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THE OSCARS
Cinematography: 'The Aviator'One of Robert Richardson's main challenges was to adhere to the film's highly evolved color scheme.
By Mark Olsen, Special to The Times
Cinematographer Robert Richardson, who took home the Oscar for his work on "The Aviator," developed his signature look of hot lights and burnished surfaces while working with director Oliver Stone on films such as "Salvador," "Wall Street," "JFK" — for which he received his first Oscar — "Natural Born Killers" and "Nixon." He worked with "Aviator" director Martin Scorsese for the first time on "Casino" and again on "Bringing Out the Dead."
For "The Aviator," one of Richardson's main challenges was to adhere to the film's highly evolved color scheme, which was meant to emulate the look of the two-strip Technicolor process for the earlier sections, and then evolve into a brighter three-strip Technicolor look for the later sequences, following the look of movies from the periods being acted out in the on-screen story.
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