielberg. Kubrick had been working on it for years and he trusted Spielberg with bringing the vision to life. I don't care what anyone says that movie is great and the effects have aged so well.
@@aliensoup2420Stanley probably came up with it because it was filmed first( The Shining is actually the reason Raiders was delayed one year ) and Stanley had more experience than Steven at that point
19:23 One thing I like about this particular scene is it gives you a feeling of following down an arrow. Not sure how to explain it, but as the camera moves with Hartman, the entire scene is moving with him and the camera is getting closer to not only him, but the focus of the point (being private Joker). I can picture a big arrow pointing to private Joker as the scene moves. Most directors would have either just moved the camera or zoomed or done a jump cut, but Kubric gives us multiple motions and they all come to a nice pin-point right at the end, like we're zeroing in on the target with Hartman. I also like the dolly work at the beginning when he's doing his introductions, following him around the entire barracks as if to say "I'm all encompassing, this is all me". I'm not well versed in the works of Kubric, but that's how I interoperate it :D
Even as a young kid I knew that this movie was different. I was shocked by it of course because I was only twelve but I loved the look of it. And the switch to Vietnam halfway through is like an entirely new movie. Still one of my favorites.
21:43 When I was in boot camp at Paris Island in 2002, the toilets at the weapons battalion barracks were intact on both sides of the room facing each other. No stalls, just a room full of toilets.
The toilets facing each other do, at least currently, face each other at MCRD San Diego. I remember this quite vividly because it took some getting used to taking a dump while facing another person. This of coarse became completely normal as time went by and full conversations would be had mid-poop.
I just rewatched this movie for the thousandth time less than a month ago, but you have sparked the desire to see it again. It’s one of the “perfect” films
When I was in boot camp, all of the toilets faced each other. They were separated by stall wall on the sides, but they had no doors. So you had to watch and be watched during a shit. You got used to it pretty quickly.
I remember being in Basic Training, on an FTX and the outhouse just had like a plywood surface with toilet seats bolted to the holes cut out in the wood. For some reason, in that setting, it wasn't weird look another man in the eyes talking about our up coming hike doing our business. Lol.
That was probably the old barracks, all the newer barracks have them on both sides, in the last week we move to the old barracks on the other side of the parade deck and they has stalls only on one side
I remember seeing this film in the Cinema. The scene right after Private Pyle (sp?) utters the film's namesake - that transition with the next scene was so extreme that I won't ever forget it. You could hear a pin drop - the audience was in shock.
Some of those outdoor shots you showed while stating they were shot wide open seem to have a lot of the fore and background in focus, which indicates that the lens is stopped down. The plane of focus should be much more narrow if it's wide open.
@@benisrood Technically correct. But perception is a bit different if you have a wide angle the perceived depth field it larger because object are distorted and large and the background is perceived as further away. Telephoto lenses would compress the background and foreground thus eventuating any difference in focus
When I was younger I was in the army cadets, I stayed at Bassingbourn multiple times and I will say all of the people stationed there are very keen to mention/reference fmj at every possible opportunity.
This series is absolutely awesome and I would say Kubrick himself would be enthusiastic about its attention to detail and meticulous research. Well done, Tyler.
Correction at 8:30 mate! If you keep the aperture wide open you have less depth of field and a narrow focal zone; so less detail is recored before and after the set focus point. I think what he meant to say or he was quoted wrong was by having the lack of depth of field this made shell casings and dirt stand out due to the lack of depth of field since the background details didn't get in the way of foreground material in the focus point area. However I'm just some bloke that's actually worked in cinema for over 30 years... Cheers & Peace
He was a photographer first. He wanted his movies to look like animated versions of his black and white journalism photos that he learned his craft on.
This is true. The content within any given composition of a shot is why we watch his films, not plot or character development; elements Stanley was not much interested in. This was why Stephen King disliked the adaptation of his book, and why the director received little recognition for his films by The Academy during his lifetime. Actually, we don’t “watch” Kubrick films so much as we “view” them.
@@kramalerav Totally. King should be recognized by his flair for character development, on the other hand. I’ve always greatly respected the both of them.
11:15 -- I elect to believe that these are actual 'behind the scenes' shots of the FMJ crew moving the bus-mounted lights to meet Kubrick's exacting requirements.
I love that you give attribution to your sources and cite each source. It lends great credibility to your video essays and sets you apart from others who behave like scavengers. This video, aside from technical specifics, is so wonderful. Love it. Way interesting.
That's very interesting about the film stock and the apertures. The majority of the shots you showed were definitely stopped down to get pretty large DOF. Now I have to go watch the movie again to pick apart the apertures in every shot - thanks for that :)
@@garrettschwindt7478 look at the shot at 8:16 for e.g. That looks to be around a 28mm. The subject is pretty close to us yet everything is in focus. That’s shooting at T8 at a minimum.
