The Director & The D.O.P
Marcus Friedlander is a colourist working across commercial production in Sydney. In this episode he breaks down the grade on Nike "Run Your Run" — shot in one day in Southeast Asia, multiple cameras, and a director who walked into the grade and asked him to push the look further. We get into what density actually means, how to unify footage from different cameras in a single working colour space, and what happens when a client asks you to make something more poppy and you've already hit the legal limit of the farm. We also talk about the colourist being involved earlier, why the DP needs to be in the grade, and the new piece of client feedback nobody quite knows how to decode yet — "we don't want it to feel AI." Plus — our very first listener question. Yun from Sydney asks how to work with a colourist for the first time. In Gear Chat: Cooke AP3 Anamorphics. 1.5x squeeze, user-interchangeable mounts, tiny, and about to be everywhere. 00:00 Opener 00:26 Intro — e-bikes, cyclists, North Sydney Bears 02:48 The Breakdown with Marcus Friedlander, Colourist 03:43 Nike "Run Your Run" — why this project 06:09 Look development — seeing it with fresh eyes 07:31 Technical challenges — one day, multiple cameras, harsh light 14:21 Working colour space — unifying different cameras 15:33 The gatewave — making digital feel like film 20:20 "We don't want it to feel AI" 21:33 Make it pop" — decoding client language 24:58 Director's cut workflow — backing up before client notes 27:32 What colourists wish production understood 28:40 The DP needs to be in the grade 33:05 Marcus's question for Ethan 37:50 First ever listener question — Yun from Sydney 42:37 Gear Chat — Cooke AP3 Anamorphics 47:44 Wrap-up
11 episodios
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