---
name: cinematographer-sturla-brandth-grovlen
description: >
  Shoot in the style of Sturla Brandth Grovlen FNF — Norwegian cinematographer who pushes the
  boundaries of available-light digital cinematography, best known for Victoria, the genuine
  single-take 138-minute feature shot through the streets of Berlin, and for the fluid Steadicam
  naturalism of Another Round. His images are raw, immediate, and alive with the energy of
  unbroken real time. Trigger for: Victoria (2015, Schipper), Utoya: July 22 (2018, Poppe),
  Another Round (2020, Vinterberg), Nonstop (2022), As in Heaven (2021, Fly Carlsen), or
  "Grovlen lighting," "Grovlen look," "one-take cinematography," "Victoria look," "available
  light digital."
---

# The Cinematography of Sturla Brandth Grovlen

## The Principle

Sturla Brandth Grovlen FNF (Norwegian Society of Cinematographers) has established himself as one
of the most technically daring and emotionally immediate cinematographers working in European cinema.
His filmography is defined by a commitment to REAL TIME — the idea that cinema is most powerful when
it refuses to cut, when the camera's unbroken attention creates a bond between audience and subject
that editing would sever. Victoria (2015), shot as a genuine single take over 138 minutes through
the nighttime streets of Berlin, is the defining achievement of this philosophy and one of the most
remarkable technical accomplishments in the history of cinematography.

But Grovlen is not merely a technician of the long take. His collaboration with Thomas Vinterberg
on Another Round (2020) — the Oscar winner for Best International Feature — demonstrated that his
talent extends far beyond endurance filmmaking. Another Round is a classically constructed film
with conventional coverage and editing, but Grovlen's Steadicam work gives it a fluidity and
intimacy that makes the audience feel physically present in the rooms, the bars, the classrooms
where four men drink their way toward crisis. The camera is always in motion, always close, always
AMONG the characters rather than observing from outside.

His work on Utoya: July 22 (2018) — Erik Poppe's film about the 2011 terrorist attack on a
Norwegian youth camp, also staged as a single continuous take — confirmed Grovlen's unique ability
to sustain visual and emotional intensity across extended real-time sequences. The Scandinavian
tradition of austerity, of stripping away artifice to reach emotional truth, runs through all
his work. Grovlen does not add light to a scene; he finds the light that exists and uses the
extraordinary sensitivity of modern digital sensors to capture it. His images are raw, textured
with digital noise, sometimes almost uncomfortably intimate — and always, unmistakably, ALIVE.

---

## Light

### Available Light as Aesthetic Commitment

**Victoria (2015, Sebastian Schipper):** Because the film was shot in a single continuous take
from roughly 4:30 AM through dawn, with the camera moving through nightclubs, apartments, streets,
parking garages, a bank, and a rooftop, Grovlen had NO ABILITY to pre-light in the traditional
sense. The light of Victoria is the light of Berlin at night: sodium-vapor streetlights, the
fluorescent wash of a 24-hour convenience store, the red and blue neon of club signs, headlights
of passing cars, the grey pre-dawn light that gradually bleeds into the sky. Grovlen shot on the
Canon C300, chosen for its sensitivity at high ISO settings (he operated at ISO 3200 and above
for most of the film), accepting digital noise as a textural element rather than a flaw. The
remarkable thing about Victoria's lighting is that it CHANGES — as the characters move through
different environments over real elapsed time, the light shifts organically. The warm chaos of
the nightclub gives way to the cool blue of street exteriors, which gives way to the harsh
fluorescent of the bank interior, which gives way to the soft, grey, heartbreaking dawn light
of the final sequences. Grovlen could not control these transitions; he could only ride them,
adjusting exposure in real time, finding the frame within whatever light presented itself.

### Steadicam Intimacy in Natural Light

**Another Round (2020, Thomas Vinterberg):** Here Grovlen worked with more conventional production
resources but maintained his commitment to natural and available light as the foundation. The
Danish school where the four teachers work is lit with the flat, cool overhead fluorescents of
institutional Scandinavia — a light that Grovlen accepts and even celebrates for its democratic
flatness. The restaurant and bar scenes use warm tungsten practicals — the amber glow of pendant
lights over wooden tables, the golden spill of a well-stocked bar. Grovlen's Steadicam follows
the actors through these spaces with the ease of a slightly intoxicated companion, the camera's
movement matching the looseness and increasing recklessness of the characters' experiment.
The birthday party sequence — where the four men drink openly for the first time — is shot
with a warmth and kineticism that makes the audience feel the PLEASURE of the alcohol before
the consequences arrive.

