To celebrate the release of Barry Jenkins’ miraculous new feature If Beale Street Could Talk, we asked video essayist Luís Azevedo to look back over the American filmmaker’s career – starting with his 2008 debut Medicine for Melancholy – to explore the evolution of his distinct visual style.
Here’s what Azevedo had to say about the project:
“You could look at the most recent work of Barry Jenkins and intuitively understand how precisely he paints with a camera, yet you don’t need to. Jenkins first spelled out his deep interest in light, colour and the inception of images in a 2011 short. The first sentence of Chlorophyl explains the mechanics of the green pigment: ‘Its main function is to absorb light’.
“The parallel with cinema is obvious: light travels through the camera until it is absorbed by the chemical coating on film. Despite relying in digital cameras, especially the Alexa, the work Jenkins develops with long-time collaborator James Laxton is hyper-conscious of the intricacies of film and attentive to impact of subtle –and not so subtle – colour nuances.
“Their first collaboration, My Josephine is awash in green, as if the images were spun in an emerald-sock-tainted washing machine. When purple invades the frame in Moonlight it’s not only the result of mixing red and blue, but the combination of trauma and years of reflection. And we don’t quite know if when the mostly black-and-white Medicine for Melancholy finds colour in its ultimate instances, we’re entering or leaving a colour/colourless haze.
“More than an understanding of the mechanics of light and the complexity of the Arri Alexa 65, the work of Barry Jenkins denotes a unique emotional intelligence in the way he approaches pictures. He’s one of the few bold yet personal stylists that came out of the blue, fully-formed since his film school days – perhaps since he was rocked in the cradle.”
Watch Barry Jenkins In Colour below and share your thoughts with us @LWLies
Published 12 Feb 2019
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The Moonlight director sits down to pick apart his wonderful James Baldwin adaptation, If Beale Street Could Talk.
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