On Tue, 7 Sep 2004 14:08:38 -0700 (PDT), John Mason <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> 
> Me, too.  The intimacy of the photography in Lost in
> Translation killed me, in part because find myself
> doing a lot of close, interior, fly-on-the-wall
> available light shooting.  Yes, I know that L in T was
> not shot available light, but much had that look.
> 
> Watched Girl with a Pearl Earring twice on an 16 hour
> flight (one stop for fuel in Cape Verde) earlier this
> summer.  More intimacy, more gorgeous available light
> (or the illusion thereof).  Liked the way the film
> evoked, but didn't mimic Vermeer.
> 
> Humm...  Scarlett Johansson in both movies.  Couldn't
> have affected my appreciation of the cinematography,
> could it?
> 

Scarlett is ~such~ a babe!  (sorry for being politically incorrect,
but it's the truth...).

Of course another interesting thing about Lost in Translation is that
Scarlett's dopy photographer boyfriend used a Pentax 6x7.  I know it's
been mentioned here before, but what the hell.

Haven't seen Pearl Earring yet but I want to - heard lots of good
things about it.

cheers,
frank


-- 
"It's about time we started to take photography seriously and treat it
as a hobby." -Eliott Erwitt

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