### Horror in Daylight

**Utoya: July 22 (2018, Erik Poppe):** The film takes place in bright Nordic summer daylight —
an overcast but luminous Scandinavian afternoon. Grovlen had to create a sense of terror within
the most benign possible lighting conditions: soft, even, shadowless daylight that suggests
safety and normality. The single-take approach means the camera stays with the protagonist
(Andrea Berntzen) as she runs, hides, and searches for her sister, and the light never changes
from its impassive, democratic evenness. The horror is amplified by the light's refusal to
acknowledge the violence — the same gentle overcast that illuminates a summer camp also
illuminates a massacre. Grovlen's handheld work here is more urgent than in Victoria or Another
Round: the camera runs with the character, stumbles, catches itself, pans wildly toward sounds
of gunfire. The rawness of the camera movement combined with the calm of the light creates a
dissonance that is profoundly disturbing.

---

## Color

**Digital naturalism, ungraded truth.** Grovlen's color palette is defined by the absence of
manipulation — or rather, by the minimal possible manipulation. Victoria's color is the color of
Berlin at night: amber sodium vapor, blue-white LED, red neon, green fluorescent. These colors
are not harmonized or corrected; they coexist in the frame with the chaotic authenticity of real
urban light. Another Round uses a warmer, more consistent palette — the amber tones of Danish
interiors, the cool grey of Danish exteriors — but the warmth comes from the actual light sources
rather than from grading. Grovlen's preference for high-ISO digital capture means his images have
a quality of slight desaturation in the shadows and warmth in the highlights that feels inherently
digital — not the creamy tones of film, but the honest, slightly gritty rendering of a sensor
working near its limits. This digital texture has become part of his signature: it reads as
IMMEDIACY, as the look of something captured rather than constructed.

---

## Composition / Camera

**The body as compass.** In Grovlen's single-take work, classical composition becomes impossible —
the camera cannot be pre-set for the perfect frame because it must follow unpredictable human
movement through real space. Instead, Grovlen composes AROUND the body of the lead actor: the
frame is organized by the character's position, direction, and emotional state. When Victoria
(Laia Costa) is happy, the camera gives her space, pulls back to include her environment. When
she is trapped, the camera closes in, reducing the frame to her face and the immediate threat.
This body-centric composition replaces the architectural composition of traditional cinematography
with something more primal: the camera as companion, its spatial relationship to the character
expressing the emotional relationship between audience and subject. In Another Round, the
Steadicam work achieves a similar effect within more conventional coverage: the camera orbits
the group of friends at a table, moves in to catch a whispered confession, pulls back for a
toast. The movement is always motivated by the social dynamics of the scene — the camera goes
where a slightly drunk friend would lean.

---

## Specifications

1. **Accept the available light.** Use the actual light of the location — streetlights, fluorescents,
   practicals, daylight — as the primary illumination. Do not supplement unless the image is
   literally unprojectable. The authenticity of found light outweighs the perfection of designed
   light.
2. **Embrace high-ISO digital noise.** Shoot at the sensitivity the scene requires, even if that
   means ISO 3200 or above. Digital noise is texture, not failure. It reads as immediacy and
   presence.
3. **Move with the body.** Let the camera's spatial relationship to the actor express the emotional
   relationship between audience and character. Close for intimacy and threat, distant for freedom
   and context. The body is the compositional anchor, not the architecture.
4. **Sustain the shot.** Resist the urge to cut. When a take extends beyond conventional length,
   the audience shifts from watching a scene to INHABITING it. Real time creates real empathy.
5. **Let the light change.** When moving through spaces, allow the color temperature, intensity,
   and quality of light to shift naturally. These transitions — from warm to cool, bright to dark,
   artificial to natural — are part of the storytelling, not problems to be corrected.
