Definition January 2024 - Web

THE KILLER PRODUCTION

WORDS Katie Kasperson

With six unique locations, grading The Killer was never going to be simple. Colourist Eric Weidt shares how he captured David Fincher’s meticulous hitman

T he latest film from David assassin – a Smiths-loving cynic who embarks on an international chase after a high-profile job goes awry. The story takes our anti-hero from hazy Paris to humid Florida to wintry New York, with each location taking on its own challenge – both for the Killer and the film’s colourist Eric Weidt. Fincher, The Killer , sees Michael Fassbender play the titular GOING INTERNATIONAL Based on Alexis Matz Nolent’s graphic novel series and inspired by Jean- Pierre Melville’s Le Samourai , The Killer combines a fast-paced plot with moody yet bold colours. “I think Fincher is a big comic book fan,” begins Weidt, “especially in the art of framing to impart the beats of a story. Working in film, he brings that to movement as well – he’s seeking a visual rhythm that makes you forget it is highly constructed.

“David likes to push and pull colours, but always strikes an unconscious balance,” he continues. Weidt began working on The Killer while it was still at the pre-production stage, developing lookup tables alongside cinematographer Erik Messerschmidt ASC, who had previously worked with Fincher on Mank , for which he won an Academy Award. “We created the show LUTs together for shooting the different locations, which we drove home in the grade,” recounts Weidt. “I started working with test footage early on, especially to process green- or blue-screen material.” With six locations across Europe and North America, Weidt needed to differentiate each one without disrupting the film’s overall palette. “There’s Paris at night, with tungsten street lighting; there’s the Dominican Republic, with a misty-humid-warm look going on; and there’s this winter white-point Chicago material,” explains Weidt. During the

grading process, they started with a “yellow-blue split in Paris, a saturated warm-chocolate look in Dominican Republic, and an ice-cold northern US look,” which was then tailored to each individual scene. Take the Floridian fight scene, for example – ‘where black was the modus operandi’, according to Weidt. After following a character aptly nicknamed The Brute to and from a strip club, the Killer sedates his guard dog and breaks into his home before eventually being discovered. “We wanted to push for detail, all the while knowing that more darkness would make it scarier. So, a perfect balance needed to be struck.” Meanwhile, the Dominican Republic storyline was saturated and warm, allowing Weidt to play around with both darkness and light. “We also added a halation filter as a kind of haze that would make it feel muggy and humid,” he explains, as well as touches of red in the daytime shadows.

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