An Interview with Oscar-Winning International Colourist Hootan Hagshenas CSI
Hi, it's Kali Bateman here for Mixing Light and
today I'm speaking with Hootan Haghshenas.
He's a colourist who's just arrived in Melbourne
about a year ago and has done his Masters in
photography at RMIT here in Australia. But prior to
that he is an Iranian who worked in Iran and
then worked in Turkey in Istanbul and made his way
out to Australia only recently.
Hootan, it's so nice to have you here and it's so
nice to have a sense of what's happening in the
broader world outside of Australia.
Thank you so much for having me
Kali. I'm so happy to be here.
Yes, as you said, I've been doing
most of my career in Iran. Tehran is a
major post-facility and I just
moved to Turkey, Istanbul actually.
And I work on a couple of Netflix and Disney
projects in there and I just moved
here. So I've been around for a while.
You've been around and
you're very humbly glossing over.
You know, you're extremely well known, especially
in Turkey, and you've actually graded an
Oscar-winning feature film in Turkey.
So, you know, just take a few
Netflix shows, you're being a bit coy.
Can you tell me a little bit
about where you started in Iran and
what the industry was like over there and how you
got your start in color grading? Yeah, definitely.
So at my involvement in the color grading world was
a bit of an accidental event or
thing. So I was my honours, my
bachelor was in cinematography.
So back then in, I think around 2008, I was so keen
to be involved in the
board of the cinematography and
movie pictures and like camera works and lighting
and all those beautiful
things that all the DPs are doing.
But we had this lecturer back
in the university. So he was,
so I'm gonna name him because I owe
him a lot. So he's Mr. Alakruch. Yeah.
So he was a top-notch cinematographer, director of
photography and a member of the
IRSC, which is the equivalent of the ASC.
So they've got their own guild.
So at the same time, he was our lecturer and also
he had his own editing studio,
which actually his wife, one of the,
she was a very famous editor back then.
And he was very into all the digital, like, so it
was very new, all the
digital manipulation and stuff.
So he was very into it. So he was a bit now and
then he was used to try different, you know,
softwares like try them and stuff. And he realized
that I am also into
computer and digital image editing.
So he invited me over and so we had a lot of
different, you know, try errors and like,
we had fun with digital pictures, which there was
like none back then in 2008.
We didn't have anything to play with. After a
while. So the first digital
cameras came to Iran was by the,
one of the famous distributors back then. And it
wasn't an Alexa or ARRI, or RED or whatever.
So it was back then there was a company, I think
still they are working, but
not in the digital domain.
So they had this camera, which is called SI2K. Have
you heard it? No, I haven't.
What's what's the SI2K? Yeah, there was a company
called Silicon Imaging and
they had just one product,
one digital camera, which is called SI2K, which was
a industrial camera modified to be like a
function as a cinema camera, which a Windows
installed in the camera, which is very fun to
work with that camera. You see, you could see the
Windows logo when the camera was booting up.
So it was fantastic to work with that camera. And
so before that camera became available,
were you working with film at all or did you really
get into it? No, we as a digital colorist.
No, no, no. We didn't have any digital scanners
back to 2008. There was one, but just like rarely
used and just used for a few shots in a whole
movie. And the quality
wasn't very decent back then.
So it was it actually it was like all the chemical
lab and and all the color timers were
quite famous back then because they just know how
to use the like Hazeltime machine to time
or grade, you know, chemical process. But we didn't
have any digital DI process back then.
What we had was like digital cameras such as like
SD, Sony SD cameras, which used to record on tape.
And that was all the digital material that we had.
So that camera was the beginning of the whole
digital cinema back in Tehran in Iran generally. And
so since the camera was there,
and they needed someone to grade the footage
because it was the first time that people
came across with something called log picture,
which they had no idea what is a log picture.
So somebody had to grade the log picture for them.
So I had a chance to so my lecture actually
introduced me to the company that
was just like shaping shaping up.
They did because there should be there should have
been some some company to do all the
grading. So now I know I had the experience. So
they just introduced me and was just started.
Actually, I started the whole digital cinema when I
just it was beginning. So yeah,
I'm as old as digital cinema in Iran. Yeah.
Yeah, that's great. And what kind of material
was being shot on these cameras? Like
what sort of stuff were you grading?
Feature films, most of them, most of them. And there
was another thing. So there were some
other people who had the experience, but with like,
so sometimes they sent the material outside of
so sometimes they sent the material outside of
the country to be scanned and they just had the files
scanned back. So we had some more experienced
people which I had to opportunity to meet them and
learn from them. But like working on pure
digital camera files was like just was the process
of the beginning of the process and
and slowly red camera red one cameras were in. And
so like it was a knick and knack. So it's like 2K
Red started together. And but everybody was
demanding an ARRI camera and ARRI was thinking how
they should make a better workflow and more
standard workflow into the market because
everybody was confused back then at least seeing on
how we should deal with the digital files.
What's a LUT? What's the workflow? What's how can
manage the digital files? And where were you
where were you getting the information from?
Because I remember early on we didn't have
some of the resources that we have now. Where did
you find out what to do with these files? Or was
it all just trial and error? So I had another
chance because the company that I used to work for
so there was another company like a sister company
which was the distributor of those products. So
we always had constant connection with the
manufacturers such as they were the distributor
of the ARRI cameras like like Si2k cameras. So Si2k
was a company was based in Germany. So I had
the access to technicians in Germany and asked all
those questions and they were very willing to help
nicest people I ever met. And so yeah I could
update my information and you know like find out
how I should deal with those files because I was
not quite experienced back then in terms of using
the digital files. So yeah so that was the biggest
resource, the information
resource. And there wasn't
much information on internet that time back then
but slowly it was just like there was a huge
difference between 2009 and 2010 and 2011 because
like it was like a very very rapid
process of updating. Everybody was trying to update
themselves and they were also so generous to post
all the information over the net. So it wasn't that
quite hard to know more about you know the whole
process. And what kinds of films were being shot in
Iran that you were grading? What was the the
state of the cinema like? It was like 50% indie
movies, 50% funded by sometimes government,
sometimes like big facilities or like they had some
big sponsors. So like, studios.