@@garrettschwindt7478 But not that much DOF. That kind of DOF in the shots he referenced looked like they were on the higher range - both foreground and background had decent focus...so f11 at a minimum. Just not a lot of light from what was described...odd.
Your Kubrick videos are soooooooo well done. Super interesting, thoroughly researched and well put together. Thank you for making them. Kubrick was such an inspiring filmmaker for so many of us, thank you for sharing his stories and processes.
Super trivial correction: Lee filters makes 216. The Rosco equivalent is “Tough White”. A DP or cameraman is more likely to forget the exact nomenclature. They would just tell the grips, “cover those windows with 216”. When I gripped, we generally liked the Lee diffusion better because it was easier to identify by numbering. Full is 216, Half is 250, Quarter is 251. We still used Rosco Opal Frost for our thinnest diffusion.
The "special viewfinder" you refer to @ 14:37 is known as a "director's viewfinder." They are fairly common and allow the user to adjust the focal length (zoom in, zoom out, wide angle, telephoto, etc.). Since Kubrick was a "gadget guy," perhaps he did have a "special" viewfinder which was slightly different from a standard director's viewfinder, but I would bet it was just a regular director's viewfinder. Anyway, this an excellent video, CinemaTyler -- keep up the good work.
A "Director's Viewfinder" is a small device with a FIXED LENS and an eyepiece. What Stanley had made, was a device which can accept the exact lenses that he would then put on the camera. The typical director's viewfinder can zoom in or out ,and give you wide an telephoto but that is not the same . Prime lenses, look completely different than a zoom lens, which makes what Stanley made, completely new. That's why HE had to have it made for HIM.
This series has provided me with further insight on Full Metal Jacket (which I've seen more than once). I have also been enjoying the videos on Apocalypse Now which I haven't seen, but I don't feel has been spoiled for me (it's been a part of popular culture for so long now).
Another great essay. Just to clarify (from what I remember) FMJ was shot on 5294 (a film stock normally rated at 400 ASA/ISO), and pushed one stop to 800 in the lab. Eyes Wide Shut was 5295 (I think) rated at 500, and pushed two stops to 2000. I also believe Kubrick fired at least one Steadicam operator over the battle footage. I met Doug Milsome and his wife in 1990, and they were both very friendly and personable -- but I was too nervous to ask him any questions! As I'm sure you are aware, his technical proficiency was first rate (he pulled focus on Barry Lyndon, and shot the helicopter footage for The Shining -- after the original team was "replaced").
I always liked this movie because of how smooth, real, and just ascertric the performance and picture feel. You made me appreciate this film way more, thanks.
@CinemaTyler I worked for Stanley on FMJ. We were at Delta Sound and to aid Stanley in selecting individual frames to make publicity stills I had the answer print. Reel one was on a six plate Steenbeck. I was advancing the reel under Stanley's direction when he asked me to stop. I flipped the lever into reverse instantly snapping the print. It broke exactly on a frame break. Stanley was remarkably cool about it. He chuckled and said "I bet you never fo that again." I didn't.
I was a Recruit at Parris Island in the late 80's, there was a set of barracks there that had "Shitters" on both walls like the scene of the head in FMJ. It's not very common, but there have been real Marine barracks like the movie. SFMF
The first half of FMJ is easily one of my favorite movies of all time. The second half scares and saddens me. Taken together, it adds up to a profound experience.
The monolith in 2001 symbolizes man's capability for transformation. When Cowboy is dying, what's in the background? A burning monolith. The whole film is man-centric. Maybe women are the answer. No. The sniper at the end is a woman. DEVASTATING FUCKING MOVIE. I LOVE IT.
As an amateur still photographer, it seems pretty obvious from depth of field that most daylight shots were not shot "wide open". The deep focus looks like at least f 8+ on 35 mm image frame, with ND filters for exposure, much smaller aperture than the widest f 2-3 (actually, T 2-3) that most cinema lenses can manage.
Well there is one thing to consider though. The longer the lens, the shallower the depth of field when the aperture is open. Inversly, on a very wide angle lens you could have deep focus even while the aperture is wide open. The outdoor shots appeared pretty wide.
Fun fact. ASA is an acronym for American Standard Association. Film sensitivity is based on how immersed the stock is with silver halide crystals. That is why the theater experience is often referred to as the silver screen. So American Standard Association makes perfect sense.
"Pushing" film is intentionally underexposing the film, then compensating by over developing it. This leaves you with a usable image but with more grain and contrast than film exposed and developed normally. This helps with shooting in low light too.
