Martin Scorsese's films contain many homages to
classic motion pictures the techniques of influential
directors often find new applications under his inventive hand.
With his latest picture Scorsese takes that trend one step further
by remaking the 1962 thriller CAPE FEAR, which was directed by
J. Lee Thompson and photographed by Sam Leavitt, ASC. A vigilante
picture which met with some scathing criticism in its day (due to
its violence and what some termed its "amorality"), the original
has become a recognized classic.
Adapted from a John D. MacDonald novel, The Executioners, the
original CAPE FEAR starred Robert Mitchum as the psychopath Max Cady.
Released from prison, Cady seeks to exact revenge upon Sam Bowden
(Gregory Peck), the attorney he blames for his incarceration. Cady's
unsettling presence haunts the lawyer and his family, who, trapped in
their own home, expect the ex-con to descend upon them at any moment.
Finaly escaping to the apparent isolation of the Cape Fear River, the
Bowdens find their weaknesses and insecurities exposed when they must
resort to violence to restore order.
Scorsese's remake, produced for Universal Pictures by Steven Spielberg's
Amblin Entertainment, stars Robert De Niro as Cady and Nick Nolte as Sam
Bowden. The cast also features Jessica Lange, Joe Don Baker and
in cameo roles Peck, Mitchum and Martin Balsam.
Scorsese was interested in recreating the tension and atmosphere of an
old-fashioned melodrama while incorporating the edginess and "hyper-reality"
(his term) that distinguinsed his work on previous efforts such as TAXI DRIVER,
RAGING BULL, AFTER HOURS and GOODFELLAS.
For cinematograher, Scorsese chose Freddie Francis, BSC. "The main
thing was Freddie's understanding of the concept of the Gothic atmosphere,"
Scorsese explained. "He knows the atmosphere that I want for this picture.
He knows the lighting whatever it takes to get that incredible,
Gothic thriller look. He understands the obligatory scene of a young maiden
with a candle walking down a long hall towards a door. 'Don't go in that
door!' you yell, and she goes in! Every time she goes in! So I say
to him, 'This has to look like The Hall,' and he understands that."
Francis was interested in working with Scorsese, but was also drawn to the
project by his memories of the original CAPE FEAR. "Funny enough, though I
didn't remember the original picture in detail, thinking back I remembered
the mood of it, and as far as I'm concerned a very important part of any
picture is if it captures a mood. I don't want to do a film unless I've got
a chance to create a mood and an atmosphere, which is what I think my job
is," he states. "Anybody can photograph a film you can just put lights
on and make an exposure. I want the challenge of creating an atmosphere and
the right frame for the director."
Although Francis recently won his second Academy Award (for GLORY), he earned his
reputation with black & white cinematography, on ROOM AT THE TOP, SONS AND
LOVERS and, later, THE ELEPHANT MAN. Scorsese wanted to replicate the stark
contrast and murkiness of black & white photography, which Francis finds easy
to do: "I don't really know anything about color. I still photograph things
in black & white, but the fact that it's color stock means they come out in
color. I know that sounds rather facetious I am rather facetious
anyway but I prefer to think in terms of light and shade than in
color."
"One of the ideas I had for the film," he continues, "was how normal people
living in a normal house change, so that the atmosphere of the house changes
with them it degrades as the story goes along. The thing starts off
bright and sunny and then slowly gets more downbeat, reaching the lowest depths
when we get into the tank for the final sequence. From the beginning the
house was a very light and airy place, but always recognized was the fact
that it was hemmed in, as if the trees at any time would close in on the
house like a lot of Triffids."
[Francis' reference to "Triffids" recalls his extensive work for the Hammer and
Amicus studios of the '60s and '70s. He directed more than 30 films over the
course of 15 years, mostly of the horror ghenre. DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS was a
sci-fi thriller where ambulatory plants called Triffids take a stab at ruling
the Earth.]
Francis has always been an advocate of source-true lighting. "As I have always
said, before I light a scene, I have to find a reason for it," he states simply.
"The light has to come from somewhere." However, this particular film's low
lighting conditions have limited him to a certain extent, since the figure
of the psychopath Cady is supposed to lurk ambiguously in the shadows.
Shooting in Panavision and Cinemascope, Francis has discovered difficulties
using currently available 'Scope lenses to film deep-focus on what is
essential a very dark movie.
