'We Need To Talk About Kevin' Wins At London Festival
December 1, 2011

'We Need To Talk About Kevin' Wins At London Festival

LONDON — LipSync Post (www.lipsyncpost.co.uk) provided finishing services for Lynne Ramsey's We Need To Talk About Kevin, a film that recently won the Best Film Award at the 2011 London Film Festival.  We Need To Talk About Kevin relied significantly on the studio’s Quantel Pablo and colorist Stuart Fyvie.
LipSync graded and finished no less than seven of the films that were screened at the London Film Festival, with Pablo playing a role in all of them. Fyvie explains: “For finishing and color correcting we relied on our three Pablos. All three share media via our Genetic Engineering GenePool.  We can all be working on the movie at the same time if necessary. For example, we often prep on Pablo 3 and are then able to get straight to work on the same footage on the big screen in Pablo 1. It's a great way to work and a real time saver too.”

 
We Need To Talk About Kevin stars Tilda Swinton as the guilt and angst-ridden mother of a teenage boy who has been jailed following a high school killing spree. "The subject is tough but the amount of cinematic input required throughout the film made it enjoyable to work on," notes Fyvie. "You have to create an atmosphere that's conducive to the creative process; it's a big part of the job of a colorist along with really knowing your tools."

Cinematographer Seamus McGarvey ( Atonement) and director Lynne Ramsey both attended the post production grading of the film.  "On the Pablo, I could offer ideas and treatments that the DP and director had not yet considered,” notes Fyvie. “You're helping to tell the story with color. The Pablo has all the tools I need and even the most subtle changes can alter the balance and feel of a scene quite dramatically. 

 
 
"The high quality processing that the Pablo provides ensures that the final look matches the director's ideas exactly," Fyvie continues. "You're interpreting the director's vision and representing what they are trying to do aesthetically."
 
Repetitive colors and themes to help tell the story were used throughout the film. For example, a bleak recurring reference to tomato soup and a running blue theme made color correction a very significant part of post-production for the film.