Thursday, October 16, 2014

Color on Developing Characters and Story - Kathy & Frank Whitaker - Far From Heaven 2002

Far From Heaven was created as a homage to 1950s Hollywood melodramas, cinematographer Edward Lachman was nominated for an Oscar for this film.
A still frame of bright red-orange leaves fills the screen as the title sequence begins. As the camera pans slowly over the block the leaves gradually turn brown. By the end of the block the leaves disappear completely and the trees are left bare. In less than sixty seconds, in pure visual language, we have just seen a perfect synopsis of the story.
Kathy's street is full of beautiful warm colours. A bit over saturated in fact, as if they were trying too hard to be perfect. Kathy's best friend arrives in a pastel pink two tone sedan. They have to discuss a party they are hosting soon. These are very busy women living in a perfect pastel world where everything is in its place. Or so it seems. Later that night the phone rings. It’s the police department, Kathy's husband Frank has been arrested. The way the director Todd Haynes introduces Frank says everything about his character. He is giving his back to the camera, facing a lime green wall.
Frank's world is represented as a distortion of nature's primary colours. His world is full of lime greens, magentas and secondary colours. When Kathy goes to the Police Station to pick up Frank you can see she doesn't belong there. Lime green is all over the place. Even his workplace has this lime green tint. It’s obvious now that he represents almost the opposite of what Kathy is. One night after work, he sees two men laughing on the street and decides to follow them. They walk through a dark alley. Frank hesitates but with caution decides to continue. This is a decisive moment for him, director Todd Haynes decides to use a tilt angle to reinforce this feeling. He is giving us a clue that something wrong is about to happen. Something is not right, something is crooked, like Frank.
In the 50s, homosexuality was considered an aberration. That’s the reason that Lachman uses colours that are not pleasant to the eye. When Kathy catches Frank one night with another man we see again the same tilt angle, only this time we see Kathy running away. They try hard to save the relationship but we can see more and more cold blue and purple entering Kathy's world. She can only find some glimpses of happiness in her sporadically chats with Raymond, the colour gardener that works for the family. Raymond is everything Frank is not in many ways. He's always represented by earthy colours. However we see a similar green atmosphere when Kathy goes with Raymond to a restaurant, indicating that a married white wife going with her black gardener to a restaurant isn't well seen either. 
"Far from Heaven takes place over different seasons, which are a metaphor for what’s happening to the characters emotionally. To suggest the emotional arc of the story, as the seasons changed, the night becomes an emotional texture for Frank and Kathy’s world coming apart. The fall night is more of purplish blue in transition to winter. As their relationship disintegrates and winter comes, it became more of a greenish blue, more of an acerbic night depicting the character’s isolation. As spring begins, the light becomes a purplish blue once more. It is a new beginning" Edward Lachman
So much to see and analyse on this film, so many different readings that is impossible to summarise. I'll finish it with another quote from Edward Lachman "The surface beauty of the characters’ world becomes its betrayal. It’s a beauty that they can never be part of. Ironically, they are seduced by what keeps them from their desire. The beauty points to something it denies. Kathy is always moving through all these different worlds in her picture-perfect environment, but somehow never obtaining the emotional stability of what middle class life is supposed to reward you with" 

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Color on Developing Characters and Story - Jerome Morrow - Gattaca 1997

Colour affects our emotional perception of the world.  It speaks to us on such a primary level that we barely think of it. It is there not to be seen, it is there to be felt. To understand how green can be used to reveal a character’s state of mind and personality, we can use the example of Jerome (Jude Law’s character) in the film from 1997 Gattaca.
Jerome Morrow is a genetically improved man. He lives in a world were eugenics is common, and DNA plays a primary role in determining social class. His destiny is to always be the best. But after a car accident he is now just a cripple on a wheelchair. So this is the way that director Andrew Niccol chooses to introduce him. Smoking a cigarette, Jerome is backlit with this almost toxic green light.

