Colors of Film Deconstructs Visual Palettes of Cinema History | Features


What’s so wonderful about Bramesco’s book, outside of a visually splendid layout that embraces the first word of that title with detailed color breakdowns of each palette, is how much it enhances the critical language of the average viewer. People who see films by directors like Jacques Demy, Wong Kar-wai, or Wes Anderson—just a few examples of filmmakers with a firm grip on color palettes—are impacted by the choices made when they pick a cool blue over a hot red, but they may not fully grasp the role these artistic decisions are playing in the final product. Great critics don’t try to change the mind of the reader as much as give them the vocabulary and education to appreciate what they’re seeing and even what they’re thinking about art. People often know they like something, but books like this unpack why they like it, revealing how much craft is married to content.

Bramesco starts with Georges Melies’ “A Trip to the Moon” in 1902 and ends over a century later with Steve McQueen’s “Lovers Rock.” In an era when it feels like more and more of the discourse is almost anti-artist as films are seen as products or visions are reproduced by A.I., something is fulfilling about a text like this that connects film history across generations. Of course, Melies and McQueen are radically different filmmakers, but they’re the bookends to a volume that connects them in a sense by unpacking how they both used color in their work. Melies and his colorist Elisabeth Thuillier had roughly 200 people hand-painting film. I love how the book connects that work to what McQueen and his creative team did 120 years later.

Of course, there’s a lot in between to unpack. Bramesco goes film by film, typically with a left page of information about the practical process and artistic craft of each choice, accompanied by a right page (and sometimes a couple more) that included a pertinent still and then the relevant color boxes. Some choices are obvious, like the way Stanley Kubrick explodes “2001: A Space Odyssey” into color in its psychedelic final act or the threatening greens of Alfred Hitchcock’s “Vertigo” (in which Bramesco cites Roger’s interpretation of the palette) while others are more unexpected and inspired. I’ve thought a lot about “Blue Velvet” and how it uses color in some obvious shots of suburbia but less about how it contrasts with darker choices when Dennis Hopper is going off the rails. Colors of Film has the ability to make you appreciate works that you already loved, which is a gift. And it’s also remarkably detailed in terms of the history of the process. In fact, some might find it a bit too technically dense at times, but Bramesco wants readers to understand how the use of color developed in film as much as the artistic choices made as it did so.

You can view the original article HERE.

Willow Smith on Empathogen Inspiration, Workout Routine
Jamie Lynn Spears Doesn’t Mind Britney’s Smack Talk, Just Glad She’s Alive
Revisiting Jennifer Lopez’s 2011 Album “Love?”
‘Bachelorette’ Star Jason Tartick Does Dinner with New Girlfriend
Retrospective: Oscar Micheaux and the Birth of Black Independent Cinema | Features
Interview with the Vampire Season 2 Review
‘I Won’t Say It Didn’t Sting’
Facets to Honor Academy Museum President Jacqueline Stewart at the 2024 Screen Gems Benefit | Chaz’s Journal
King Princess covers Steely Dan’s ‘Dirty Work’ for ‘Hacks’ season 3
Toronto restaurant New Ho King sees huge spike in interest after Kendrick Lamar’s Drake diss track
VIVIZ 2024 ‘V.hind : Love and Tears’ tour: dates, tickets and more
Fontaines D.C. announce intimate surprise New York show for next week
Embiid loves being ‘punching bag’ for Knicks fans
A.J. Brown hopes to play rest of career with Eagles
North Carolina star Davis returning for 5th year
Dominate the Field: Essential Tactics for Establishing Your Presence in Polish Sports
Sheldon Actors Iain Armitage and Jim Parsons Meet on the Set of Young Sheldon
Chicago PD Season 11 Episode 10 Review: Buried Pieces
Tulsa King Season 2 Adds Yellowstone’s Neal McDonough as Sylvester Stallone’s Latest Enemy
The Rookie Season 6 Episode 7 Review: Crushed
Best Workout Leggings From Gap
Maya Rudolph’s Covergirl Moment, Banana Republic Taps Taylor Hill, & More!
Charlotte Stone Shoes Review With Photos
Watch! Highlights From The 8th Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards