Saturday, 7 July 2018

Charlotte Bruus Christensen on Visually Capturing the Silence of ‘A Quiet Place’

We chat with the cinematographer about visually representing the unique scares of A Quiet Place.

Horror films always rely on craft. There is an art to them, for sure, but there is also a science in achieving peak screams from your audience. Some problems can be solved with cheap arithmetic. The jump scare accentuated with a sharp violin string will send any viewer shrieking towards the ceiling. Other terrors require a little algebra, maybe some calculus or dreaded trigonometry.

To solve the terror of A Quiet Place, director John Krasinski needed a tactician up for a challenge. Simplistic additions of 1 + 2 = Jump Scare would be required, but a whole heap of geometry would come into play as well. Maybe even a few fractions. While this was not his first rodeo by any means, Krasinski needed a visual stylist he could trust in taking on his first bout of alien horror, and cinematographer Charlotte Bruus Christensen came prepared with a long list accomplished cinematic equations.

The post Charlotte Bruus Christensen on Visually Capturing the Silence of ‘A Quiet Place’ appeared first on Film School Rejects.

No comments:

Post a Comment