Very excellent, a close friend was responsible for all the vehicles, he spent a year getting everything together and then best part of 8 months on set keeping everything going and arranging the vehicle for scenes, he talked a lot about how they would shoot very late into November just with natural light and the amount of prep and rehearsal on video before the a take would be tried , there’s some very interesting pieces on here called Stanley Kubrick’s boxes witch was his daughter filming him on 16mm , my friend was one of the few with a mobile phone so she would ring him to see what her father was up to , the shot with the tank firing and recoiling took some doing I’m told
Love your work. I'm a pretty obsessive Kubrick/ cinema-phile myself, but still find your investigations insightful and thought-provoking. What I find hilarious, in this instance, is that the local advertising preceding the vid was for a supermarket chain (here in Australia) called 'Woolworths' - and they were using a bastardised version of 'Wooly Bully' on the soundtrack!
My evening is saved !! ( I live in Central Europe ). Cinema Tyler is back!! I look forward to another wonderful exercise on film and technique of film-making ! Thanx a lot !!
You don’t get greater depth of field with a wide open aperture. Leaving the lens open “to see the flying dirt” would not have worked. No other choice but to stop down.
Probably just a bit of crossed wires somewhere in the descriptions, I did think the DOF felt a bit long (for a wide open shot) in the exteriors and wondered if they'd just jotted it down wrong.
I think @CinemaTyler might have gotten mixed up trying to be thorough but brief. His source material was probably referring to having a wide open aperture, a narrow shutter angle and/or a higher frame rate in order to capture those fast moving subjects, but yeah wide open = shallow depth of field.
Kubrick: All I need you for on set is to turn on the lights. Electrician: Ok, but I'm with the union, so you still need to pay me for the full day. Kubrick: Well, might as well get my money's worth. I need some lighting fixed in my house.
That's how you screw a union worker lol. Don't get me wrong, unions did great things, but nowadays people lean on them and use them as a way to work less and get paid more.
I swear that set for the boot-camp open-bay barracks was spot-on. I was in the Navy, not Marines, but I swear that set is perfect. I think the only difference is that the floor at my boot-camp company was white tile. The floor in the FMJ barracks doesn't look like tile, it looks like concrete that was painted with the same heavy maroon paint that my Navy ship used for its engine room bilges and exterior surfaces below the waterline. The wall paint looks spot-on with my boot-camp barracks and Navy ship interior (I was on an aircraft carrier), which was a very light green that resulted from mixing one part dark hunter-green and 5 parts white paint.
This is the best video I’ve seen on the entirety of UA-cam in a very, very long time. This should be an actual series on an actual streaming service. Very well done :)
An amazing movie from Kubrick. I thoroughly enjoyed the first half of the film with R Lee Ermey. It stands out as one of the best sequences of Kubrick films. My problem with the film begins in the second half in Vietnam. First off, the entire tone of the film changed. I didn't believe for a second that it took place in Vietnam. The helicopters were cheap alternatives to the Hueys used overwhelmingly in-country. The blown apart buildings looked like movie sets. (I know, they used old rundown buildings in England - Beckton Gas Works.) It just didn't have the urgency, unique perspective and hard earned acting of the principal players. It is simply two films. Each about 55 minutes. One great, the other is average and boring. I've met Lee Ermey (in fact he gave me a medal with his name inscribed on it.) A really great talent and soldier.
This is such a common, silly complaint about the film. You were expecting the film to transform into Platoon for the second half. This misses the point entirely. Ever notice how you never see the enemy up close? And how the climax of the film revolves around a non-enemy?
This film is about the Marine Corps that used CH-34s and CH-46s during the war. Although, the choppers used were not CH-34s, they were modified to look close enough. I know this because I was there in '68-'69. There are a lot of little things about the film that are not quite right that only a Marine of that era would notice. Nonetheless, it is a great film and your knowledge of Vietnam is based on movies and documentaries, not actual experience.
I've always felt like those not-so-steady Steadicam combat scenes were alarmingly similar feeling to modern first person shooter games. He nailed that feeling almost a decade before Doom.
Imagine all the planning it took to be iconic. Now imagine being the DI, Drill Sergeant, or MTI coming in hungover at 0300 on Monday. Iconic is the moment.
Great video. It was very informative and revealed a lot about how Kubrick uses light and lenses. Minor feedback- I found the cuts to shots from other movies distracting. The groundhog day clip, for example. Or the one where you talk about the photo journalist stepping on a landmine and then a shot of a soldier getting blown up. Subscribed
I think that an experienced killer like the the Drill sergeant Hartman would have seen his death in the eyes of Private Pyle and would not have provoked him the way he did. For me, that was the only misstep in this film.