With this shot you can read very clearly Jerome's state of mind. You can read it on his face, on the green mouldy walls of his apartment, on the empty bottles of alcohol on the floor, on the unhealthy yellow green colour of his skin, on the wheelchair, the cigarette... it’s a fantastic master piece of character exposition.

Green is a colour that presents a duality. In its plant manifestation, it signals life itself. However green in the atmosphere, water or skin can be read it as toxic or unhealthy. “Beware of the green water” is a sailor’s warning, "You look green,  you must be sick" is another common saying.

Now, if you haven't seen the movie stop reading right now, watch the movie first and come back because I'm about to give away key moments of the movie. Vincent (Ethan Hawke) narrates at the beginning of the film how he was conceived in the back seat of a car as "faith birth". The colour Green appears this time not as a toxic environment but as a metaphor of life. However, Vincent's father disappointment on his son’s natural abilities makes him decide to visit a genetic enhancing clinic and make sure he gives his second son the best genetics tools to succeed in life.
And that’s how Anton is born. You can see from now the green colour shifting and privileging one kid over the other. Anton's clothes are always using different shades of greens while Vincent is left with more brownish earthy tones in his wardrobe.
The drama that propels the story is Vincent’s life obsession to go to the space. This is a story about commitment to a dream. About how he doesn't have any other choice left but to take another man's identity to be accepted in Gattaca. “Each day I would dispose of as much loose skin, fingernails, and hair as possible to limit how much of my INVALID self I would leave in the VALID world. At the same time, Jerome would prepare samples of his own superior body matter so I might pass for him.” His voiceover explains.

When Gattaca’s Mission Director is murdered, and through a discovery of an INVALID eyelash, Vincent becomes a suspect. The lead detective is Anton Freeman. But despite his best efforts Anton can't unmask Vincent. Filled with anger that his own brother couldn't stand to lose to him Vincent shouts to Anton:
"You wanna know how I made it?  I never save anything for the way back" alluding to a swimming game they used to play when they were kids in which the first one to get scared or exhausted and swim back to shore would lose. At the end of the film we see how colours support the characters in a different ways. Jerome gains and changes so much helping Vincent that all the green has disappeared from his environment. He gives a letter to Vincent to be opened only when he is in space. Vincent says, “I don’t know how to thank you.” Jerome replies, “I got the better end of the deal. I only lent you my body. You lent me your dream.” Vincent will walk through a green tunnel that leads to a spaceship that would take him to the stars.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Camera Obscura Portraits for Everyone

After 2 years spent perfectioning this technique, I'm happy to finally offer this special type of portrait to anybody looking for something different and of unique value.

Using techniques available since Leonardo’s days (without Photoshop), I aim to give you the most complete and compelling portrait you can get. Showing not only yourself, but also your most personal space and the view you see/wake up to every morning from your window, projected on you. All that, by using only natural light.

BOOK IT NOW (for October and November)
Phone: 0415639223
Email: info@mauriciodelarocha.com

Price: starts from 300$

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The House of Screams

The mind is without a doubt, a complex and fascinating place, full of light, doors that open and close, secret passageways and hidden places.  The mind is capable of doing surprising things and at times, when it is bored, it can pass the time creating irrational thoughts.

I like to think that ideas are always inside oneself and live kept in one’s head, resting and waiting for that stimulation that will let them know when it is time to leave the nest and enter this world.  The interesting part comes when they are never provocted, when the mind is bored.  They can seem like innocent day dreams, or a distraction, a change in scenary or a tirp to another world.  However, when one mindlessly drifts off, the ideas do not escape.  This is what is most frustrating. Impatience errupts, they yell at eachother and stop listening to one another.  Many try to get out but through the wrong door.  Anarchy opens way and the house is turned into chaos.  

Only when the mind decides to end its game, will it turn on the lights, open all the doors, and with a great force, expel all escaped turmoil.  It is then, when control will be taken back, and reasoning will be ceased.

Mauricio, Buenos Aires, 2008



Is unusual that I come back and work again on previous projects. However The House of Screams has a very special meaning for me. Was my first real attempt to tell a story with photographs. A few weeks ago I though it would be interesting replace the original 18 photographs from the series and make a slide show with some music. I love the result. Below is the original text I wrote in 2008, in spanish of course.