exactly there is there is not studio type of movie
making back in Tehran. Most of the movies
are like done by the independent part of the movie
making world and the other one was like
founded by sponsors or like government. So the
studio system is not quite functional back in
Iran. I don't know how is it now because I've been
away from the country for a while so I have no
idea what's happening now. But back then it was
like 50% 50%. But the point was like the final
cost of the filmmaking on digital camera even in
the very early days was much much better,
much much lucrative for the producers rather using
negatives. So it was a rush towards the
digital production back then. So everybody wants to
use the digital camera and the company which I
was working for they realized that if they buy film
recorders like a laser recorders they can like
produce huge number of the movies every year. So we
had three of those laser recorders and we've
been very busy back then because everybody you know
liked to shoot on digital and record it on
negative because we didn't have any sort of digital
projections. All the projectors were
like in film projectors. So I remember there was so
there is this big festival happening every year
it's annually and one year we had too many movies
to finish for that festival and it was
it was like a madness to finish 20 movies in a very
short period of time but that was the thing
that we should have done it. So yeah and we did it.
That's amazing. So the process was you'd have
these films getting acquired on the new digital
formats and then you'd receive a turnover from
editorial and you'd conform it and grade it and
then finish it and it would be put back onto film
or projection. Exactly, exactly and we've been
direct connection with film labs like chemical
labs because having finished printing them on
negatives on films and especially we had
Fuji RDI Intermediates which were amazingly good
when we used them on laser printers and
we've always been in connection to get the best
results you know out of those recordings.
That's so cool. I mean you know I hear a lot about
people having experience with
like tele-cine grading and colour timing and things
like that but I haven't actually spoken to many
people who've had experience of printing back out
to film to be honest and I don't know if that's
just that I haven't come across it yet and there's
heaps of people out there or if it's a special
skill but did you personally have much to do with
the printing or is that handled by different
colleagues which were operators of those machines
but we usually we've been in connection in terms
but we usually we've been in connection in terms
of a colour accurate pipeline because then ARRI I
think they still have it I'm not quite sure but
they had something called ARRI Cube which was a
colour pipeline from the beginning to the end
so you would have you could have access to the like
how ARRI laser or ARRI lasers are going to
print so you could monitor it on your reference
monitor but anyways since everything was like
finalised in the chemical lab so we had to be in
contact with chemical labs as well but the thing
is that you had to be very patient because one
frames per second it's like wow. Right, get it
right. So that's how fast it's printed back onto
film and so that ARRI system you're talking about
was that like a viewer LUT like to emulate the film
as you were grading is that sort of what
it was or slightly different? Yeah it was like a
CMS program so something like
like Calman or like Light illusion that we we
these days, so it was like designed for that
pipeline so so you had to read your information
from your monitor and you have film profiles so
we could match them together and mix them together
and generate the final film LUT which you could
put it on your computer on your grading software
and you could monitor what's going to be like
roughly the final material. I say roughly because
roughly the final material. I say roughly because
chemical labs were on top of the
the fluctuation of the resolver just like heavy so
every now and then we would be surprised
by what we saw on the big screen afterwards. Yeah
by what we saw on the big screen afterwards. Yeah
by what we saw on the big screen afterwards. Yeah
sometimes it was quite red sometimes it was good
so yeah. Wow, wow that's so interesting. I suppose
so yeah. Wow, wow that's so interesting. I suppose
that's still something that you have to deal with
when you've got a digital cinema projection and you
know each each cinema slightly different
their lamps might be new or old or you know running
at full power or not so not much has
changed in that respect you still put it out in the
world and cross your fingers right.
And so you were in you were in that facility for
how long roughly did you work there before you
made the move to Turkey? I think 12 years 13 years
so it was there. Yeah so I've been lucky
actually before moving to Turkey so I had the
opportunity to grade Mr. Farhadi's "Salesman"
which won the Oscar and it was after that which I
received a lot of offers from overseas so
yeah so it was like a big jump-start for me to have some
recognition to be exposed
to the bigger world. And what was that grade like like
what was that process like?
Well I would say challenging so I had the chance to
work with director of photography
Mr. Jaffarian. Back then he was one of the most
famous and experienced director of photography
famous and experienced director of photography
in Iran and I had the chance to work with him and I
had the chance to talk with him because not only
I learned a lot about cinematography from him I
learned a lot about you know life and experience
of you know the professional experience of being in
the industry because we had
we had we had three months to work together because
the movie took almost three months to grade
and we did it twice so we first we did it based on
the references that Mr. Jafarian showed me and
we did the grade and so Mr. Farhadi joined later and
he decided that we have to adjust some scenes
and add a bit of like tone and touch to it so we
just he said okay we have our grading let's do it
another time and in a different way and he was so
happy second way second time hopefully he was happy
and I've never seen someone with that much energy
in terms of working so he just worked with us
during the day until like 6 p.m and then after 6
p.m he used to go to the audio until morning and
again he was joining us for the grading I I don't
know how to explain yeah yeah yeah but and and
but he was he was quite fine I mean working with
him was quite fun it was quite an experience
working with two giant icons.
that context of working with people who had big
reputations and on a on a big film I think it's
quite bold to throw away the first grade well I
mean I suppose you probably could have recalled it
but to make that decision to not to not alter it
but actually to go back and start again I think
that's you know I remember um a colourist who I
that's you know I remember um a colourist who I
greatly admire as I was coming up, Martin Greer
saying that you need to be prepared to
you know redo things and kind of admit when okay we
need to make a change in direction even if
the client's in the room, and can you tell me
about that how when when you made
that decision to approach it again from a different
from a different direction
that's that's so true that's I
mean sometimes you have to do it
sometimes you know like um so when
when when you just make something
sometimes you have to just break it break break the
whole thing and remake the whole thing again
and it's like it's like having a second um chance
to work on the same thing so now you know the
challenges you know the issues you know the
problems but this time you're ready to tackle
the issue you're ready to fine tune everything and
you know what's the wrong what's wrong in there
there was there there there's been time that you
just work on the shot which it wasn't it wasn't
working so it just like took a day to realize
what's wrong with the shot but the next time we
were ready so that the second the second time it
was so faster and we were ready and we knew the
issue sometimes you have to break it and remake it
issue sometimes you have to break it and remake it
you know sometimes you just just fix it you
have to break it and start over yeah not all the
time maybe no yeah I know and knowing and knowing
when you should do that you know that's got to be a
skill in and of itself, I mean I think
that's really interesting what you say about like
the first pass is almost a way to you know work
out what the problems are going to be it's like
research but it's like practical research and then
the second time you grade it
you're coming to it with all that knowledge that you've
built up through that first grade.
