• Thursday, Oct. 15, 2020
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"I Know This Much is True" limited series from HBO "Cookes" up a period look
A scene from "I Know This Much is True" (photo by Atsushi Nishijima/courtesy of HBO)
  • LEICESTER, UK
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Set from 1913 to the early 1990s, HBO’s six-episode limited series I Know This Much is True required director Derek Cianfrance and cinematographer Jody Lee Lipes to make a choice: What would the show look like? They agreed that a cohesive, period look for the project would be the way to go as opposed to a contemporary feel--and decided that the marriage of Cooke Optics S4/i T2 prime lenses and Kodak Vision3 500T 5219 35mm film would be an ideal combination.

Mark Ruffalo, whose work on the show won him the Primetime Emmy® for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie, plays the roles of twins: middle-aged Dominick Birdsey who recounts his troubled relationship with Thomas, his paranoid schizophrenic twin brother.

“Deciding on a period look led us to 2-perf film framed for a 2:1 aspect ratio, using a small piece of the negative to give us film texture with present grain,” said Lipes. “I purposely underexposed the 1.7 million feet of film to accentuate the grain and muddiness.” That just happens to be the perfect environment for Kodak’s 5219, as it delivers high image-quality in low-light scenes, with higher signal-to-noise ratios. Teamed with the Cooke S4/i primes and Kodak 5219 were a number of ARRI Arricam LT cameras, optimized for smaller, lightweight usage in handheld mode. The kit was rented from ARRI Rental.

“The Cooke S4/i lenses give me the perfect place to land,” explained Lipes. “They don’t draw attention to themselves. They’re not distractingly soft and not super sharp, but add so much aesthetic into the filmmaking technique. I didn’t need, or want to use a lens series that added an unrealistic quality to the images – and with Derek having used the S4/i lenses in the past, he knew exactly what we would get.  Having a director already know that is a really big plus.”

Using four full sets of Cooke S4/i prime lenses (each set consisting of 15 primes: 16mm, 18mm, 21mm, 25mm, 27mm, 32mm, 25mm, 40mm, 50mm, 65mm, 75mm, 100mm, 135mm, 150mm, and 180mm) is not what one would typically expect to be used on a limited series, but circumstances warranted it. “We started with two full sets of the Cooke S4/i prime lenses and four Arricam LT bodies--two 2-perf and two 3-perf (for some visual effects work)--that were all lost in a fire. It was a $4 million loss, on camera equipment alone” said Lipes. “ARRI Rental was great; we got everything replaced and we were back up and running. The transition from the first two sets of Cooke S4/i prime lenses to the second set was totally seamless. They matched perfectly.”

While zoom lenses played an important role, Lipes’ prime lenses of choice were the Cooke S4/i 35mm, 40mm and 50mm on the wider side, with the 65mm, 75mm, 100mm and 135mm lenses for long shots.

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