Robby Müller(1940-2018)
- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Actor
Robby Müller was born on 4 April 1940 in Willemstad, Curaçao, Netherlands Antilles. He was a cinematographer and actor, known for Breaking the Waves (1996), Paris, Texas (1984) and Dead Man (1995). He died on 3 July 2018 in Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands.
- Awards
- 15 wins & 15 nominations
Cinematographer
- 2018
- 2014
- 2004
- 2004
- 2003
- Poem: I Set My Foot Upon the Air and It Carried Me7.0
- Cinematographer (segments Gesang der Geister über den Wassern, Nach grauen Tagen, Der Schiffüchige)
- 2003
- 2002
- 2002
- 2001
- 2000
- 1999
- 1998
- 1997
- 1996
- 1995
Camera and Electrical Department
- 2007
- 1999
- 1986
- 1976
- 1975
- 1969
- 1968
- To Grab the Ring
- assistant camera
- 1968
- 1967
- 1966
- 1966
- 1965
Actor
- Alternative names
- Robby Muller
- Born
- Died
- July 3, 2018
- Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands(undisclosed)
- Publicity listings
- TriviaJim Jarmusch at the Lincoln Center, New York, April 2014: "Robby Müller, I learned so much from this man about filmmaking, about a lot of things, about life in general and about light and about recording things and about capturing things in the moment and about trusting instincts. Robby and I had a really wonderful way of working: No storyboard, a shot list only if really necessary for ourselves. I still don't like making a shot list each day when I'm working. Robby's idea is about instincts, trusting your instinct and your intuition and Robby would always say things like: 'Of course we can plan everything in advance and when we go to that location it's a different time of day, the light is different, the clouds are different, so why would we cling to the idea we had previously? We must always be on our feet.' Think on your feet. And we did a lot of interesting things while scouting for this film together which was: We find the most dramatic, incredibly beautiful landscape you could imagine and then we would turn our backs on it and film the other way. [audience laughs] That was something that Robby said: 'Look how magnificent this is, we've seen it in a fucking calender! Let's look over there, it's a small tree and a rock, very sad and emotional, you know?' [audience laughs] So we would film that instead. And this is just one example of the kind of way that Robby thinks. And I learned so much from him, thinking that way. Don't look for the obvious, always keep your eyes open, keep thinking on your feet. Shooting a film is a process and you can't control everything in the process, so be open. Another thing Robby taught me was: O.K., you're shooting a scene outside and suddenly it starts raining. And most crews would say: 'Well, the scene doesn't take place in the rain, so let's pack up and we'll have to stop for today'. And Robby would be: 'I wonder what it would be like, if the scene's in the rain. Maybe it's much better'. Or if we already shot some of it: 'O.K. think of some dialogue where they say it's about the rain, you know?' Like, keep thinking, keep thinking, don't be set in your script. It's something that came from Nicholas Ray, who said: 'If you just gonna shoot the script then why bother?' And that's something Robby also instilled in me. Robby Müller is a kind of brilliant man who's a very rebellious teenager in part of his spirit and yet an incredibly technically gifted person.".
- QuotesThere are many films made today where the color is not really necessary, but you don't have a choice because the distributor wants color so he can sell it. But I always have a kind of 'thinking exercise' with the director, 'Why not in b&w?' or 'Why not in color?' So if we explain it to ourselves we know where we have to pay attention because, if you make the kind of films I generally make, color could give you too much information. Alice in the Cities (1974), for instance, would have been very bad in color. The same with Down by Law (1986). You would have had so much information around you that it would distract you from what you are telling. "Alice in den Städten" (1974) was originally planned for color. We even had a sponsor, Polaroid, who was bringing out that same year the SX-70 [a compact, reflex-viewing camera for Polaroid film] on a trial market in Florida and they agreed to sponsor us. But when Wim [director Wim Wenders] and I discussed it I said this will be no good in color; this little girl will be totally lost in this loud, exotic New York. Polaroid later agreed but they didn't withdraw their sponsorship. [June 1993]
- TrademarkFrequently worked with Wim Wenders
- Nickname
- Master of Light
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