"Most people forgot about CinemaScope about 10 or 12 years ago, and so we
are really working with very old equipment. For the sort of stuff Marty
wanted, we had some trouble with the lenses; they have a limited focus
range. Panavision has improved CinemaScope lenses just recently
they have one set of new lenses which I gather are very good but
unfortuantely, that's [out on] another movie."
Early on, Francis considered using special filters he developed for THE INNOCENTS.
The filters shaded selected areas of the CinemaScope frame, thereby concentrating
attention towards sepcific characters. "What it did was make the edges murky
so you didn't quite know what was going on just outside the main point of
vision, so we could keep the interest up in the center," he relates. "It
worked in that instance, but here it's a different thing. There's a family
in the middle that being terrorized by this man on the outside. This
horrible Cady character is so evil, he outwits these people at every turn
and they can't get away from him; he's always hovering on the outside.
To my mind, that has been the overriding reasons we haven't used those
filters, although I may use them in the tank when we do the long shots of
the boat: we close in on the boat and the edges are sort of mysterious and
dark."
Francis adds, "I always use Eastman Kodak I've never used anything
else and this time I tried the 5248 and 52 96. I find that given
the areas and locations we've been working in, I've had to use the fast
stock for about 80 percent of the picture."
Scorsese admits to allowing Francis enormous freedom, but Francis initially
found the lack of detailed communication, and the director's seemingly
removed presence on the set, somewhat off-putting. The elaborate storyboarding
went a long way towards facilitating their collaboration. "When we spoke
originally about the movie, we were both on the same wavelength. He had the
film firmly in his mind before we started, and I knew exactly where he
wanted to go with it. But as far as the nuts and bolts of shooting are
concerned, our methods are very, very different. It's my job to get into
the swing of it, though I don't expect Marty to change his methods [to
suit me]."
"Marty hates being on the set outlining a shot; he'd rather talk about it
and then stay off until we've done it," he continues. "It was very
disconcerting for me to just sort of discuss an effect with Marty, then
have to go on the set and plan roughly what I think he wanted. I have to
be right on the floor, right by the camera, to control and speed the
thing along. Marty likes to be by the television remote, and this was a
bit difficult for me. I can't operate unless I'm right by the camera.
But that's my method, and this is his method."
Although Scorsese scrupulously plans out the style and speed of each scene,
he can be open to improvisation once he arrives on a location with the
actors. He also favors extremely kinetic camera moves, which means that
Francis has to be prepared for anything. "Particular setups are something
that I find very difficult to think of too much in advance, especially
with Marty. The camera's swinging all over the place shooting
upward, downward, backward and forward and it would be mad to
think in advance how you're going to do that; you think you're going to
do a shot with a set camera, and then suddenly you find the camera is
rotating about 360 degrees.
"Martin's a great 'editing room director.' I know that we may be doing a
shot that runs for about 30 or 40 seconds with a complicated movement,
and then he'll pick out about 24 franmes, go away in peace with [editor]
Thelma Schoonmaker and piece them together."
Having worked as a director himself, Francis is generally cautious about
imposing too many of his own ideas when he serves as a cinematographer.
In the case of CAPE FEAR, however, he feels that he may have undecut his
usefulness to Scorsese by not pushing the boundaries of their relationship.
"There was an enormous amount of room for me to play around with, but I
didm't know how much to jump in. In the last few weeks, because we got
into the tank and some special effects something Marty's never
been involved with before I found that I was making far more
suggestions than I usually make to directors. So I think we achieved a
good working method but it took a long time!"
CAPE FEAR is the first widescreen picture directed by Scorsese, whose
films are known for their intimate, gritty film. While working on FEAR,
he luxuriated in the compositions while simultaneously fretting about the
massive array of equipment needed to produce a clear, sharp 'Scope image,
even when using handheld cameras. Scorsese was also frustrated that he
had to shoot the Bowden house scenes in a real house, since he had hoped
to shoot much of the picture on swing sets.
Several sets were built to accommodate shooting, but the majority of scenes
were shot on actual locations in the Fort Lauderdale/Miami area. This
meant that Francis had to squeeze equipment into some confining interiors,
particularly for thiose scenes where Scorsese shoots with two cameras to
cover the reactions of all his actors. "We did one scene of Bob De Niro
coming out of prison, where we had a great crane in a small prison area,
about 20 or 30 cells on two different levels, and started a long sequence
of Bob in the cell; then the camera has to draw back through the bars
we had some collapsing bars and Bob comes out of the cell
and walks around the prison and goes out.