I have a cinematography question. At 7:46-7:48 I saw something something that I have frequently seen in movies, but never found an explanation for: why is the sky in the top third of the frame a different color than it is in the middle third of the frame? Does that have anything to do with the lens, the aperture, or the film stock? I’ve always wanted to know. And Tyler, your videos are amazing.
makes sense to me, in game production u use so much shaders, ofc u test the camera and lenses up and down till u feel right. the thing with the models is same in games, you always get a 2nd camera while building to see how it looks ingame. e.g. rotate a house with a cam inside looking through the window. love it.. that man been so ahead crazy
8:10 _They could only shoot when the sky was overcast_
...but as they were filming on location in Britain, they were able to shoot every single day.
My friend went to London for 3 weeks and he didn't see the sun for all 3 of them.
@@nobody-tj1mv London's problem is more pollution than genuine clouds. True nonetheless though.
@@tipi5586 maybe 50 years ago
It's not that bad !
I'm sure the sun came out last year at least twice.
The uk sky looks like the uk sky if you know what I mean, sky's wrong doesn't look right
Kubrick being a photographer before getting into cinema is 100% one of the reasons his cinematography is so insane. Every shot could be an amazing still photo
"100% one of the reasons" - so like 100% of 20%? lol
I’ve always thought photography is way harder than doing video. If you’re a great photographer, you’ll probably be great with video - not so much vice versa.
Every frame’s a painting
I never knew Kubrick was a photographer before doing cinema, but yeah, it shows.
Yeah, definitely man,
Kubrick being a photographer *first*
is as integral to his film-work as being a *painter* first is to Lynch.
All your videos are so good that they could be extras on the Blu Rays of these films.
1000% yes!
This is an accurate statement
I could totally see them on criterion releases
It’s definitely possible, the now abandoned UA-cam channel “Every Frame a Painting” has done documentary features for Criterion releases.
What is a blu ray?
To clarify about pushing the film stock: in the case of 5294, it was rated at 400 ASA, so they pushed a stop, by exposing it at 800. You then compensate in the development of the film, by leaving it in longer in the developer. This is also why it’s crucial to note on the film cans when film has been pushed, as if it’s developed incorrectly, it would be way too dark.
This essentially allows you to get twice as much light, but with the downside being you get more grain, less saturation and blacks take on a greyer quality, all something Kubrick wanted.
This also has the side effect of shifting your dynamic range, favoring highlights.
There’s also the opposite of pushing, which is pulling the film. This is when you purposefully overexpose the film and then light it less in the development, to compensate. This has the effect of giving you less grain and a dynamic range favoring shadows.
Kubrick used 5294 and got the grain he expected your brain is sexy
@@gabrielledebourg2487 I hope you teach because you explained that very concisely.
But to me (as a professional stills photographer of forty years), when you see the movie it doesn't look like it was shot "wide open" and it doesn't look like the stock was pushed. What am I missing? Especially (as far as I know) as cinematographers always shoot negative film and then create a "print" by making what I would call an "interneg" which loses you about half a stop and some dynamic range. Happy to be educated.
@@BoredOfBills totally agree. They shot everything wide open for “more depth of field” was stated in this video. Um that would be less depth of field. How did they get the razor sharp focus in foreground and back? I don’t think he used split diopters. An f1.4 50mm lens isn’t going to focus at 6 ft and infinity. Unless it’s stopped way down.
Kubrick made art in his own vision. An absolute master at his craft. As an audience member I appreciate his work ethic and attention to detail as it makes the overall experience of his movies so much more than what we get today with the garbage being made
Spielberg said something similar about Kubrick when he visited the set of The Shining. He had a custom periscope made that he could put inside the model of the hotel and show people how it was supposed to look on camera with lighting, production design, etc.
Apparently Steven was very impressed.
I was unsure if it was Kubrick that got the idea from Spielberg while he was preparing for 'Raiders', or vise versa.
Spielberg visited the set of the Shining?
@@reinforcedpenisstem yes they were friends. Kubrick gave the movie a.i to Spielberg. Kubrick had been working on it for years and he trusted Spielberg with bringing the vision to life. I don't care what anyone says that movie is great and the effects have aged so well.
@@aliensoup2420Stanley probably came up with it because it was filmed first( The Shining is actually the reason Raiders was delayed one year ) and Stanley had more experience than Steven at that point
19:23 One thing I like about this particular scene is it gives you a feeling of following down an arrow. Not sure how to explain it, but as the camera moves with Hartman, the entire scene is moving with him and the camera is getting closer to not only him, but the focus of the point (being private Joker). I can picture a big arrow pointing to private Joker as the scene moves. Most directors would have either just moved the camera or zoomed or done a jump cut, but Kubric gives us multiple motions and they all come to a nice pin-point right at the end, like we're zeroing in on the target with Hartman.
I also like the dolly work at the beginning when he's doing his introductions, following him around the entire barracks as if to say "I'm all encompassing, this is all me".
I'm not well versed in the works of Kubric, but that's how I interoperate it :D
Even as a young kid I knew that this movie was different. I was shocked by it of course because I was only twelve but I loved the look of it. And the switch to Vietnam halfway through is like an entirely new movie. Still one of my favorites.
