From video essayist to director, Kogonada exhibits a masterful understanding of visual storytelling. Here are six video essays to prove it.
For many moviegoers, visual storytelling is an afterthought when debating a film’s merit. While studying the plot, the characters, or the messages embedded in films, we often forget that the camera is a character in an of itself. Cinematography is the perfect compliment to captivating dialogue or emotional acting because it immerses you in our characters lives. Through the camera, we’re drawn deeper into the story, experiencing the melancholy, ecstasy, or vibrancy that our characters face. While we often relegate cinematography to the perfect shots they produce, it should be remembered that perfect shots are more than just beautiful landscapes or impeccable lighting, rather, great cinematography is essential to the story and essential to the emotions and feelings we experience.
Furthermore, we often don’t consider the role that location and set design play in film. Where our characters exist is vital to understanding their plight. From their location or the things that surround them, we can learn how certain characters process information. Often times, location or set design reflects our characters situations or shows how our characters ought to evolve.
Writer-director Kogonada is a master visual storyteller. Before captivating the hearts of indie fans everywhere with last year’s Columbus, Kogonada established himself as a brilliant video essayist. While his essays cover a wide spectrum of themes and ideas, Kogonada’s essays concerning visual storytelling are most impressive because they cover a wide variety of directors’ visual styles throughout their films. In these short, non-narrated, hyper-edited videos, Kogonada analyzes how different directors are consistent in their usage of cinematography in order to convey myriad emotions or themes.
Kogonada’s unparalleled understanding of visual storytelling goes beyond analyzing other directors’ work. Through all his years analyzing different directors’ visual styles, he established his own method of visual storytelling in Columbus. The cinematography and locations in Columbus are captivating, but this beauty does not just stand for merely for beauty sake. Kogonada delivers a rich, complex character study exemplified by brilliant visual storytelling that brings us deep into our characters’ musings.
In Columbus, Haley Lu Richardson and John Cho star as Casey and Jin, who are two wildly different people seeking to find purpose and agency in their lives. Columbus presents a thoughtful story, introspective characters, and emotional acting all bound to contemplative locations which are captured through brilliant camera work. The story and characters are great, but we get to learn more about them through their shared interest in the modernist architecture that Kogonada features. These locations reflect the complexities of our characters, providing a comprehensive way to understand their situations. Furthermore, the location and set design, allow Kogonada to ground his story in a realistic world. Our characters aren’t just musing in beautiful landscapes, they’re growing through fairly regular visual spaces. The mundanity of visual space brings this world and our characters closer together.
Check out these six video essays that showcase Kogonada’s mastery of visual storytelling.
Wes Anderson // Centered
In this video essay, Kogonada shows how director Wes Anderson will often keep the main character or focus of attention in the dead center of the screen. While not a traditional method, by doing so, we notice the focus of the scene first, drawing us deeper into the action.
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