---
name: cinematographer-matyas-erdely
description: >
  Shoot in the style of Mátyás Erdély HSC — the architect of radical cinematic subjectivity,
  László Nemes's visual partner, the DP who shattered conventional visual grammar with Son of
  Saul's shallow-focus following shots and proved that what the camera REFUSES to show can be
  more powerful than what it reveals. Trigger for: Son of Saul (2015, László Nemes), Sunset
  (2018, Nemes), The Brutalist (2024, Brady Corbet), Miss Bala (2011, Gerardo Naranjo),
  or "Erdély cinematography," "Son of Saul look," "shallow focus following shot," "radical
  subjectivity," "Nemes DP," "The Brutalist cinematography."
---

# The Cinematography of Mátyás Erdély

## The Principle

Mátyás Erdély HSC is the cinematographer who made BLUR a moral and aesthetic statement. His
collaboration with László Nemes on *Son of Saul* (2015) produced one of the most formally
radical films in the history of cinema — a Holocaust film that takes place almost entirely
in shallow-focus close-up, the camera locked to the back of the protagonist's head, the
horrors of Auschwitz-Birkenau existing only as out-of-focus shapes, muffled sounds, and
peripheral nightmare at the edges of the frame. The world beyond the protagonist's
immediate physical reality is DENIED to the audience. You see what he sees. You see ONLY
what he sees. And what he sees is mostly the next step forward.

This approach is not a stylistic choice. It is a philosophical position. Erdély and Nemes
argued that the Holocaust CANNOT be represented through conventional cinematic means —
that wide shots of atrocity, clear images of suffering, the panoramic view of the death
camp, all risk turning unimaginable horror into consumable spectacle. By restricting the
image to the narrow, shallow, claustrophobic field of Saul's immediate perception, they
made the film about the EXPERIENCE of being inside the machinery of death rather than
the OBSERVATION of it from outside. The audience is not permitted the comfort of distance.
The blur is not a technical limitation. It is an ethical boundary.

Erdély's subsequent work — *Sunset* (2018) with Nemes, and *The Brutalist* (2024) with
Brady Corbet — has extended this investigation of restricted vision and subjective camera.
*Sunset* applies a similar shallow-focus, following-shot approach to Budapest in 1913,
the world teetering on the brink of war just beyond the protagonist's field of vision.
*The Brutalist* shifts register entirely, using large-format VistaVision cinematography
to create monumental compositions for a story about a Hungarian-Jewish architect in
postwar America. Erdély is not a one-technique cinematographer. He is a thinker about
the relationship between what the camera shows and what the audience is permitted to know.

---

## Light

### The Sonderkommando's Light — Son of Saul

**Son of Saul (2015, Nemes):** Saul Ausländer works as a Sonderkommando — a Jewish
prisoner forced to assist in the operation of the gas chambers and crematoria. Erdély
lights the death camp with the light it would actually have: the cold, flat grey of
Polish overcast for exteriors, the dim yellow of bare electric bulbs for the underground
chambers, the orange of the crematorium fires reflecting on concrete walls. The light is
never dramatized. It is FUNCTIONAL — the minimal illumination required for the machinery
of death to operate. The crematorium fire is not cinematic fire; it is industrial fire,
utilitarian, its light falling on Saul's face as he works.

Because the focus plane is so shallow (Erdély shot on 40mm at wide aperture, approximately
T1.3-2.0), the light behaves differently than in conventional cinema. Out-of-focus light
sources become large, soft, SHAPES of luminosity rather than defined points. The
crematorium becomes an orange glow. The searchlights become white smears. The world
beyond Saul's immediate focus dissolves into an impressionist field of light and shadow.
This is not beautiful. It is the visual representation of a mind that cannot — must not —
process what surrounds it.

### The Fading Empire — Sunset

**Sunset (2018, Nemes):** Budapest, 1913. Erdély applies a similar subjective camera to
a different historical moment — the last days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The light
is warmer here — the amber of gas lamps, the warm daylight of a Central European summer
— but the technique is the same: shallow focus, following shot, the world beyond the
protagonist's perception dissolving into luminous blur. The hat shop where Írisz Leiter
seeks her family's legacy is lit by the soft daylight filtering through display windows,
the interior warm and golden, the world outside a bright, indistinct haze.

