Molly visits BAFTA for Dick Pope cinematography masterclass

19 Dec 2014 BY Molly

3 mins
Mr Turner
Mr Turner

A rapturous round of applause ensues as Dick Pope, a leading creative force in cinematography, takes to the stage. The academy award nominated Mr. Pope is still working today, and his impressive portfolio spans many films, including a variety with the iconic film maker Mike Leigh, through to Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging (2008) the later of which was neglected from the talk, unfortunately.

What came next was a selection of personally selected clips, conversations and audience questions. Dick seemed a lovely, humble gentleman, passionate about his craft, and who saw cinematography as an art form. At its core, cinematography is the basics of what goes into a shot the colours, lights and camera shots, for instance, that creatively manipulate every frame we view and can add so much more depth and intrigue. This is what Dick went on to explore and it was highly enlightening to hear from a man at the top of his game; as someone trying to comprehend the manual on how to even start.

Most prevalent in the talk was the discussion of his collaborations with Mike Leigh. In fact, it may as well have been Cinematography as an excuse to ask questions about Mike Leigh with Dick Pope! However, it was riveting to hear how much consideration went into the simplest of his shots. For example, he explained that a motif and fascination of Leigh's films is framing families and events from behind door frames and to have action take place on stairs. The motive of this to make the viewers voyeurs on these slices of life, created in films such as Naked (1993) and Secrets and Lies (1996) it allows us to feel involved with these situations and just simple devices like this can give us a heightened sense of involvement.

From a personal perspective, perhaps what I found most fascinating was his discussion of his most recent work on Mr Turner (2014). The beautiful attention to detail in the colour of the film felt similar to the brushstrokes of Turner himself and it reminded me how much thought goes into a scene's construction and the power this gives to the story itself. 

The talk was truly inspiring and fired up an instant desire to go home and watch as many films as possible. There is nothing better than learning from the masters and I've discovered a little gold-mine of films through the talk - it really was a thoroughly good Tuesday evening!

Young Reporter Molly

Molly, Young Reporter

I'm Molly, I'm 18 and studying Film, Television & Digital Production at Royal Holloway, London. I love anything from Kill Bill to Amelie, and feel privileged to study such a powerful medium. I believe film is the all encompassing art of everything!

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