Vietnam was an entirely different world than what Americans left behind.
Perfect representation of drafting
This FMJ series is great and really insightful. I'd love to see a similar series for Eyes Wide Shut once your done with FMJ!
my favorite kubrick film ♥
Kubricks only flop even with a nude Nicole Kidman. lol
21:43 When I was in boot camp at Paris Island in 2002, the toilets at the weapons battalion barracks were intact on both sides of the room facing each other. No stalls, just a room full of toilets.
Toilets facing each other is EXACTLY the latrine setup in the wooden barracks made in the 1940s at Fort Benning, GA and Fort McCoy, WI.
This is one of the most professional, informative documentaries of it's kind. Great job to all involved!
The toilets facing each other do, at least currently, face each other at MCRD San Diego. I remember this quite vividly because it took some getting used to taking a dump while facing another person. This of coarse became completely normal as time went by and full conversations would be had mid-poop.
I just rewatched this movie for the thousandth time less than a month ago, but you have sparked the desire to see it again. It’s one of the “perfect” films
When I was in boot camp, all of the toilets faced each other. They were separated by stall wall on the sides, but they had no doors. So you had to watch and be watched during a shit. You got used to it pretty quickly.
Ha! How many millions of us from draft days remember that toilet experience!
They only had toilets on one side of the room when I was at MCRDSD in '75, with side walls but no door.
I remember being in Basic Training, on an FTX and the outhouse just had like a plywood surface with toilet seats bolted to the holes cut out in the wood. For some reason, in that setting, it wasn't weird look another man in the eyes talking about our up coming hike doing our business. Lol.
That was probably the old barracks, all the newer barracks have them on both sides, in the last week we move to the old barracks on the other side of the parade deck and they has stalls only on one side
MCRDSD 1969 1Btn. Our heads were face to face, no bulkheads between "seats".
I remember seeing this film in the Cinema. The scene right after Private Pyle (sp?) utters the film's namesake - that transition with the next scene was so extreme that I won't ever forget it. You could hear a pin drop - the audience was in shock.
Didn't expect this deep dive into the actual cinematography of the movie. Great video!
Some of those outdoor shots you showed while stating they were shot wide open seem to have a lot of the fore and background in focus, which indicates that the lens is stopped down. The plane of focus should be much more narrow if it's wide open.
I think that the lenses were telephoto so while wide open they were also far away so everything looks flat
@@benisrood Technically correct. But perception is a bit different
if you have a wide angle the perceived depth field it larger because object are distorted and large and the background is perceived as further away. Telephoto lenses would compress the background and foreground thus eventuating any difference in focus
This. None of the outside shots are wide open by any definition. It's nonsense.
Also the hyper focal of those wide angle lenses would render everything in focus beyond that point.
When I was younger I was in the army cadets, I stayed at Bassingbourn multiple times and I will say all of the people stationed there are very keen to mention/reference fmj at every possible opportunity.
This series is absolutely awesome and I would say Kubrick himself would be enthusiastic about its attention to detail and meticulous research. Well done, Tyler.
You are too kind! Thanks!
This has been one of my top five favourite movies for like 20 years now.
Very well made video man!!
Correction at 8:30 mate! If you keep the aperture wide open you have less depth of field and a narrow focal zone; so less detail is recored before and after the set focus point. I think what he meant to say or he was quoted wrong was by having the lack of depth of field this made shell casings and dirt stand out due to the lack of depth of field since the background details didn't get in the way of foreground material in the focus point area. However I'm just some bloke that's actually worked in cinema for over 30 years... Cheers & Peace
He was a photographer first.
He wanted his movies to look like animated versions of his black and white journalism photos that he learned his craft on.
This is true. The content within any given composition of a shot is why we watch his films, not plot or character development; elements Stanley was not much interested in. This was why Stephen King disliked the adaptation of his book, and why the director received little recognition for his films by The Academy during his lifetime.
Actually, we don’t “watch” Kubrick films so much as we “view” them.
@@kramalerav Totally. King should be recognized by his flair for character development, on the other hand. I’ve always greatly respected the both of them.
Every frame is a still photograph.
Wow, I now know everything I ever wanted to know about Kubrick and how he lit his films. Very in-depth and very interesting also. Thanks for this.
That was really interesting and really shows how much Kubrick really took a lot of care into every little thing. Well done!
11:15 -- I elect to believe that these are actual 'behind the scenes' shots of the FMJ crew moving the bus-mounted lights to meet Kubrick's exacting requirements.
I love that you give attribution to your sources and cite each source. It lends great credibility to your video essays and sets you apart from others who behave like scavengers. This video, aside from technical specifics, is so wonderful. Love it. Way interesting.
wow. i never would have imagined appreciating this film any more than i already did. this was mind blowing. instant subscribe!