But it's something that doesn't happen very often,
especially not in indie films,
you just don't have the time.
And I often think about like editors, you know,
imagine if your first edit
was the one that ended up
being the edit for the film.
Like they have a similar process, I'm sure,
where sometimes they'll refine a scene
or sometimes they might start a scene again.
But often as colourists,
we're not afforded that time.
I mean, even, you know, you're saying you had a
three month grade for this film.
Like even that's not a huge
amount of time to grade it twice.
Exactly.
I don't know what the
question is, it's more of a comment.
Exactly. I mean, we had the
luxury of time for that project.
Not so much time for that because it should have
been ready for the release
and there was like a huge workload after the
grading, waiting for the movie.
But we had the time that we
could do all the experiences.
And it's not something like you
could do it for every movie, definitely.
Yeah. But the thing is that Mr Faradi was
he was ready for everything.
So he gave us the time and Mr
Jaffarion also the director of photography.
He was so calm and like and
he knew, OK, if it's the way,
so let's let's go that way
and let's let's do it great.
So, yeah.
But this was a very particular
project that we had the luxury of time.
Most of the indie movies, especially you have to
finish it in 10 days, 12 days.
So everything should be
when everything should be ready
when you're just starting, because
you don't have the time to go back
and change everything. So, yeah, definitely. Yeah.
It's a shame that we don't get a chance to do that
kind of hands on research
on every grade, though, wouldn't that just be nice?
You think about how much how much more enjoyable
the process would be as well.
So so tell me about so after
So so tell me about so after
that, you said you got a lot of offers
off the back of that film,
winning that very prestigious award
and it helped propel your career.
And what was it about Turkey and
Istanbul that made you go, yes,
this is the one I'll head over there?
I had I had I had a great
experience working in Istanbul.
First of all, for the first
project which I was invited to Turkey
came out one of the best
selling movies ever in the history of
cinema in it was a biopic about one of the most
famous Arabesque singers
in the history of the Turkish music and the
company, the digital cinema company,
they spent a lot of time,
money, effort making that movie.
And it was another job start, actually.
So by grading on that movie
was like another big leap for me.
And then the director of that same movie
just invited me for another project that he had.
So it was an ongoing project.
Then so I was being invited to
work on different projects.
And then Netflix, because Netflix and Disney
just invested a lot of money
in terms of production in Istanbul
because of the Turkish speaking contents.
The amount of the production is just like
unprecedented. It's huge.
So they really need talents to work in there.
So I have I had the chance to
work with a variety of different
type of director or cinematographers.
But the thing that was quite
different to me was just like I was so new
to the whole industry in
Turkey was the look of the picture.
So the realism and the
realistic approach to the cinematography
in Iran wasn't quite the same practice in Turkey.
So they wanted more
pictorial approach to the picture.
And I had to update my
understanding about the whole industry
because I had to know what exactly they want.
What's the taste of, you
know, the whole industry in there.
So I started to watch tons of Turkish movies to
realize what's happening in there.
But then I realized that they
just invited me to stay away
from the mainstream look that they have.
And they wanted to sell
something, something different.
So I thought, OK, yeah.
Can you tell me more about the
difference between the two looks?
So what was what would you say?
How would you describe the Iranian look
and how would you describe the Turkish look?
It's very hard to tell these days because now
just everything just like
getting similar to each other.
But back then,
I would say Iranian look was a bit more natural.
So the eye, so there is a
saying that eye is the reference.
And what you see on set, you should like produce a
movie, but in a better way.
So you didn't used to go like
crazy far away from realism back then.
But nowadays it's like like
it's the same as everywhere else.
But back then it was like, I
don't know, maybe that was because
because most of the DPs that I work with was
come migrating from the
film work to the digital work.
So in film work, you are like
you've got a few film stocks
and you've got the chemical lab.
So you're not you're not you're not able
to do all the crazy things that
like these days are just being done.
I wouldn't say by crazy the good way.
But yeah, yeah, sure. Yeah.
But back then it was like stay to
the realism, stay to the reality.
Scheme tones should be the most
proper skin tones that you could have.
What should be like in a correct way.
So everything should be like fine tuned.
But I like that that
saying the eye is the reference.
I like that it's the eye on set.
Exactly, exactly.
I like that.
And but in Turkish cinema, it was
a bit more pictorialistic approach
the whole whole picture.
So it should have it should have had mood.
It should have had like like
glow to it.
It should have had like
color to it, contrast to it.
So I had to learn how to do it.
But at the end of the day,
I just mixed them together.
So I just borrowed little
things from different like
aspect of the Iranian looks, Turkish look like.
And DPs are so they used to
invite DPs from Eastern Europe.
So again, it was the third look that was like
introduced to the whole thing.
So also had to learn how to do it the
way they just do it in Eastern Europe.
So what's the Eastern Europe taste?
So and what was the Eastern Europe?
Hmm.
The most pictorialistic
approach to the picture, I would say.
Yeah, it's very hard to define.
It's very hard to define it.
But I would say like Eastern
European director of photography has changed
Hollywood picture, changed, I think at some point
in history of the Hollywood
movie making, they changed the approach, they
changed the approach to the picture.
Like Janusz Kaminski, what he's
been doing, like in contrast to like
like standard Hollywood look, which
is like very close to Iranian look.
Actually, honestly, I would say
because like most accurate skin tones.
But but feeling free to do to go beyond the
horizons of like realism.
It's a scary thing.
You have to you really need
to know what you are doing.
