en:lang="en-US"
1
https://www.panoramaaudiovisual.com/en/2011/07/08/ana-rodriguez-rosell-inicia-el-rodaje-de-buscando-a-eimish/

New director Ana Rodríguez Rosell has started filming in Madrid Searching for Eimish. The film, with interesting photography by Pau Mirabet, is produced by Jana Films and filming will take place over six weeks in Spain, Germany and Italy.

New director Ana Rodríguez Rosell has started filming in Madrid for Looking for Eimish, starring Óscar Jaenada, Manuela Vellés, Emma Suárez, Jan Cornet, Carlos Leal, Roberto Hoyas and Birol Ünel (Against the wall and Soul Kitchen).

Finding Eimish is about finding 'your place in the world', about lost characters who have not lost their love for life. It talks about intuitions, destiny and the invisible energies that create bonds between people.

The film is produced by Jana Films and filming will take place over six weeks in Spain, Germany and Italy.

Shot in 35mm, 1:1.85 color, the photography is directed by Pau Mirabet, with José Carlos Rodríguez in production. Mapa Pastor will be in charge of the assembly and Víctor Puertas will be in charge of the sound.

Ana Rodríguez has commented that "we are going to tell this with the eyes of a traveler, who is hypnotized by the new world he is discovering. We are looking for a hypnotic, poetic film that relaxes the soul and provides hope. To do this we have a deep story, wonderful landscapes, moving music and lost characters who have not lost their love for life. The photography of this film must help in all its capacity to complement, highlight and beautify the ideas we want to show."

For this reason they are working with cold, almost melancholic photography, with bluish light tones, which make the image tend slightly towards monochrome, achieving a feeling of cold, since most of the film takes place in winter.

It is always shot at the best time of daylight, to achieve maximum realism and naturalness from the ambient light, thus emphasizing the integration of the characters in real environments.

Long lenses and fixed shots in most cases, to isolate the characters and their problems from the hustle and bustle that surrounds them, and to which they are almost oblivious, are fundamental elements in its aesthetics.

By, Jul 8, 2011, Section:Cinema / Production

Other articles about ,

Did you like this article?

Subscribe to our NEWSLETTER and you won't miss anything.