Hartford Courant

It’s all there in black and white for these films

- By Chris Hewitt

Hollywood’s award season has been invaded by monochroma­tic films.

Four awards contenders are ROYGBIV-LESS: Kenneth Branagh’s “Belfast,” “C’mon C’mon” with Joaquin Phoenix, Rebecca Hall’s “Passing” and Joel Coen’s “The Tragedy of Macbeth.” That could be more noncolor films than we’ve had at any one time since their premature “death” in 1966, the last year an Oscar was given for black-and-white cinematogr­aphy (“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ” won).

There are plenty of reasons to shoot a movie in black and white, but often it’s to anchor it in the past. Our great-grandmothe­rs — and everything else — were in color, of course, but monochroma­tic images seem to take us back, perhaps because we’re aware that black-and-white photograph­s preceded color ones. Draining the frame of color immediatel­y transports us out of the present and into whatever tale the filmmakers have dreamed up.

“Belfast” takes clever liberties with that. Cinematogr­apher Haris Zambarlouk­os opens it with color images of the city today before shifting to 1969 and going black and white.

But, at key moments in the movie, color is reintroduc­ed.

When the central family goes to the movies, they stay in black and white but “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” is in vivid color, maybe to hint there’s a life for them far from the troubles that rage outside their front door. When the film’s Buddy (Jude Hill) and his grandmothe­r (Judi Dench) attend a production of “A Christmas Carol,” it’s also in color. As the ghosts tell Ebenezer Scrooge about the future he could have, we see the stage actors reflected — in color — in Dench’s black-and-white glasses.

Obviously, Branagh is not the first contempora­ry director to fall in love with black-and-white images. Joel and Ethan Coen (“The Man Who Wasn’t There”), Steven Spielberg (“Schindler’s List”), Alfonso Cuaron (“Roma”) and

David Fincher (“Mank”) are right there with him. Those films were all nominated for cinematogr­aphy Oscars, and it would not be surprising to see a couple of this year’s films join that club.

Two fairly recent best picture winners, “Schindler” and “The Artist,” demonstrat­e that Oscar voters like black and white almost as much as folks such as Steven Soderbergh, whose “Kafka” is colorless and who loves the look so much that he created a version of “Raiders of the Lost Ark” in the monochroma­tic style of the ’40s movies to which “Raiders” pays homage.

George Miller has even claimed his masterpiec­e “Mad Max: Fury Road” is better in a black-and-white alternate version, not the color one that was released. You can watch it and judge for yourself, or take a look at a comparison of scenes in both versions, which illustrate­s how mesmerizin­g the giant sandstorm is in eerie shades of gray.

Still, many moviegoers seem to want color. Blackand-white films rarely become hits (you’d have to go back to “Schindler” in 1993).

That’s why filmmakers must fight for it passionate­ly, and maybe why the few movies that do get made that way tend to be good, or at least good looking.

Both are true of the following latter-day blackand-white movies, which don’t need color to make an impact.

‘The Man Who Wasn’t There’: The Coens’ melodrama was shot by frequent collaborat­or Roger Deakins, who earned one of his 15 Oscar nomination­s because he does such inventive things with the camera. He nods to the film noir movies that inspired “Man” with, for instance, a shot in which bars of light trap Billy Bob Thornton as he’s about to head to the slammer.

Nostalgia isn’t the aim in this Oscar nominee for direction (Pawel Pawlikowsk­i) and cinematogr­aphy (Lukasz Zal), although it is set in the 1950s. Black and white is a way of visualizin­g the relationsh­ip of a man and woman whose temperamen­ts are so diametrica­lly opposed that their romance is doomed.

‘Raging Bull’: A paradox: Black-and-white movies feel gritty and realistic, even though reality is not black and white. The events depicted in Martin Scorsese’s boxing-themed drama occurred, but cinematogr­apher Michael Chapman achieves a dreamlike, surreal quality with weird flashes of light as well as sped-up and slowed-down images. Chapman said the idea was to reflect the reality of title character Jake Lamotta, who’s split between cool confidence in the ring and chaos outside of it.

‘Frances Ha’: Black and white is usually reserved for dramas, but Noah Baumbach’s comedy is an exception, in which he and cinematogr­apher Sam Levy chose a blurry, deliberate­ly low-fi look to salute the French New Wave movies, such as “Jules and Jim,” that inspired them.

Just as rare as a comedy in black and white is a documentar­y. It often includes archival footage but “Time” achieves its moody tone by draining color from all the inspiring, frustratin­g and hopeful scenes of Fox Rich, who raises six kids on her own while fighting for her husband’s release from prison.

Spike Lee may have shot in black and white because it’s stylishly melancholy, but it also underlines a key theme, which is that white people make it difficult for Nola Darling, who is Black and dating around, to find profession­al or personal happiness.

‘Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid’: The Steve Martin comedy is droll, but its real achievemen­t is its technical wizardry. The script works Martin’s gumshoe character into existing film noir movies, then cinematogr­apher Chapman matched contempora­ry footage of Martin and others with existing scenes featuring Humphrey Bogart and

Joan Crawford. It sounds like it wouldn’t work but it does, and it demonstrat­es how many different variations of black and white are possible.

 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON ?? Billy Bob Thornton and Frances Mcdormand in the Ethan and Joel Coen film “The Man Who Wasn’t There.” ‘Cold War’: ‘Time’: ‘She’s Gotta Have It’:
MELINDA SUE GORDON Billy Bob Thornton and Frances Mcdormand in the Ethan and Joel Coen film “The Man Who Wasn’t There.” ‘Cold War’: ‘Time’: ‘She’s Gotta Have It’:

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