Via Collider.com:
When filmmakers Phil Lord and Chris Miller were announced as the directors of Lucasfilm’s untitled “Young Han Solo” film, the reaction was one of both surprise and elation. Between 21 and 22 Jump Street, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, and The LEGO Movie, Lord and Miller have made a career out of turning “bad ideas” into spectacular films, so who better to tackle a movie that presents audiences with the first non-Harrison Ford Han Solo?
While this Han Solo film certainly marks Lord and Miller’s biggest project to date, it sounds like the duo were hired precisely for their knack of subverting expectations and telling stories that are at once cinematically compelling, emotionally engaging, and thematically thought-provoking. I recently got the chance to speak with cinematographer Bradford Young in anticipation of the release of the incredible Denis Villeneuve-directed sci-fi drama Arrival, and seeing as how Young was recently announced as the cinematographer on the Han Solo film, we briefly discussed their tremendously exciting plans for the Star Wars anthology film.
As one of the best cinematographers working today, fresh off stunning work in films like Selma and A Most Violent Year, Young was a thrilling and yet somewhat surprising choice as DP for the Han Solo movie given his drama-heavy resume. Young admitted that he at first thought it a bit of an odd fit for him to team up with Lord and Miller on the Han Solo film, but he quickly realized he and the filmmakers share the same ambitions when it comes to moviemaking:
“It’s funny, here’s the thing about Phil Lord and Chris Miller: don’t let their track record fool you. Don’t put those guys in a box because they have a vision, they know exactly what they want. They have no hidden agenda, but they do have an agenda; they have a way of seeing that’s very special, and their collaboration is genuinely unique. So I have to say I had to get converted into that. I respect their work, I respect them as filmmakers, but I wasn’t quite sure if there would be a good marriage between what I’m trying to pursue and the work that I’m doing and what they’re doing, but they helped make that real clear to me early on by expressing some real interesting story [and] photographic ideas that really resonated with me. So once they started really pulling me into that world, I realized how much these cats have come from the same pedagogy of filmmaking—in the visual sense for sure, and definitely from an approach in terms of how we want to make movies, they come from the same school.”
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