



This post continues my account of a two-day visit with Greig Fraser, ASC, ACS, on the set of Rogue One at Pinewood studios, and features part of my subsequent conversations with the cinematographer at Camerimage, and via Skype. If you haven’t already done so, you may want to start by reading my previous post about my first day on the set. 1. Lighting the Set with Virtual Images

2. Lighting Everything with LEDs

3. LED Color Finesse

4. Soft & Sharp

5. Natural Lighting

6. Blue & White Screens

7. Shower Curtain

8. Darth Vader’s Helmet

9. Technocranes Versus Dollies

10. The First Take

11. Fear and Excitement 1. Lighting the Set with Virtual Images Greig Fraser has kindly invited me to return for a set visit to Rogue for a second day. After once again navigating the security checkpoints, I arrive to see a 20 foot cube, whose pitch, yaw and roll are controlled by a giant gimbal mechanism. Inside the cube is the interior of the Rebels’ U-wing starfighter, where director Gareth Edwards is shooting the actors handheld with an Alexa 65.



Greig stands some 30 feet away from the gimbal, looking at the video assist and overseeing the interactive lighting, which is provided by a gigantic LED screen surrounding the set in a U-shaped configuration. Supplied by VER, the screen measures approximately 160 feet long and 20 feet tall, and is made up of some 600 lightweight, high brightness WinVision Air 9mm LED panels. Additional panels above, below and in mobile configurations provide supplemental coverage for the set. The image on the LED panels is a virtual planet from space, and then a closer view of the planet’s landscape as the U-wing spaceship “flies” over it. What’s impressive about this set-up is that the inside of the space ship is being lit by the image of a virtual planet created by computer graphics. This is a lighting technique I first saw pioneered by Emmanuel Lubezki, ASC, AMC, on Gravity. The Rogue One set takes this concept of lighting real actors with virtual landscapes to a larger scale. 2. Lighting Everything with LEDs Months after my set visit, I speak to Greig about Rogue One when we meet at Camerimage. We continue our conversation via Skype in the weeks that follow. Benjamin B: Did you really manage to light Rogue One entirely with LEDs? Greig Fraser: We did have one set with HMIs on the Scarif control tower set, but effectively, yes. During prep I put the argument forward to production and to the rental company that, with these lights — the Digital Sputniks, the Creamsources , the Arri SkyPanels, the Litegear LiteRibbon — there were finally enough LED tools to do an entire movie with just LEDs and natural light. Everybody agreed.



BB: Why choose LEDs ? They are more expensive than Tungsten and HMI technologies. Fraser: On this film, we had the resources to be able to afford them, and that cost was offset by big savings in energy, wiring and gels. We also used lights for effects. On the wet set you visited, we used 4-by-4 DS units to simulate the light from X-wings flying above and bombing the planet. [Special-effects supervisor] Neil Corbould helped to build a trolly system on a steel girder to run DS lights from one end of the stage to another; we could fly over, but we couldn’t drop down. For a landing-light effect, we put nine Digital Sputniks on a crane with a remote head, and an electrician used the wheels to move the beam as it came down to the stage.



BB: The wet set was very moody and dark. Fraser: The idea was a planet with an eternal dusk. So color was very important, and we hung 30 Creamsource Sky units above at 11000 degrees Kelvin. The mood was heightened by smoke and water vapor, and a painted backing, with Skypanels as cyc lights and more DS units to create colored laser effects. I kept the lights even lower to make the landing light stand out. 3. LED Color Finesse Fraser: See the subtle mixture of daylight colors on my hand here? [Greig moves his hand near the window in the Camerimage café] It’s almost impossible to achieve that color with Tungsten, and even with HMIs. But with LEDs it can easily be achieved. BB: You feel you get more precise colors with LEDs, and perhaps four-color LEDs? Fraser: Yeah, with RGB plus White or RGB plus Amber, you get colors that you can’t get quickly with gels. The traditional way is to think in terms of ¼ or ½ Blue or Orange, but speaking with Kaur and Kaspar Kallas from Digital Sputnik, they think of it differently. They come from the postproduction side, and they say: ‘Let’s manipulate color like we do in the DI.’ BB: You mean like: ‘Give me a point of red’? Fraser: Exactly. But instead of talking about a 2-dimensional image, you can make it 3-dimensional. You can sit on set and do each source; you can go, ‘Let’s desaturate this one, let’s take some blue out of that one and add some red there.’ There’s a massive color chasm that I wasn’t aware of before. I used to look at HMIs and say: ‘That’s a little green or magenta’. That now seems like 3-year old speak. The present LED technology goes so much farther. BB: But all these sources have to be controlled by DMX? Fraser: This is the next problem, which is that unfortunately, DMX is not good enough. DMX is built for the theater. You can add color, but not minute color. Especially when you’re talking about a camera like the Alexa 65 that sees Color so intimately. I would like to see a better interactive interface for color control of DMX: something like the DaVinci Resolve or Baselight. I would love to have that at my fingertips. Of course there’s the counter-argument: you don’t want to be going: ‘Wait a minute’ and go through every single source on the set while everyone’s standing around freezing cold and wet! [laughter] 4. Soft & Sharp BB: What was your overall lighting approach for Rogue One? Fraser: It’s the combination of soft lighting, soft lenses and a sharp format that gave us the right look and feel. We built lights into the props with Digital Sputnicks, the same lights we used as sky lights and wall lights. We also built LED LiteRibbons from LiteGear into the sets, they were RGB plus Amber or White, which meant we could have the same control and finesse that we had with the other LED units.

5. Natural Lighting Fraser: I think natural lighting is the most beautiful; if I could do everything with natural lighting, I would. But we have to light because we’re working on stages and we have to illuminate the actors and action — not to mention hyperspace! So you have to come up with ways of either controlling natural light or coming up with lighting that looks just as natural.