The Cinematography Podcast Episode 138: Ferdinando Cito Filomarino and Sayombhu Mukdeeprom
Director Ferdinando Cito Filomarino and cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom have worked together on Call Me By Your Name and Suspira. Ferdinando served as the second unit director on both films. Beckett is the second feature Ferdinando has written and directed. Sayombhu also shot Ferdinando’s first feature, Antonia, and was Oscar-nominated for his cinematography on Call Me By Your Name. Prior to his experience working with Ferdinando and director Luca Guadagnino, Sayombhu built his cinematography career in Thailand, shooting films such as the Cannes festival winner, Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul.
Beckett is a thriller, reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock films, starring John David Washington as an American vacationing in Greece with his girlfriend, played by Alicia Vikander. After a tragic accident, Beckett is pursued by the police and drawn into a political conspiracy while being chased across the country. Ferdinando intended to have the film nod at Hitchcock, but he wanted to stay away from the heightened, perfectly choreographed elements of Hitchcock movies such as North By Northwest, where every scene is a spectacle, with amazing set pieces following one after the other. For Beckett, Ferdinando liked the idea of shooting everything with very natural light, keeping the movie grounded and not quite so heightened. As a hero, Beckett is relatable and believable- when he fights or runs, he sweats, gets out of breath and becomes seriously injured, and all of the action sequences are grounded in reality.
Sayombhu enjoys shooting films using natural light, preferring to reshape or bounce sunlight. If he has to use lights, he uses as few as possible, and in a way that’s almost invisible. He also prefers to light the environment rather than the actor, to give them space to move around, so that they can live in the moment and he can capture it as it happens. When Sayombhu scouts locations, he uses his eyes and his gut feeling to explore the place and memorizes the kind of natural light available, noticing potential issues before figuring out how to overcome them.
To have a good rapport with a director, Sayombhu suggests listening to the director first, and only then make a suggestion that would make it better. Ferdinando enjoys collaborating with Sayombhu because they both understand the importance of preparation during pre-production and research, and they have similar taste in filmmaking and visual language.
Find Ferdinando Cito Filomarino
Find Sayombhu Mukdeeprom
You can watch Beckett on Netflix.
Close Focus: Candyman, directed by Nia daCosta, is the highest grossing movie in America right now, and the first time a Black woman has directed the number one movie at the box office.
Ben’s short end: A YouTube channel called Macro Room started by Ben Ouaniche, a cinematographer based in Tel-Aviv, Israel. He shoots everything in slow motion, such as water balloons popping and a cookie splashing into a cup of milk.
Illya’s short end: The trailer for the new Dune movie looks epic.
Sponsored by Hot Rod Cameras
Sponsored by Aputure: The Aputure Amaran 200d is an incredibly bright, lightweight, daylight balanced light perfect for content creators and video production. You can buy one at Hot Rod Cameras for just $299.
LIKE AND FOLLOW US, send fan mail or suggestions!
Facebook:@cinepod
Instagram: @thecinepod
Twitter: @ShortEndz
Podcast Credits:
Editor in Chief: Illya Friedman. Email: editor@camnoir.com
Instagram: @illyafriedman @hotrodcameras
@neptunesalad twitter
@bejamin_rock instagram
Producer: Alana Kode
Editor: Ben Katz
Composer: Kays Al-Atrakchi
Subscribe to the Podcast on Apple Podcasts or click on the link below to listen here
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 47:21 — 65.0MB)