### Monumental Light — The Brutalist

**The Brutalist (2024, Corbet):** A radical departure. Erdély shot on large-format
VistaVision, embracing deep focus, wide compositions, and the monumental scale of
brutalist architecture. The light becomes architectural: hard, geometric, defined by
the concrete forms it illuminates. László Tóth's buildings are lit by the qualities of
light they were designed to control — shafts of sunlight through narrow apertures, the
diffused glow through translucent panels, the hard shadow lines that the architecture
INTENDS. For the first time, Erdély pulls back from the face and photographs SPACE —
but space conceived as an extension of the character's inner life.

---

## Color

**The restricted palette of perception.** In *Son of Saul*, color is almost absent. The
image exists in a narrow range of grey, olive, concrete, and the orange of fire. This is
not a post-production desaturation — it is the consequence of the actual lighting conditions
and the physical environment of the camp. Concrete is grey. Uniforms are grey-green. Skin
under insufficient light is sallow. The only strong color is flame, and flame in this
context is not warmth — it is the crematoria.

**The amber of empire.** *Sunset* operates in a richer but still controlled palette: the
amber of gas light, the warm brown of wood-paneled interiors, the muted cream and gold
of Habsburg-era commercial display. The color conveys the deceptive warmth of a
civilization about to destroy itself — beautiful, refined, and fatally blind to the
catastrophe just beyond the frame's focus.

**The brutalist grey.** *The Brutalist* embraces the material palette of its subject:
raw concrete, steel, glass, the austere chromatic discipline of mid-century modernism.
Color arrives through the human elements — skin, fabric, the materials of domestic life
— set against the monochromatic severity of the architecture.

---

## Composition / Camera

**The following shot.** Erdély's signature: the camera fixed to the back or side of the
protagonist's head, moving WITH them through space, the focus plane locked to their face
while the world beyond dissolves. In *Son of Saul*, this is executed almost entirely in
long takes — extended, unbroken following shots that track Saul through the camp, through
the chambers, through the forest, without releasing the audience from his perspective.
The composition is LOCKED: Saul's head or shoulders fill a consistent portion of the frame,
and the camera adjusts to maintain this relationship as he moves, turns, stumbles, runs.
The audience is handcuffed to the protagonist.

**Shallow focus as moral choice.** The depth of field in *Son of Saul* is approximately
12-18 inches at the working distance. This means that a face in focus has a background
that is COMPLETELY dissolved. This is not typical shallow-focus aesthetics — it is RADICAL
shallow focus, where the relationship between sharp and unsharp is so extreme that the
image becomes almost two separate realities: the narrow plane of the protagonist's
immediate experience, and the incomprehensible blur of everything else.

**The 4:3 frame.** *Son of Saul* is shot in the Academy ratio (1.37:1), which compresses
the peripheral vision — the edges of the frame are closer to center, eliminating the
wide-screen panoramic view that would contextualize the horror. The narrow frame mimics
tunnel vision. The audience literally cannot see to the sides.

---

## Specifications

1. **Restrict the depth of field.** Shallow focus is not an aesthetic — it is an
   epistemological position. What the character cannot perceive, the audience cannot see.
   The blur beyond the focus plane is the boundary of permitted knowledge.
2. **Follow, don't observe.** The camera is attached to the character. It moves when they
   move, turns when they turn, stops when they stop. The audience does not get an
   establishing shot. They get the character's trajectory through space.
3. **Functional light, not dramatic light.** The light serves the SPACE, not the
   narrative. A crematorium is lit like a crematorium. A hat shop is lit like a hat
   shop. The light reveals the environment's reality, not the filmmaker's commentary.
4. **The narrow frame.** When the subject demands subjective restriction, consider the
   Academy ratio. The narrower frame eliminates peripheral context and forces the
   audience into tunnel vision.
5. **Blur is content.** What is out of focus is as important as what is in focus. The
   shapes, the movement, the light in the blur — these tell the audience what SURROUNDS
   the character without permitting them to examine it. The incomprehensible background
   is the film's subject as much as the sharp foreground.