Yeah and like why you're doing it
surely you know like what
the feeling for the audience is gonna be
I always think as the European look as being very soft
It doesn't have as much contrast
You know it's dark and...
It's like chalky blacks
This is just in my mind, like chalky blacks but low
and subtle, and the highlights are gentle
Maybe it's for having the sun at a different angle for what we're used to seeing in Australia
Would you say that's in the ballpark?
Yes, exactly, exactly.
And it was the first time I was experiencing
working with the same material.
So honestly, I was so confused.
So I didn't know how to,
should I push the blacks down?
Should I keep them soft?
Should I?
So because it wasn't my usual
practice working on that type of picture.
So honestly, I was super confused.
What should I do with that kind of picture?
Yeah.
So slowly I learned how to,
okay, no, this should be that way.
The contrast is like, it should be soft, should be
dark, you know, skin tones are like warmish.
So yeah.
And was it the DPs that kind of helped you with
that understanding by asking
you to grade in certain ways?
Or, you know, were you close with the DPs in
learning that visual language?
For the first project, unfortunately, I was alone.
So yeah.
So the wonderful DP Martin who's
passed away this year, unfortunately.
Yeah.
So he had to be on another project and he was far
away from the reach of the internet or any sort of,
you know, like possible image transfer location.
you know, like possible image transfer location.
So I had to do it with the discussion and with the,
so we had like just like meeting with the director
and he tried to explain the whole thing to me.
But unfortunately, I was a little bit alone.
So I had to experience it
myself and I had to learn it myself.
But after that, I had the opportunity to work with
director of photography from Europe,
from Germany and from Eastern Europe.
And then we had more discussions
and I learned slowly from them.
OK, that's the approach.
That's the way it was a quite successful experience
in terms of learning new ways of grading.
That's so fascinating.
Your instincts must have been good
that first time when you're on your own.
I still don't know.
And it's just like working fine, but I enjoy it.
And at the end of the day, I enjoy working on that
movie because the outcome was I think it was
successful and I received a lot of compliments from
the people that I just like.
I I believe that they are just telling the truth.
So yeah. Yeah.
Great.
And you were working for sort of large facilities
both in Iran and in Istanbul.
They were both facility
positions like on-staff colorist jobs?
Yes, fortunately.
Yes, fortunately.
So there was the big one in Iran and the other two
in Istanbul, 1000 Volts and Imaj, which now it's
still they are the biggest post
production facilities in the town.
And so I had another opportunity to work with
colleagues, colorist colleagues
in there and share ideas and tools.
I love that.
Yeah.
You learned a lot during those
discussions with other colleagues.
So yeah, exactly.
So yeah, exactly.
They were very willing to share their techniques
and they didn't want to keep all
those techniques for themselves.
So they were really sharing, very
willing to share all those secrets.
That's that's lovely.
And what kind of did you did you work on any
particular tools or were you a little bit like open
to lots of different systems or do they have like
an in-house system that everyone was on?
Yeah.
So back in Tehran, we started with Iridas
Speedgrade, which then became part of the Adobe
Speedgrade and then just
like merged into the premiere.
So there is no more Iridas.
It was it was a good piece of software.
Then we moved to Resolve after after a while.
But my first experience with Baselight actually was
in 1000 volts in Istanbul.
So I invited over for to work
on a project and a feature film.
And they said, we got Baselight.
We don't have Resolve here.
And I said, I'm going to do that.
Let's do it.
So I had no idea how Baselight just works.
And I had the biggest chance in
there because it was around 2010.
I think I don't remember correctly.
But I met Andy Minneth in there.
So he was a chief colorist, a
senior colorist in 1000 Volt.
And he used Baselight and he shared a lot of
information about Baselight with me.
Now he's one of the heads
of the FilmLight company.
He's worldwide famous.
But I had the opportunity to meet him.
And it was my first encounter
with Baselight system in total.
I think the version was like
4.4m if I recall correctly.
And it was quite different from the Baselight
software that we have these days,
especially in version 6, which is awesome.
But yeah, so I was very, very
curious to know more about the Baselight.
And eventually I had the chance to meet one of the
masters of the Baselight back in then.
And yeah, from so and then other companies,
they had Resolve, which is still have Resolve.
So it was juggling between
Baselight and Resolve back in Istanbul.
That would have been
fascinating to learn from Andy.
I just can't think of a better teacher.
How fortunate.
And did you find it a challenge?
Like obviously any new software is a challenge,
but did it have any
particular challenges moving into that?
Or were you just like a duck to all?
Or were you just like a duck to water?
The first thing was, I think
it was still in 4.4m back then,
was scene-referred grading, which I had absolutely
no idea what is the scene-referred grading.
What is an IDT? What is an RRT?
Which is RRT.
So because in my normal pipeline, we had the LUTs
So because in my normal pipeline, we had the LUTs
and we had the like ShowLUT,
we had the like Display, Target LUTs.
And those like normal
situations that everybody knows about.
But the Baselight was quite different.
So again, I was super confused in the very first
thing of using Baselight,
which was like, what is
that? What's the scene-referred?
How should I set the right IDT? What's an ODT?
And fortunately, we had Andy in
there to explain about all those things.
And honestly, I fell in love with scene-referred
grading right from, you know,
the first day I used the scene-referred because
even the tools were like feeling different
and the app DDD possibilities were like endless.
So you could do the grading
and you had different ODTs
so you just like could deliver in a
different like Target displays easily.
So yeah, honestly, you know, it was like the
concept of the scene-referred grading
actually just took shape in my mind by using the
Baselight the first time.
I know that you use ACES a little bit
in just through
conversations that I've had with you.
Were you using aces in
Baselight as well as Resolve?
Or how did you like to approach that?
Honestly, I quite like the T-CAM look.
It's only available in Baselight.
But anywhere else, I mean, aces
is like wonderful if you need it.
And honestly, I prefer to use aces on Resolve
more than Resolve's own color-managed system.
That's a personal preference and
it depends on the type of grading.