La Casa de los Gritos

El cerebro sin lugar a dudas es un lugar fascinante mente complejo, lleno de luz, puertas que se abren o cierran y pasajes secretos a lugares desconocidos. La mente es capaz de hacer cosas sorprendentes, y a veces cuando esta aburrida mata el tiempo tomándole el pelo y jugándole bromas a la razón. 

Me gusta pensar que las ideas están desde siempre dentro de uno, que viven guardadas en la cabeza, descansando y esperando el estimulo correcto que les indica que es hora de dejar el nido y salir al mundo. La parte interesante empieza cuando los estímulos no vienen, cuando la mente se aburre. Puede al principio parecer un inocente sueño diurno, o tal vez una distracción. Un cambio de escenario o un viaje a otro mundo. Pero mientras uno divaga la verdad es que las ideas no salen. Y eso definitivamente las frustra, se impacientan rápidamente, empiezan a levantar la voz pronto dejan de escucharse entre ellas, muchas intentan salir por la puerta equivocada. La anarquía se abre paso y la casa se vuelve un caos.

Solo la mente cuando decide terminar su juego ordena apagar las luces, ordena abrir todas puertas y con un estruendoso sonido expulsa a todo anarquista suelto. Es ahí cuando retoma el control, y se lo cede a la razón.

Mauricio, Buenos Aires, 2008

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Portrait of a Photographer

Scott McGale Portrait from Mauricio De la Rocha G on Vimeo.

Scott is a highly regarded professional photographer with nearly 20 years experience. He began his photographic career in London, and worked there as a pro for 12 years before returning to his native Australia, and now resides in Sydney. In 2008, he started teaching photography where he developed a real passion for teaching that has led to the opening of Photo Workshop Australia

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Workaholism as a Creative Block

Workaholism is an addiction, and like all addictions it blocks our creative energy. If we're too busy to write a play, to finish that paint, to take that sailing class, or to shoot that film, we're probably too busy to listen to our creative inner voice. Rather than trusting our intuition, our talent, our skill, our desire, we are afraid of where this creative energy could take us and we choose to be blocked. At least when we are blocked, we know who and what we are, unhappy and incomplete people. Once unblocked, we may experience something way more threatening… happiness.

Excess of work is only one of many creative blocks. The need to be a great artist makes it hard to be an artist. The need to produce great work of art makes it hard to produce any art at all. We need time for that and we're too busy working.

Do not call it procrastination or laziness. Call it fear.

Creativity requires activity. And most of us hate doing something when we can obsess about something else instead. We all have creative blocks. Work has been mine since the beginning of the year. It is good to take some time off now, step back and take stock of the situation in order to return to the doing column.

It’s funny how the mind works. After 4 months of not sharing what I think or do, doubts started popping in my head, such as, what if what I'm writing is not good enough to even share it? Writing this few lines made me very happy this morning. Because, in my case, writing about what I'm doing or thinking, helps me keeping some of my fears away.

Working is good, don't get me wrong. Actually, it is essential in order to create something. It is the abuse of it that makes it a creative issue. Having the time, and taking the time to try new things, learn new skills, and try new experience is mandatory to stay creative.

Mauricio


"Question: Do you know how old I'll be by the time I learn to play piano?
Answer: The same age you will be if you don't."

-Julia Cameron

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Colab Eyewear



It was a pleasure to work on this video for the people of Colab Eyewear, their sunnies are truly amazing. My personal favourite is the Askill model for different reasons.., I love the design of course, but I'm also a huge fan of the Askill brother's art work. In fact Daniel and Lorin have been a source of inspiration for my photographic and film work in many ways.

Photography by Petter Karlstrom
Styling by Leigh Karlstrom
Hair and Make Up by Shelly Lin
Models Kristina Agioski & Bryce Sykes
Music by Psychic Ills - I'll Follow You Through the Floor