"There had been problems of falling behind schedule ever since day one,"
relates Francis. "Obviously the complicated camera movements have something
to do with it, but then again this is the style which Marty wanted. So
I've said to these production people, 'Look, every day we work we get a
little further behind. Why don't we have two or three weeks off, to see
if we can catch up? But they don't think that's very bright!"
The most technically demanding sequence of CAPE FEAR is the climactic
confrontation between the Bowden family and Cady, which takes place aboard
a houseboat on the Cape Fear River, during a violent storm. A 90-foot-long
water tank, housed within a soundstage constructed specially for this
production, was equipped with rocking gimbals for a mockup of the boat,
as well as rain and wind machines.
Francis, of course, has seen this kind of thing before: in 1956 he
photographed the effects and models for MOBY DICK. "That was about a
hundred years ago," he chuckles.
Though shooting in the CAPE FEAR tank went several days over schedule,
the sequence adheres very closely to the original storyboard sketches.
The characters' anxiety at being trapped within the confines of a small
houseboat is signaled by distorted and skewed camera angles and movements,
and by the intensity of the close-ups. "From those sketches I knew
exactly what Marty had in mind, so I worked towards that end. It's
difficult to find improvements on sketches; it's easier when you get on
the actual locations, for these [storyboards] were mere figments of
Marty's imagination.
"Though he's not used to special effects pictures, Marty does adhere to
these storyboards. If you're storyboarding a sequence, once you start
going away from the those storyboards, the rest of the storyboards become
of no consequence. So Marty sicks to them. Of course, once you get under
way, the physical things sometimes outweigh the storyboards, and you have
to adapt."
Francis kept his lighting setup simple. "I had some space lights, which
supplied a sort of general, half-a-key light. Then we had rather large
light sources with which we were backlighting and three-quarter-lighting
the battling actors. For the lighting, we used 12Ks with old-fashioned
brute dimmer shutters.
"We made great use of a piece of equipment called the Panatate," he
continues. "It's a mount designed for revolving the camera, which we did
several times on various shots. But we also used it as what we call a
'sea head,' the kind of mount one would want on a boat to give it the
feeling of rocking back and forth. The Panatate worked very well for
that in fact it was better than the normal sea head. It's very
adaptable.
"Marty gets very involved in these things," Francis continues. "I
introduced the Panatate to him, and he used it in an unusual way, to
produce some very dynamic shots not just to give the sense of
pitching and rolling, but to give the story a dynamic twist now and then."
Francis' adherence to source lighting was tested during the night scenes
on the boat. His response was typically pragmatic. "I had to figure out
where the light was coming from," he says. "In addition to the lighting,
I've got water running all down the windows of the boat, which catches
the light. Then one had additional sense of distant lighting. Much of the
fight takes place almost in silhouette., In fact, when De Niro and Nick Nolte
are fighting and the boat is breaking up, I persuaded Martin at one point
to kill all the lights and conduct this fight in the dark. Well, how does
one go about that? How can I make this absolutely pitch black but so that
everybody can see it?
"The light that we put in is what we refer to as 'customer's moonlight,'"
he reveals with a smile. "It's just enough light so that the customers who
pay to see this film can see what's going on. One keeps it shadowless as
much as possible, but with just enough exposure to see what's going on.
"For the storm sequence we were using Kodak 5296 almost exclusively; I
usually rated it anywhere from 400 to 500 ASA, but I find that with modern
development, the negative remains the same regardless of the rating. You
almost can't underexpose the stuff, unless you try very hard."
In post-production, miniatures of the houseboat were shot in England (under
Francis' supervision); for this reason, the ending of the film was the
first sequence edited by Scorsese and Schoonmaker. Matte paintings were
created by Syd Dutton and Bill Taylor, ASC of Illusion Arts of Los Angeles,
whom Francis has used in the past. One matte shot comes early in the film,
as Cady is released from prison. The painting, suggested by a production
painting by Henry Bumstead, extends the foreground of the prison gate
(shot at a Southern Florida women's detention facility), and features an
ominous, boiling sky in the background. "Illusion Arts presented Marty
with several different skies, and asked, 'Which sky do you want?'"
Francis remembers.
"I think the mood of the picture, regardless of my contributions, is
there," Francis concludes. "It's quite frightening, and that to my mind
is coming across. That's rewarding, because it means we were all going
forward in the right direction."
Update:
Francis' most recent credits include SCHOOL TIES,
PRINCESS CARABOO, and David Lynch's THE STRAIGHT STORY, for which
Francis received the New York Film Critics Circle's Cinematography Award.
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