But honestly, if I'm doing grading on Baselight, I
definitely prefer to use T-Cam
because the mixture of the T-cam
and all the tools and like color space
aware tools that the Baselight
has, they've got a better relationship
between the tools and the T-cam in my opinion.
Thank you.
And what are you looking for
when you make that decision
about what ecosystem of color management you're
going to use for a particular project?
Do you look at how the footage responds under the
different color management settings
or how the tools respond or is it
a contrast or a saturation thing?
So, like, there are a lot of people who really
dislike the look of the aces
because there is a look like
because there is a look like
implemented baked in the aces color pipeline,
which is a very ''Kodaky'' look, in my opinion.
So it depends.
So the most important thing, you know, like to not
having a personal preference,
it's all about discussions with the DP and the
director and if they really like it.
So the thing is that I'll show
them all the options that we've got,
like in Baselight, it's T-cam and aces or like
maybe sometimes video grade,
which video space, which is
the basis, Baselight offers,
in Resolve in like its own CMS and aces.
So we can do the comparison.
We can decide which one is
much more suitable for the movie
because at the end of the day, the
most important thing is that, like,
what people would see on
their screens or on a big screen.
So it's not a personal preference.
And I think I shouldn't have a personal preference
because then everything would be, again,
would look like the same.
I agree with you so much about that.
And I was actually having this discussion just the
other day with a different colorist,
about having that flexibility and looking at what
works for the particular show
and not being too tied down to just
having one way that you like to work.
But when you're in a high pressure situation,
sometimes it can be really nice to just fall back
on the things that work for you
and then you find yourself doing the same things
over and over and over again.
But yeah, I really like that approach of just
seeing what works for the show and
what gets the DP and the director
to see the footage in a way that they wanted to see it, of course.
I love that. And so you must feel pretty confident
grading in all kinds of tool sets and all kinds
of scenarios. And like I know that you're kind of
bilingual with the Baselight and the Resolve,
but even within them, you know, you would feel as
confident grading in like DaVinci
Wide Gamut as you would in Aces.
Yeah, I mean, so you have to be ready
for all the challenges for each different color
pipeline would bring for you. I mean,
so Aces has got its own challenges as well as the
CMS, as well as the, you know, like the DaVinci
Wide Gamut, as well as the, you know, the TCAM. So
each of them, they've got pros and cons.
But yeah, yeah, so working enough on all of those
color pipelines would like add to your experience
as a colorist. So I think as a colorist, colorist
generally should try all of these, those color
pipeline workflows to realize what's the abilities,
what's the outcome of using, you know,
the particular color, color managed system, then
you could choose wisely which one would be much
more suitable for that show. So yeah. And do you
like to work, and I know this is getting into
the weeds a little bit, but this is where I kind of
get really nerdy and interested. Do you like
get really nerdy and interested. Do you like
to work project-wide in that, you know,
say, for example, Resolve Color Managed.
Would you work project-wide Resolve Color Managed
or would you like to do it in nodes?
- I definitely would go for the project settings.
Yeah, it's easier for me.
There is nothing wrong to
do it on your node structure.
But honestly, like if you take a look
at how BaseLight actually works,
so you set the proper color
manage system for your project
and you go through that project,
sometimes you change it to different things.
Because stacks can be color space agnostic.
So you could have different color space
for different stacks.
But generally, in an overall thing,
you have a general color engine,
which is processing your materials.
I would prefer to go like a global project setting
for the show, for the project, honestly.
- I'm the same usually.
I'm the same usually for
setting up color management.
And I know there's lots of debate around it
and some people like to work scene-referred
for some operations and
then come out of scene-referred
and do other things in display-referred spaces.
And I think it depends on the
show that you're working on.
But I like the tidiness of working project-wide.
And I also like how it kind of emulates that
simpler, telecine style of working
where you've got one contrast curve,
one tone curve for the whole show.
And you don't go outside of that.
So all of the choices that you might get funneled
through that and there's no option
to kind of go outside of that.
I think that kind of gives
you some kind of coherence
to the piece that you might break,
you might fiddle around with too much otherwise
because you'd have the option so you might try.
But in Baselight,
when you're working color management in Baselight,
do you ever mix and match your RRTs and your...
Sorry, I'm forgetting the exact terminology,
but do you ever sort of
work in TCAM on your timeline?
But... ACES for your RRT
like that or do you tend to stay?
- So you have to define if
you're working with the TCAM
or if you want to work with the ACES
because if you switch from ACES to TCAM
after like your grading, it wouldn't look correct.
- But you can use an RRT that's different.
- Yes, but--
-Do you ever do that?
- That's too complicated for me.
- You keep it simple.
- Yeah, yeah, when we just,
like most people I use like
fixed note trees in Resolve
because it gives peace of mind
and simplifies the whole process.
So for instance, node number, whatever,
it's just always my skin tone nodes
and node number one and two and three
is just like my basic gradings.
So I don't need to think about how many nodes
I'm gonna make and keep it simple.
I mean, just like makes the whole life easier.
If you keep everything just
like as simple as possible.
- I love that.
Do you like to work with looks or LUTs
or anything like that?
Do you have a little set of secret sauce
that you like to bring out?
You don't have to tell me exactly what it is.
- Oh, no, that's fine.
There is, there is,
after the internet, there is no secret sauce anymore
because people are sharing
ideas all over the internet
and so yeah, yeah.
And these days like if you search about anything,
you could find it.
- Well, I prefer a few scene referred
look development tools,
which I really quite like it
because then when the look is just like work
for the same referred color pipeline,
you will have access to different variety
of for ODTs or DRTs.
So you just use a particular look for your Rec 709
and that same look works very good
for your P3 sometimes,
Rec 2020 depending on the type of the curve
that you're using.
But you're not limited to
very like limited Rec 709 LUTs
that you might be using for in your pipeline
then because if you shift it to different ODTs,
which these days you have to deliver
a lot of different deliverables
in terms of color space and contrast
and curves and everything.
So you have to be,
I mean, it's easier, it makes life easier
to develop a look in a scene referred space.
So there are particular softwares to do that.
Honestly, we had the opportunity assigned
and thanks to you, I mean,
so you explained a lot about the chromogen
in baselight version six,
which is a scene referred look development.
