SamSuka
nostalgicgirl
nostalgicgirl

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Lucifer S5E6

holy crapola!

https://1drv.ms/v/s!Al5rFsCmfGDihSfHbkuJuq7W5qql

Comments

I think its interesting because both colors can apply to both characters. Blue is a colder color, hell is seen as being blue and cold and Lucifer is wearing a dark blue shirt. But blue also symbolizes commitment, trust, loyalty, honesty, commitment, serenity and peace. Something that Chloe has been wanting to feel with a partner. Red is a warmer color and symbolizes passion, life, security, action, energy, dominance, confidence and power. Chloe is wearing red. Lucifer being driven by lust and passion and Chloe being the object of his desire for some time now. So if I were to interpret the color palette I think it is showing how both characters are feeling in their relationship with one another. Because it is not just about passion and desire, etc but there is also trust and loyalty there. Chloe being finally ready to take that step with Lucifer, being confident in their relationship and giving in to her passion and Lucifer realizing that this is not just about sex but something far more intimate than that. So both colors coming together might be a way of showing how they are both finally in the same space both physically and emotionally. Maybe? Idk.

nostalgicgirl

Your comment about Dan - that he should talk to Chloe about seeing the devil face... It was Dan calling Chloe when she and Lucifer were getting hot and heavy and she dismissed the call... So now Dan has no one to talk to, and which malevolent Angel do you think might play on Dan's fears? (not a spoiler - at least that was my thought when I first watched this episode)

D Boss

"I believe the lighting/color palette was intentional" - you got that right girl! Again having worked on motion picture and TV production for some time, I can confirm that the lighting and color choices are paramount. The running gag for production crews is "hurry up and wait" - mostly because setting up the lighting takes HOURS for every scene even if it only lasts for a few seconds or tens of seconds on screen! I worked on a B movie with Peter Fonda, and it had the DP or Director of Photography as Jack Cardiff, who did films like "The African Queen" with Humphrey Bogart/Katharine Hepburn. We were shooting this scene in a seedy bar, and the location was an actual strip club - and Cardiff spent about 4 hours setting up and tweaking lights - and the crew was getting antsy - we were saying "what is taking so bloody long" - he'd look through the camera, tell the stand ins to move here or there - and then say something like "put a 150 watt pepper right over here, in this corner" - for hours.... When he was done lighting the scene - then we understood what took so long - it looked incredible and was a masterpiece of light, shadow and color - which precisely matched the mood of the scene portrayed in the script! I will bet money that last set of scenes in the penthouse - from the time Chloe exited the elevator until the screen goes dark with them tangled on the bed - took at least 1 if not 2 whole 12 hour days to shoot. Every detail about the set dressing, lighting and photography is meticulously prepared - then you need several takes to get the lines and action right, and often repeating with different camera angles too.

D Boss


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