Every film stan made was a masterpiece
That's very interesting about the film stock and the apertures. The majority of the shots you showed were definitely stopped down to get pretty large DOF. Now I have to go watch the movie again to pick apart the apertures in every shot - thanks for that :)
Well most of the focal lengths were probably between 21mm and 35mm, so shooting wide open on them would still have plenty of DOF.
@@garrettschwindt7478 even so, unless they’re naturally very slow lenses, a lot of these shots are stopped down 100%
@@garrettschwindt7478 look at the shot at 8:16 for e.g. That looks to be around a 28mm. The subject is pretty close to us yet everything is in focus. That’s shooting at T8 at a minimum.
Should have said 28mm at the widest. Bit hard to tell with this composition but it’s not wider
@@garrettschwindt7478 But not that much DOF. That kind of DOF in the shots he referenced looked like they were on the higher range - both foreground and background had decent focus...so f11 at a minimum. Just not a lot of light from what was described...odd.
Your Kubrick videos are soooooooo well done. Super interesting, thoroughly researched and well put together. Thank you for making them.
Kubrick was such an inspiring filmmaker for so many of us, thank you for sharing his stories and processes.
Super trivial correction: Lee filters makes 216. The Rosco equivalent is “Tough White”. A DP or cameraman is more likely to forget the exact nomenclature. They would just tell the grips, “cover those windows with 216”. When I gripped, we generally liked the Lee diffusion better because it was easier to identify by numbering. Full is 216, Half is 250, Quarter is 251. We still used Rosco Opal Frost for our thinnest diffusion.
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
What do you do for a living?
The "special viewfinder" you refer to @ 14:37 is known as a "director's viewfinder." They are fairly common and allow the user to adjust the focal length (zoom in, zoom out, wide angle, telephoto, etc.). Since Kubrick was a "gadget guy," perhaps he did have a "special" viewfinder which was slightly different from a standard director's viewfinder, but I would bet it was just a regular director's viewfinder. Anyway, this an excellent video, CinemaTyler -- keep up the good work.
A "Director's Viewfinder" is a small device with a FIXED LENS and an eyepiece. What Stanley had made, was a device which can accept the exact lenses that he would then put on the camera. The typical director's viewfinder can zoom in or out ,and give you wide an telephoto but that is not the same . Prime lenses, look completely different than a zoom lens, which makes what Stanley made, completely new. That's why HE had to have it made for HIM.
This series has provided me with further insight on Full Metal Jacket (which I've seen more than once). I have also been enjoying the videos on Apocalypse Now which I haven't seen, but I don't feel has been spoiled for me (it's been a part of popular culture for so long now).
Another great essay. Just to clarify (from what I remember) FMJ was shot on 5294 (a film stock normally rated at 400 ASA/ISO), and pushed one stop to 800 in the lab. Eyes Wide Shut was 5295 (I think) rated at 500, and pushed two stops to 2000. I also believe Kubrick fired at least one Steadicam operator over the battle footage. I met Doug Milsome and his wife in 1990, and they were both very friendly and personable -- but I was too nervous to ask him any questions! As I'm sure you are aware, his technical proficiency was first rate (he pulled focus on Barry Lyndon, and shot the helicopter footage for The Shining -- after the original team was "replaced").
replaced and corrected ;)
You make videos about things that no content movie creator really talks about which is why i love you. Its excusive to you
Thanks so much!
Kubrick's films look so natural I never even considered what went into the lighting before. Thanks!
The audiobook of modines diary is amazing
I always liked this movie because of how smooth, real, and just ascertric the performance and picture feel. You made me appreciate this film way more, thanks.
The amount of research and preparation Kubrick and his key specialists put in never cease to amaze me.
What studios want today: you make a film exactly to their shareholders' parameters and specifications--and you pay for it.
@CinemaTyler I worked for Stanley on FMJ. We were at Delta Sound and to aid Stanley in selecting individual frames to make publicity stills I had the answer print. Reel one was on a six plate Steenbeck. I was advancing the reel under Stanley's direction when he asked me to stop. I flipped the lever into reverse instantly snapping the print. It broke exactly on a frame break. Stanley was remarkably cool about it. He chuckled and said "I bet you never fo that again." I didn't.
Cheers Sir! Your content is much appreciated as a Kubrick enthusiast... very well done
I was a Recruit at Parris Island in the late 80's, there was a set of barracks there that had "Shitters" on both walls like the scene of the head in FMJ. It's not very common, but there have been real Marine barracks like the movie. SFMF
FMJ looks like it was shot yesterday, the film simply doesn't age.
This is a great breakdown of the cinematography and lighting of FMJ. I would love to see similar breakdowns of other films. Great work.