So it's much easier.
And the point is that if you use this chromogen
for instance to develop your
look on ACES and baselight,
you can share it to resolve,
you can share it to VFX departments.
So everybody would be in the same page
in terms of using the same look.
So it's not like variety as different
and you can have different variety of the same look
in Rec 709, P3, which almost looks the same.
So yeah, I would love to use the look designing
and look development programs, plugins slash.
- Yeah, chromogen is really
something special I think.
I've never seen anything like it before.
For people who aren't familiar
with what we're talking about here,
version six of base light has
version six of base light has
a new operator called chromogen
which is a primary operator.
And it gives you the color space sort of like
you can almost bold it and shape it
using what they're called stages.
So you're directly molding the color space itself,
not doing secondaries or anything like that.
It's one of those things
that you almost have to do.
I can't really explain it without showing it
but they visualize the color space either as a cube
or as a...
or as a...
- EAB color model.
- Yeah, it's the EAB color model
but what's that other shape?
Well, I don't know why I can't remember
the name of it right now.
Anyway, they've got a different couple of shapes
that they visualize this color space in
and you use stages to define things like contrast,
color cross talk, the amount of saturation
and different parts of the image,
things that you might otherwise use curves for
like hue versus hue or hue
versus sat you can do there.
And you can develop really quite intricate
and specialized looks.
You can define densities for different tones
You can define densities for different tones
and different shades of colors.
And you can come up with
something that's really unique
and you can also, I think you could emulate
references pretty precisely
with something like that as well
but it's quite new and I'm
sure that the possibilities
with it are just gonna open
up as people start to talk
about how they're particularly using it
like all things.
So the workflow that we're discussing now would be
to sort of use that tool to,
within a color managed project
to then output a look in like either a cube form
or whatever form you can output.
And then you can pass it
around to various different parts
of the production.
So you might use it on a
split or in the camera on set.
You might use it for dailies.
You might use it for visual effects.
And then you might also use that as your show look
that you're grading
underneath when you get to the DI
or you might refine it in the process as well
because it's always gonna be open.
But that's a lot of talking from me.
I should stop and actually talk to who.
- I don't know if that's a
- I don't know if that's a
comprehensive explanation
because it's already new and
I think it's gonna be a very,
it's gonna be a favorite tool
for many colorists very soon.
- Yeah, and I think DP's are
gonna really like it as well.
- Yeah, because it speaks in the same language
as the DP's language, yeah.
- Yeah, yeah.
I can really see that being quite useful
when you're sitting down and
doing that look development
at the start of a show.
So we've gotten as far as Istanbul
and how long were you in Istanbul for?
- It was an on and off situation.
- It was an on and off situation.
So it was coming in, oh,
like it's like coming and going.
I think it was started from 2017,
but I think from 2020, I just moved to Istanbul
because I wasn't enjoying any more working
in Iranian productions.
It was quite a bit different from the day
that it just like worked
and worked with like masters
of the industry.
So I thought it's time to move
and I just move to Istanbul.
And yeah, spending time in Istanbul,
I had the opportunity to move to Melbourne.
So now I'm in Melbourne
and try to find my position.
And fortunately I've got a wonderful friend,
DP friends here.
So now we are working together
and slowly, slowly the whole business
is just like developing here as well.
- Yeah, so when I first met you,
your little, not little,
but your shop in Melbourne had just opened
like the week before.
And I met yourself and your business partner
and you had two stories.
One of them was with production gear
and the other one was for post-production.
And you of course were
heading up the post-production.
You had a couple of pretty impressive systems
there for grading.
And what was it that brought you to Melbourne
to begin with though?
Was it that business or was it the study
that you did at RMIT?
- Most probably it was RMIT's study.
So I thought, so I had, you know,
So I thought, so I had, you know,
like my progress through the years
was mostly towards the
technical part of the spectrum.
But I really had,
actually I really was super keen
to know more about the theory,
know more about why I'm doing this.
So I did a bit of research
and I actually finally applied
for a Master of Photography course,
which after a few interviews with lecturers
of RMIT, so they just like picked me.
And it just, the outcome was like unprecedented.
I wasn't thinking that, you know,
how the outcome would be, but it was massive.
I had no idea how they're gonna change
my whole perception and perspective
to the world of the colour and imaging
and digital imaging and everything.
- Wow. - So yeah.
So at least when I started new movie,
I got like few whys, big whys
and big question marks in my
mind that I have to answer.
So why should I, why I'm doing this?
Why I'm choosing that colour palette?
What's the correct approach to that movie?
So the way that I'm just doing the grading
is quite different from the
way that I'm just been doing it,
just like by following the instructions
and following the techniques.
So it's like a balance of the theory
and the technique altogether.
So it was, and now I feel it was quite necessary
to realise why you should
choose that particular colour palette
for that particular movie.
Is it all about the genre?
Is it all about the feeling?
Is it all about the
subconscious effect of the colours
on the audience's mind and, you know,
the feeling of the texture of the picture?
And everything is just involved.
And I had the opportunity to meet masters
of the industry at RMIT.
And I'm quite thankful to all of them.
All the lecturers were fantastic.
So I feel much more confident these days
in terms of approaching to a picture,
even just for editing.
It's a quite different practice these days for me.
- Oh, you make me want to go on to a master's
at the photography, that's awesome.
- And I mean, I think it's great
when you're coming into a country
that you haven't lived in before to, you know,
I mean, when you were going over to Istanbul,
you were going into work environments
where you were meeting people,
but coming out to Australia to be part of a course
and to have that kind of built-in network
that you get when you're studying, you know,
that's really great, you know,
because it can be hard to make friends as an adult
when you move.
I've moved a couple of times
as an adult and I've found
that it's not like it was
when you were kids and you just, you know,
oh, we're in the same class, so we're friends
or I've got a little boy and he's just like,
oh, you're my age, let's be best friends, you know.
(laughing)
It's a bit harder when you're an adult.
- I've been lucky.
I've got the best friends at RMIT,
you know, from the classes, which I love them.
I wouldn't think that I could have those friends
in my life in Australia.
