This story originally appeared in i-D’s The Darker Issue, no. 365, Winter 2021. Order your copy here.
Bradford Young is an award- winning cinematographer best known for his striking, contemplative big-budget motion pictures like Arrival, Selma and A Most Violent Year, in addition to his work on important indies, such as Pariah and Mother of George. His most recent endeavours include the creation of a lens company, Tribe 7, with technologist Neil Fathom, and making work with Ummah Chroma, a dynamic new collective of black filmmakers and collaborators. He studied at Howard University under the mentorship of filmmaker Haile Gerima, and remains one of the most sought-after cinematographers working today.
Can you talk about how you prepare for a project? After you receive a script, what’s your process?
First it just has to speak to me. Hopefully by the last page I have found a moment of myself in there. Then I’ll speak with the director and I’ll read it again like a cinematographer, because first I have to read it as a lover of stories. Then, I pull out an archive. I aggregate and pull material from all types of sources.
How do you feel about the state of cinema right now?
I think we’ve lost sight. The efficacy of capturing actors is what it’s all about, but that’s also what destroys us and destroys the art form. There’s a lot to gain from the camera being vulnerable and the actor being vulnerable, but you’ve got to know how to harness both of those elements.
So I don’t work with actors, not in that way. I don’t want to. I want to understand what it is they need to do, and I want to understand the story they’re telling and what that space is, and once I understand that, then I know how to light it and where to put the camera. I know what kind of relationship the camera needs to have with the subject.
The camera has a purpose. It has an agency. It’s a determinant. It is a vector. It’s the thing to get around and it’s a thing to go through. It has all this ability and what I don’t see people doing now is stretching and using it, even imperfectly, as a vessel to tell another story.
The one thing that brings us together on set is a camera. It’s not an actor. Sorry, that’s theatre, that’s radio. The thing that brings us together is a persistence of vision, the science of filling in gaps and trying to figure out the in- between. That’s where people put their own stories.
Is there anything you want to do that you haven’t done yet
as a cinematographer?
I still have this dream of going somewhere with a caravan of family and friends and making a film in an unmanaged way, and doing it in a way that feels nurturing and fulfilling. We might come out with nothing. But to even go out and try would be revolutionary. It’s just kind of a Trojan horse to build something else.
And outside of cinematography?
I just want to teach. I want to give to other cats what Haile gave to us. It’s time to teach, to listen, to be heard, to build community.
Credits:
Photography Schaun Champion
Make-up Meagan Shea