I went through basic at Knox in '84. The lighting for the barracks and natural settings shot are spot on. Well done Mr. K.
The first half of FMJ is easily one of my favorite movies of all time. The second half scares and saddens me. Taken together, it adds up to a profound experience.
I remember watching this during Army basic training, we thought it was a comedy, all the singing whilst marching and crap like that.
The monolith in 2001 symbolizes man's capability for transformation. When Cowboy is dying, what's in the background? A burning monolith. The whole film is man-centric. Maybe women are the answer. No. The sniper at the end is a woman.
DEVASTATING FUCKING MOVIE. I LOVE IT.
As an amateur still photographer, it seems pretty obvious from depth of field that most daylight shots were not shot "wide open". The deep focus looks like at least f 8+ on 35 mm image frame, with ND filters for exposure, much smaller aperture than the widest f 2-3 (actually, T 2-3) that most cinema lenses can manage.
Yeah that did sound weird. The shots shown looked very deep depth of field even tho they are wide lenses
Yeah, exactly what I though. Focusing any of the tracking shots in FMJ wide open would be a nightmare, even for people of their skill.
Well there is one thing to consider though. The longer the lens, the shallower the depth of field when the aperture is open. Inversly, on a very wide angle lens you could have deep focus even while the aperture is wide open. The outdoor shots appeared pretty wide.
Kubrick never ceases to amaze. Genius through and through.
Kubrick got his start in film making when he watched some art films at the local museum and thought to himself, "I couldn't possibly do any worse."
I just found your channel and have been binging the Kubrick episodes for days. What a great and interesting channel!
Fun fact. ASA is an acronym for American Standard Association. Film sensitivity is based on how immersed the stock is with silver halide crystals. That is why the theater experience is often referred to as the silver screen. So American Standard Association makes perfect sense.
"Pushing" film is intentionally underexposing the film, then compensating by over developing it. This leaves you with a usable image but with more grain and contrast than film exposed and developed normally. This helps with shooting in low light too.
Watched this for 20 seconds and subscribed. Thanks brother man, hope you keep it going.
I hope you never stop making videos about this movie.
great work! But you wanted the famous toilet scene from Buñuel's Phantom of Liberty 😉
Another excellent video. I discovered your channel a few days ago and rapidly binged through most of it. Kudos and keep up the great work!
Thank you!
Toilets facing each other were a thing at a barracks I went to a long time ago. Four on each side. We called it a V8.
Very excellent, a close friend was responsible for all the vehicles, he spent a year getting everything together and then best part of 8 months on set keeping everything going and arranging the vehicle for scenes, he talked a lot about how they would shoot very late into November just with natural light and the amount of prep and rehearsal on video before the a take would be tried , there’s some very interesting pieces on here called Stanley Kubrick’s boxes witch was his daughter filming him on 16mm , my friend was one of the few with a mobile phone so she would ring him to see what her father was up to , the shot with the tank firing and recoiling took some doing I’m told
Love your work. I'm a pretty obsessive Kubrick/ cinema-phile myself, but still find your investigations insightful and thought-provoking. What I find hilarious, in this instance, is that the local advertising preceding the vid was for a supermarket chain (here in Australia) called 'Woolworths' - and they were using a bastardised version of 'Wooly Bully' on the soundtrack!
This is a brilliant examination of the subject. Really stellar work!
Again, your rechearch time must be through the roof! What great insight! Thanks!
Thank You for creating & sharing this, CinemaTyler
I am always excited when I see you have a new video. Great job
My evening is saved !! ( I live in Central Europe ). Cinema Tyler is back!! I look forward to another wonderful exercise on film and technique of film-making ! Thanx a lot !!
Thanks for watching!
Dude your videos are simply phenomenal...your voice is very suitable and easy to listen to 🔥
Thanks!
cinema tyler the GOAT!
You don’t get greater depth of field with a wide open aperture. Leaving the lens open “to see the flying dirt” would not have worked. No other choice but to stop down.
Probably just a bit of crossed wires somewhere in the descriptions, I did think the DOF felt a bit long (for a wide open shot) in the exteriors and wondered if they'd just jotted it down wrong.
I think @CinemaTyler might have gotten mixed up trying to be thorough but brief. His source material was probably referring to having a wide open aperture, a narrow shutter angle and/or a higher frame rate in order to capture those fast moving subjects, but yeah wide open = shallow depth of field.
So much info in here 😽 great work!
"Let it go, nerds." - SK
The toilets are on both sides of the wall at Fort Irwin's rotational unit encampment area.
This series is brilliant. Thanks for making it.
love your in depth information shared..and dig your passion..Hollywood will never be the same due to CGI.
The attention to detail is insane because I can honestly say the barracks in the movie looks exactly like Fox Co. 2nd bn in Parris Island.
It’s convincing enough that I’ve always thought it was shot on location.