So yeah, those are the best people
that I just met already and I quite appreciate it.
Yeah, some of them are just like huge photographers
based in Adelaide, based in Melbourne,
based in Sydney, but yeah, yeah, yeah.
- That's fantastic.
And you met your current business partner
who's somebody who you actually knew from Iran,
who happened to meet him in Melbourne
and came up with the idea of
teaming up to open AZ Studios.
So that was a good chance meeting as well.
- Absolutely, so he's got a big rental house.
Still he's got a big rental house in Tehran,
so he's quite active in their,
like providing equipments for big productions
and he realized that I'm here
and I realized that he's here,
so we had some few meetings with each other.
And we thought, I don't see why not,
we should do something in terms of what we love
and what we are gonna do.
And he provided all the necessary infrastructure
for the post-production
and now he just developing his production part
of the business.
And I think in the next few years,
the whole production would be,
post-production production of the AZ Studio
would be a very successful business hopefully.
It depends, it's hard to start when you arrive,
but it needs a lot of effort,
it needs a lot of extra hard work
that you really don't need to do it after a while
that you really don't need to do it after a while
when you publish your business somewhere else,
but you have to do everything
else again from the zero point.
This is what it is, but it's fun.
- Yeah, so I think that's true of anyone moving
and working in a new market,
whether you're starting a business
or whether you're a freelancer
who's just entering a new market,
because you're very established
and extremely well known overseas
and you're just now starting to get to know
Australian directors and DPs
and building that reputation here.
So can you tell me a little bit about
what that process has been like for you
and what kind of work you're working on now?
- Well, honestly, this is a very slow process,
knowing people, getting to know people,
and this is all about the trust
because nobody wants to work with someone,
they don't have trust on
them or they don't know them.
So you should slowly,
slowly get to know more people.
And this is the process that we are just doing it.
And every day we meet new people,
we meet new production houses,
we meet new DOPs, we meet new directors,
and we try to have as much
as possible meeting with them,
speaking, talking, sharing ideas with them
and grow the market in a positive way.
But honestly, it's a very slow process
and it needs quite a bit of time.
But again, it's a big challenge,
but it's the very lovely
and very delightful challenge
because that's what I love to do.
So it's like all the new ground to play,
all the new people that I meet, so why not?
Yeah.
- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I get you.
That idea of a lovely challenge is quite nice,
but it is like, even
though we live in a global world
and you have colorists who are quite famous now,
people know who they are.
And I could probably name 10 colorists in London
who I've never met, who I'd be happy to work with.
It's different now than the way it used to be
when I first started where it was like,
what's a colorist, who's a colorist?
It's more widely known.
But at the same time, I don't know if it's because
Australia is quite small,
but it seems to be a tough,
it's a tough market to crack into.
And you've got a lot of networking that happens
and what am I trying to say?
I suppose relationships,
like you say, take a long time
and you kind of grow up
together in the industry in a way.
In Australia, there's like a lot of,
oh, we met at film school and
we're still working together
after 15 years and all of
those people start to get bigger
and bigger jobs together
and they've got these little networks.
And I can only imagine that would be quite tricky
to crack into, but your personality is so warm
and so kind and I think that people do enjoy
having a chat with you.
So that's gotta definitely help.
- That's so kind of you.
- I don't know if that's a question either.
That's just a statement.
- Well, thank you so much for that.
Yeah, I mean, it's the same as everywhere
if you just want to start over even in Iran,
I'm not quite sure how is the situation these days,
but everywhere else, especially these days,
which like being a colorist is
not as hard as like years ago,
2009 and 2010, because you
had to spend a lot of money
and infrastructure to run a studio,
but thanks to the development of the technology,
it's not harder these days.
So the competition in the market is higher than before.
So you have to work harder,
you have to compete harder
and you have to work much, much more than before
to establish, re-establish at least yourself.
But again, at the end of the day,
these are the challenges that you accept
when you just move to somewhere else.
And so the goal is to be successful,
but at the end of the day, you have to try.
- Yeah, totally. - Yeah.
- Totally, I know exactly what you mean.
You just have to go into it
going like, this will work,
just give it enough time.
But I mean, also speaking
about being in a global world,
my understanding is at the moment
that you're working mainly on foreign productions,
working remotely and working
in the cloud a bit as well.
So can you tell me a bit about that?
Because I think that's a really cool thing
that you're able to pick up and move
about as far away as possible
and still be able to work with your clients
over in Istanbul.
- Yeah, so the cloud is just like a savior.
- Yeah, so the cloud is just like a savior.
So it doesn't matter any more wherever you are.
And remote work is like easiest than before.
So years ago, you had to have a huge infrastructure
to work remotely, but these days,
thanks to all the technology, it's much easier.
So I still have ties with my
clients all around the world.
And when they prefer to work with me, for instance,
it's not that hard anymore.
So I don't have to be in there to work with them.
So still I have ties with projects
that just happening in Turkey.
So at the moment I'm working on a Netflix project,
it's a mini series.
At the same time, I'm working with a feature film
from Germany and projects from Australia,
not feature films like mostly commercials.
So the whole thing is just much, much easier.
And you really don't feel
that much difference these days
between being in the same location
or being far, far away from the location,
but working with the same people.
It's much easier these days to work remotely.
And sometimes it's even
better because now for instance,
like my director sits in his suitable room,
which he prefers to be in it, not in it,
like those unpleasant situations
that he really don't want to be,
but I would say the person prefers to be.
And I'm sitting on my favorite chair
few thousand kilometers away,
but we worked there like we
were sitting in the same room.
So yeah, it's easier.
And I think in the future,
people would prefer to work remotely,
remotely much more than even now
it's been practiced these days.
- Do you have any particular technologies
that you utilize for these sessions?
Do you use like Zoom or Colorfront
or remote monitoring or anything in particular?
- Yeah, of course.
So I started the same project.
So when I did the same Netflix project here,
when the studio, AZ studio didn't exist actually.
So the first part of the
project was happened in Postlab.
And they were using Colorfront solutions
for the real time streaming, which was fantastic.
I quite liked it.
