Matt Minton mminton@variety.com The making of “Nickel Boys” — a film that follows two young Black boys, Elwood (Ethan Herisse) and Turner (Brandon Wilson), as they navigate a brutal reform school — presented a unique set of circumstances for cinematographer Jomo Fray.
While Fray always wants his camerawork to feel vulnerable, director RaMell Ross‘ vision of shooting the film with the camera’s first-person point of view blurred the usual roles on set, meaning that Fray would directly interact with the actors. “It wasn’t just shooting Aunjanue [Ellis-Taylor] playing Hattie,” Fray told Variety at the film’s Los Angeles premiere on Monday night. “When the camera needed to imbue Elwood’s consciousness, if I was operating, it was about taking that in and seeing the image, not as Jomo, but as Elwood … Having that physical intimacy fundamentally changes the way you make images.” Before making the film, Ellis-Taylor, whose character Hattie is Elwood’s grandmother, never felt comfortable working with cameras. “I had to let go and let the universe handle it … Hello cameras!” the Oscar-nominated actor explained on the red carpet at the DGA Theater. “[In the film], I had to make them as a proxy for my grandson.
That was uncomfortable, difficult and frustrating but it was working, hopefully, because that’s what Hattie was feeling. She felt removed from the love of her life, so we had something in common.” Throughout the film, based on Colson Whitehead’s 2020 Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Ross also uses archival footage to juxtapose Elwood and Turner’s abusive experience at Nickel Academy (which subs in for the real Dozier School for Boys in Florida, where more than 100 students died from abuse) with the social and technological.
Read more on variety.com