Kubrick: All I need you for on set is to turn on the lights.
Electrician: Ok, but I'm with the union, so you still need to pay me for the full day.
Kubrick: Well, might as well get my money's worth. I need some lighting fixed in my house.
That's how you screw a union worker lol.
Don't get me wrong, unions did great things, but nowadays people lean on them and use them as a way to work less and get paid more.
I swear that set for the boot-camp open-bay barracks was spot-on. I was in the Navy, not Marines, but I swear that set is perfect. I think the only difference is that the floor at my boot-camp company was white tile. The floor in the FMJ barracks doesn't look like tile, it looks like concrete that was painted with the same heavy maroon paint that my Navy ship used for its engine room bilges and exterior surfaces below the waterline. The wall paint looks spot-on with my boot-camp barracks and Navy ship interior (I was on an aircraft carrier), which was a very light green that resulted from mixing one part dark hunter-green and 5 parts white paint.
amazing video
thank you so much
This is the best video I’ve seen on the entirety of UA-cam in a very, very long time. This should be an actual series on an actual streaming service. Very well done :)
Shooting with just the lights that are in the room - that’s my method lol
This is one of the only film video essay channels I'm still subbed to.
You have a hard on for Kubrick, but that’s actually correct. You win at Art.
1200 amps for lights? That is so big, it sounds like a misprint.
name of the film with the woman's calf on the pool coping?
An amazing movie from Kubrick. I thoroughly enjoyed the first half of the film with R Lee Ermey. It stands out as one of the best sequences of Kubrick films. My problem with the film begins in the second half in Vietnam. First off, the entire tone of the film changed. I didn't believe for a second that it took place in Vietnam. The helicopters were cheap alternatives to the Hueys used overwhelmingly in-country. The blown apart buildings looked like movie sets. (I know, they used old rundown buildings in England - Beckton Gas Works.) It just didn't have the urgency, unique perspective and hard earned acting of the principal players. It is simply two films. Each about 55 minutes. One great, the other is average and boring. I've met Lee Ermey (in fact he gave me a medal with his name inscribed on it.) A really great talent and soldier.
This is such a common, silly complaint about the film.
You were expecting the film to transform into Platoon for the second half. This misses the point entirely.
Ever notice how you never see the enemy up close? And how the climax of the film revolves around a non-enemy?
This film is about the Marine Corps that used CH-34s and CH-46s during the war. Although, the choppers used were not CH-34s, they were modified to look close enough. I know this because I was there in '68-'69. There are a lot of little things about the film that are not quite right that only a Marine of that era would notice. Nonetheless, it is a great film and your knowledge of Vietnam is based on movies and documentaries, not actual experience.
First video who teach me something new about one of my favorite movie - Amazing !!!!
I just love that Hartman comes out of his room in his PJs with his hat on - he must have had that thing ready for when Pyle went nuts.
With this much talent, it's no wonder they hired him to shoot the Moon landing
with research and pre production of course!
you did this movie good, thank you it deserves nothing less.
I've always felt like those not-so-steady Steadicam combat scenes were alarmingly similar feeling to modern first person shooter games. He nailed that feeling almost a decade before Doom.
I watched this on Netflix just recently now I’m getting this year old video recommendation. Good job on the back end sharing my data guys.
Imagine all the planning it took to be iconic. Now imagine being the DI, Drill Sergeant, or MTI coming in hungover at 0300 on Monday. Iconic is the moment.
Great video. It was very informative and revealed a lot about how Kubrick uses light and lenses.
Minor feedback- I found the cuts to shots from other movies distracting. The groundhog day clip, for example. Or the one where you talk about the photo journalist stepping on a landmine and then a shot of a soldier getting blown up.
Subscribed
I think that an experienced killer like the the Drill sergeant Hartman would have seen his death in the eyes of Private Pyle and would not have provoked him the way he did. For me, that was the only misstep in this film.
I have a cinematography question. At 7:46-7:48 I saw something something that I have frequently seen in movies, but never found an explanation for: why is the sky in the top third of the frame a different color than it is in the middle third of the frame? Does that have anything to do with the lens, the aperture, or the film stock? I’ve always wanted to know. And Tyler, your videos are amazing.
Amazing amazing video essay. I’ve only seen the movie once, like 20-25 years ago, but it was like a thunderbolt. Now I know why. Thank you.
I'm glad you had fun with the b-roll
one more great essay, thanks Tyler
makes sense to me, in game production u use so much shaders, ofc u test the camera and lenses up and down till u feel right. the thing with the models is same in games, you always get a 2nd camera while building to see how it looks ingame. e.g. rotate a house with a cam inside looking through the window. love it.. that man been so ahead crazy
Yo, the sources in the subtitles are really appreciated.
extremely well made thanks CinemaTyler