And then Resolve introduced
their remote monitoring system,
which is also good.
And Baselight is also having their own kind
of remote monitoring solution.
So there are a lot of technologies around
and almost all of them are quite reliable.
So not quite different state of the issue there,
but it's good enough.
It's good enough to work
with any of those technologies.
- And how do you handle the
issue of different screens?
Do you like send an iPad over to your directors
or do you just ask that they look at it
on something they trust?
How do you deal with that?
- So for this particular
project that I'm working on,
we have a list of possible
monitors that they could buy.
So they bought almost the same monitors
as we have in studio.
- Oh, great.
- We are looking at the same picture, but some-
- Oh, that's perfect.
- Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's impossible to
control the situation everywhere,
but yeah, sometimes iPads are working.
Like now most of the displays can be calibrated
as much as as close as
possible to the right picture.
So I would never know that if they are looking
at the same exact picture as me,
or if we follow some instructions,
at least the pictures are much, much closer
in terms of contrast and
color and gamut and everything,
but impossible.
I mean, at least in my situation.
- Oh, it's so good that
you've got almost the same monitor
or pretty much the same monitor going on
because that's the ideal scenario.
- Yeah, exactly, exactly.
- And then you think if both are calibrated,
you should be pretty much right.
- Yeah, yeah.
- Can you tell me before we wrap up
because I have taken a lot
of your time this evening,
can you tell me like what
you think the differences are
between these different
markets that you've worked in?
Is there anything that sort of is glaringly
obviously different between them
or is it just filmmaking's
filmmaking everywhere you go?
- Well, I think the Singapore language
is almost the same everywhere.
And people also, the contractions,
the relationships, the talks,
the terms are almost the same.
But I would say, man, if I'm gonna do a,
like a global comparison
between the Iranian and Turkish
and Australian cinema,
the approach to the picture and the final result
is a little bit still different.
I mean, in terms of everything,
in terms of the whole workflow,
which sometimes in Iranian projects,
we don't have such a show LUTs.
So every decision is just like made
during the grading session in Istanbul,
it's like a 50-50 person, some director photography
is really like to have their show LUTs.
And in Australia also is like a 50-50 person.
As my experience, I don't
know if it's correct or not.
So you know better.
But again, the final picture,
if you just put the same picture
from three different locations,
it would be like three different pictures.
So the taste of the region, it could be different.
But again, thanks to the digital platforms,
now everything just like
getting closer to each other
because like these are nowadays
are the references of the pictures.
So everybody wants to follow the same references,
which I think is not a very good thing,
but this is what it is, it's happening.
- Yeah, yeah, there does seem to be
a bit of convergence going on.
I mean, I think that just looking at your work,
and this is something that's
hard to know about yourself,
but I think you've got a bit of a style Hootan.
I really do.
And I think that when
people want you as their colorist.
as they're probably thinking,
I want a little bit of that
Hootan flavor on my work,
because when I look at your footage,
it's always, you're a very
well-controlled kind of gamut.
You shape your color ranges down and compress them
so that there's not a lot of
sort of disparate kind of colors.
You tend to choose a color scheme.
Like you usually use a like duotone
or tritone complementary color scheme.
And I tend to see like lots of cool tones
throughout your pictures as well.
And you tend to be like low
range in the mids usually.
And you don't do sort of
like real poppy bright stuff.
I wouldn't sort of think to myself,
that's a Hootan grade
if I saw something really bright and poppy.
Yeah, I think it's hard to
know that about yourself,
but even with all of these
different regional tastes,
I think that you're bringing something
that's a little bit you to
all of them, to be honest.
I try to not to do it, but it may be.
I know, but it's snazzy, right?
I mean, when you work on something,
even if you make something out of wood,
you put some of yourself in it.
Something from your soul,
something from your touch.
Impossible not to do that,
but what I've tried to be as much as possible
in a work in the favor of the picture.
So that was my goal, but again, you're super right.
You're absolutely right.
It's impossible not to.
I think there's just a little flavor there,
but it's not to say that your work is all the same.
I think that you just have an aesthetic approach
and everyone probably does,
but I think it's easier to see from a distance
than when you're in it.
Thank you so much.
I think it's a really beautiful aesthetic.
I'm definitely not saying
that they're all the same at all.
And of course you're gonna approach them
looking for the best things in that picture.
But yeah, you just have a
way of shaping your colors
that I think is really, it's
got a lot of subtlety to it.
And it's also really painterly.
And that might be that
European influence that comes through
because it's not all, you don't use heavy mid-tone
pivoted contrast that has lots of highlights
and lots of crunchy blacks.
It does have a lot more
range to the image I noticed.
And I think you also tend to have that duo
or tri-tone color palette
and you can have a little bit more saturation in it
when you aren't going as hard on the contrast.
I think these are things that
I would say from the outside.
That's what I see in your work,
but it's all very beautiful.
Thank you so much.
I mean, the first DP, the first lecture
I mean, the first DP, the first lecture
that just introduced me to the whole board
of the post-production,
he was one of the most pickiest people
in terms of color matching.
So we used to work together
and in the middle of the picture,
we used to say, go to the first shot.
And we just jumped to the first shot.
Oh, this is one point red, reduce it.
And it was that accurate.
So I learned to be accurate in that terms.
But again, you're right.
I loved that European approach to the picture
and it just stick to my mind somewhere in my mind.
So I really prefer that approach to the picture.
But again, yeah, these are happening
without you knowing it in your subconscious mind.
without you knowing it in your subconscious mind.
Maybe, maybe yes.
- Yeah, for sure.
I mean, oh, working with
somebody who's that precise,
that'd be definitely a good training ground.
But I can see how at the end of a long week,
you might be like, I've had enough of that now.
- Yes.
- On that note, I should probably wrap things up
- On that note, I should probably wrap things up
because I have taken a lot
of your time out this evening.
Thank you so much for talking to me, Hootan.
It's been absolutely great to get a sense
of your incredible traveling career.
So for Mixing Light, this is Kali Bateman.
Thanks very much.
- Thank you for having me, Kali.
It's been an honor to have a chat with you.
Thank you so much.