- 'Rust' to premiere three years after on-set shooting
- Strike at French cognac maker Hennessy over measures in China spat
- Xi, Lula meet in Brasilia to 'enhance ties'
- SpaceX fails to repeat Starship booster catch, as Trump watches on
- 'I have left a legacy': Nadal retires from tennis
- US recognizes Venezuela opposition's Gonzalez Urrutia as 'president-elect'
- European powers, US seek to censure Iran at UN nuclear watchdog board
- UNAIDS chief says husband, Ugandan opposition figure Besigye, 'kidnapped'
- Nadal's sensational career ends as Netherlands defeat Spain in Davis Cup
- US announces talks with Israel over civilian casualties in Gaza
- SpaceX fails to repeat Starship booster catch, as Trump looks on
- G20 summit ends with Ukraine blame game
- Trump appoints TV celebrity 'Dr. Oz' to key US health post
- European stocks fall on Ukraine-Russia fears, US focused on earnings
- Last-gasp Szoboszlai penalty rescues Hungary draw with Germany
- Germany, Netherlands draw as Nations League group stage ends
- Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai takes witness stand in collusion trial
- Guardiola set to extend stay as Man City boss - reports
- Minnows Botswana hold Egypt to qualify with Mozambique, Tanzania
- Inter Miami coach Martino leaving club for 'personal reasons' - club source
- Chinese man sentenced to 20 months for Falun Gong harassment in US
- Hong Kong court jails 45 democracy campaigners, drawing condemnation
- 'I did it for Rafa': Alcaraz after keeping Spain Davis Cup dream alive
- Alcaraz keeps Spain and Nadal Davis Cup dream alive
- Trump names China hawk Howard Lutnick commerce secretary
- Europe's pivotal role in bid to strike COP29 climate deal
- MotoGP champion Martin falls on Aprilia debut
- Bodies burned after Haiti police, civilians kill 28 alleged gang members
- 'Probably my last match': Nadal after Davis Cup singles defeat
- Iran faces new censure over lack of cooperation at UN nuclear meeting
- Afghan woman teacher, jailed Tajik lawyer share top rights prize
- Pressure mounts on Scholz over bid for second term
- Take two: Biden makes it into G20 leaders' photo
- Russia vows response after Ukraine fires long-range US missiles
- Spain's Nadal loses in Davis Cup quarter-finals singles opener
- Four elite Brazil officers arrested over alleged 2022 Lula murder plot
- SpaceX set for Starship's next flight -- with Trump watching
- Trump ally seeks to block trans lawmaker from women's restrooms
- Slovakia oust Britain to meet Italy in BJK Cup title match
- Top-selling daily French daily Ouest-France stops posting on X
- Russian invasion toll on environment $71 billion, Ukraine says
- 'Sabotage' suspected after two Baltic Sea cables cut
- 'You will die in lies!': daughter clashes with father at French rape trial
- Spain Women drop veterans Paredes and World Cup kiss victim Hermoso
- Stocks diverge on fears of Ukraine-Russia escalation
- New Botswana leader eyes cannabis, sunshine to lift economy
- 'Operation Night Watch': Rembrandt classic gets makeover
- Haiti police, civilians kill 28 gang members: authorities
- Taxing the richest: what the G20 decided
- 'Minecraft' to come to life in UK and US under theme park deal
Ken Loach likes to 'hide camera' says his cinematographer
Ken Loach is one of the most familiar faces at Cannes, where Saturday he is in the running for a record-breaking third Palme d'Or, but when you shoot one of the British maestro's movies it's all about staying hidden.
"The aesthetic comes from hiding the camera so you are always in the corner of the room," said Barry Ackroyd, one of Loach's most loyal directors of photography, who picked up a special cinematographer's prize at the French Riviera festival this year.
As well as making a dozen films for Loach he has also shot movies for Paul Greengrass including "Jason Bourne" (2016), and "The Hurt Locker" (2008) by Kathryn Bigelow, for which he won a BAFTA.
Loach's films "are always from a human perspective so you will very rarely see any tracking movements unless it's someone running and there will be a pan... but the perspective is always eye level and for lenses nothing wider than your field of vision."
As for techniques like zooms, these are "blasphemous"in Loach's cinema.
"The key to it is framing and balance. He is very classical... he likes things to be clean and tidy in this world that is messed up.”
When shooting a scene, the crew all have "baseball caps on, heads down," Ackroyd said. "He wants great technique but he wants it to be very hidden."
- Two decades with Loach -
Ackroyd grew up in the industrial town of Oldham in an environment similar to the one in "Kes", Loach's landmark film from 1969 about a boy from a mining family who develops a bond with a kestrel.
One inspiring art teacher changed Ackroyd's life, he said, and he went on to make documentaries, shooting around the world for the BBC, Channel 4 and other media, and collaborating with the likes of Nick Broomfield.
Ackroyd began working with Loach on "Riff Raff" (1991) and continued on nearly all his features for the next two decades.
He shot classics for Loach including "My Name is Joe" (1998) and "The Wind that Shakes the Barley" (2006), that won Loach's first Palme d'Or at Cannes.
Their last collaboration was "Looking for Eric" three years later.
Ackroyd said "socialism" was the bond that holds Loach's crew together.
"You want to see a better world and you feel a part of it when you are making a film for Loach. Giving people options to think... injustice must be put right."
Working with directors such as Greengrass, Bigelow and Adam McKay ("The Big Short") allowed his "camera to take off," Ackroyd said, in a way he could not do with Loach.
But he has never forgotten the principles he learnt from the British master.
"I can't break those rules. I stand back much further than most people do on a film set. I use longer lenses and I use that zoom as a conscious eye. My intention is to bring the audience with you."
N.Mitchell--AT