---
name: cinematographer-laszlo-kovacs
description: >
  Shoot in the style of Laszlo Kovacs ASC — Hungarian-born New Hollywood cinematographer who helped
  define the look of American independent cinema in the late 1960s and 1970s. A master of available
  light naturalism, American landscape photography, and the art of making the camera disappear into
  the story. His work on Easy Rider and Five Easy Pieces established a new visual vocabulary for
  American film.
  Trigger for: Easy Rider (1969, Hopper), Five Easy Pieces (1970, Rafelson), Paper Moon (1973,
  Bogdanovich), Shampoo (1975, Ashby), Ghostbusters (1984, Reitman), or "Kovacs lighting,"
  "Kovacs look," "New Hollywood naturalism," "American landscape cinematography."
---

# The Cinematography of Laszlo Kovacs

## The Principle

Laszlo Kovacs (1933-2007) escaped Hungary during the 1956 revolution, smuggling out footage of
the uprising that he and fellow cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond had shot at great personal risk.
He arrived in America with nothing but his talent and a deep European training in the craft of
cinematography. Within a decade, he had become one of the defining visual voices of the New
Hollywood movement, shooting Easy Rider (1969), Five Easy Pieces (1970), and a string of films
that redefined what American cinema looked like.

Kovacs's great contribution was bringing a naturalistic, available-light sensibility to American
filmmaking at a moment when the studio system's polished, controlled lighting was giving way to
something rawer and more honest. He understood that the American landscape — its highways, diners,
oil fields, small towns, and open skies — was itself a character, and he photographed it with a
documentary eye that found beauty without sentimentalizing. His work on Easy Rider, shot largely
with available light on real locations across the American Southwest, created a visual template
for the road movie that endures to this day.

But Kovacs was no one-trick naturalist. Paper Moon (1973) demonstrated his mastery of black-and-
white photography, evoking the look of Depression-era America with precision and warmth. Shampoo
(1975) brought a sophisticated, sun-drenched quality to its satire of 1970s Los Angeles. And
Ghostbusters (1984) proved he could handle large-scale effects-driven comedy while maintaining
the warmth and naturalism that defined his style. Kovacs was, above all, a humanist — his camera
loved faces, and his light loved skin. He made people look real and beautiful simultaneously, a
balance that few cinematographers achieve.

---

## Light

### The Open Road — Available Light Naturalism

**Easy Rider (1969, Dennis Hopper):** Kovacs shot the iconic motorcycle journey across America
using almost entirely available light — the sun, the sky, and whatever illumination the locations
provided. The result is an image that feels like documentary footage elevated to poetry. The
campfire scenes are lit by actual fire, faces emerging from darkness in warm, flickering orange.
The desert riding sequences use the harsh midday sun and the golden light of late afternoon,
shifting the emotional register from freedom to foreboding as the journey progresses. The New
Orleans sequences, including the famous cemetery acid trip, use natural and available light in ways
that feel hallucinatory — overexposure, lens flare, and the chaotic interplay of sunlight and
shadow through the cemetery's stone architecture.

### Window Light and Domestic Realism

**Five Easy Pieces (1970, Bob Rafelson):** The oil field sequences are shot under grey, overcast
Pacific Northwest skies that make the industrial landscape feel oppressive and inescapable. When
Bobby Dupea returns to his family's estate, Kovacs shifts to the softer, more refined light of
the Puget Sound region — diffused daylight through large windows, the cool green light of the
surrounding forest. Interior scenes use practicals and window light to create a naturalistic
warmth that contrasts with the emotional coldness of the family dynamics. The diner scene — one
of the most famous in American cinema — is lit with simple overhead fluorescents, flat and
unglamorous, matching the banality of the setting.

### Black-and-White Mastery

**Paper Moon (1973, Peter Bogdanovich):** Kovacs's black-and-white photography is a love letter to
Depression-era America, evoking the look of Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange's photographs. He used
the flat, bright Kansas sunlight to create high-contrast images with deep blacks and brilliant
whites, giving the landscape a crisp, graphic quality. Faces are sculpted by hard, directional
light that reveals every line and expression. The long driving sequences use the wide-open
Kansas horizon and the graphic contrast of black car against white sky to create compositions of
elegant simplicity.

---

## Color

**Natural palette, American tonality.** Kovacs's color work is defined by fidelity to the natural
world rather than imposed stylization. Easy Rider uses the full chromatic range of the American
Southwest — red desert, blue sky, green forest — without filtration or manipulation. The colors
are vivid because the landscape is vivid. Shampoo operates in the warm, sun-bleached palette of
1970s Los Angeles — golden skin tones, white light, the pale pastels of Beverly Hills interiors.
Ghostbusters uses the warm tones of New York City brownstones and the cooler blues of nighttime
exteriors, with the supernatural elements providing bursts of unnatural color (green, pink,
white) that stand out against the naturalistic base. In all his color work, Kovacs prioritized
warm, accurate skin tones — his faces glow with life regardless of the surrounding palette.

---

## Composition

**The figure in the American landscape.** Kovacs composed with an instinct for the relationship
between people and places. His wide shots in Easy Rider place the riders as small figures against
vast Western landscapes, emphasizing both freedom and vulnerability. In Five Easy Pieces, he uses
the industrial clutter of the oil fields to create frames that feel cramped and cluttered,
contrasting with the open, airy compositions of the family estate. Paper Moon's compositions are
deliberately classical — centered framing, strong horizon lines, balanced arrangements that echo
Depression-era photography. His close-ups are intimate without being intrusive, typically shot on
moderate telephoto lenses that flatten perspective slightly and create a sense of observing rather
than invading. He rarely used extreme wide-angle lenses, preferring the natural perspective of
50mm to 85mm focal lengths.

---

## Specifications

1. **Use available light as your primary source.** The sun, the sky, practical fixtures, and
   firelight. Supplement only when absolutely necessary, and when you do, make the addition
   invisible. The audience should never be aware of a lighting setup.
2. **Photograph the American landscape as a character.** Wide shots should establish not just
   geography but mood, social context, and emotional state. The landscape tells us who these
   people are and what their world feels like.
3. **Prioritize warm, accurate skin tones above all.** Regardless of the surrounding palette or
   lighting conditions, faces should feel alive, warm, and human. This is the foundation of
   naturalistic cinematography.
4. **Match the visual style to the social world of the characters.** Harsh, flat light for working-
   class environments. Soft, refined light for privileged spaces. The quality of light should
   reflect economic and emotional reality.
5. **Keep the camera unobtrusive.** Moderate focal lengths, steady but not rigid framing, and
   movement that follows action rather than imposing style. The goal is to make the audience forget
   they are watching a photographed image.
