I've made no secret about being a fool for Taschen books, and damned if I haven't gotten into another one -- a making-of-Babel coffee-table book composed of 250 or more shots taken during the location shooting in Morocco, Mexico and Japan. Good viewing, good revisiting, good immersion. Better if you've seen the movie, but stirring either way.

The 302-page book was edited by by Maria Eladia Hagerman, who's had the honor, intrigue and adventure of being married to Babel director Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu for the last 14 years. An idea came to Hagerman, an avid photographer and book editor (she worked on a volume of poetry by Mexican poet Jaime Sabines), as her husband was doing Babel location-scouting and regaling her with the details.
"I saw an opportunity to create a portrait of the worlds that inspired Babel," she says. "Not so much the stars as much as the people who are not always on the screen...the people who are part of these worlds."
That's an accurate description -- this is only marginally a book about Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Gael Garcia Bernal and Rinko Kikuchi shooting a movie. It's much more of a cultural atmosphere trip, which is naturally fitting given the film's focus on absorbing the rituals and aromas of native cultures.
Hagerman chose four photographers to shoot in the three separate locations -- Mary Ellen Mark and Patrick Bard covered the Morocco shoot, Graciela Iturbide captured the Mexico filming, and Miguel Rio Branco photographed the third and final location filming in Tokyo. (Additional Moroccan-shoot photographs came from unit photographer Murray Close.)

One of my favorite shots is of Innaritu describing how to play a scene to Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett during the Moroccan portion. I asked him about this last week, and he said he wanted Blanchett, whose character is limp and bleeding from having been shot near the base of her neck, to look like a Pieta figure with her head back and arms spread out.
And I was shaking my head over a wide-angle shot of Innaritu and his crew getting the film's very first image -- a middle-aged, weather-beaten man (i.e., the seller of the high-powered hunting rifle) walking along rugged desert terrain. The shot has a quiet, meditative alone-ness...and yet the Taschen book photography shows some 23 or 24 people were involved, including two large sun reflectors and a long section of parallel metal track. It hasn't made the opening shot seem inorganic exactly, but I don't think it will ever quite feel the same.
The Babel book went on sale last Thursday in Mexico and did rather well, says Hagerman. It goes on sale in the States this week. Hagerman and her husband are going to attend a two-hour book signing at the Beverly Hills Taschen store (354 No. Beverly Drive -- tel: 310.274.4300) on Thursday, at 7pm.

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on November 13, 2006 at 4:25 PM
comment #1
actionman
says ...
it's available for purchase at the arclight and has been out to buy there since the movie opened a few weeks ago...i almost got it but i only half-liked the movie...the Taschen book on Michael Mann, like his films, is a masterpiece.
Posted by actionman
at November 13, 2006 6:21 PM
comment #2
actionman
says ...
but I do agree with Jeff...it's a beautifully put together book and totally in line with the rest of the amazing books that Taschen puts out. The Paul Verhoeven book is also awesome.
Posted by actionman
at November 13, 2006 6:22 PM
comment #3
Mgmax, le Corbeau
says ...
I don't know if I can watch Babel with a straight face after reading this hilarious Slate piece on bus plunges in the Third World.
http://www.slate.com/id/2152895
It makes a wonderful companion piece, in a way-- Babel is about how we're all connected, this is about how tragedy in far away places is good for nothing more than 43 words to fill a hole on page 14A.
Posted by Mgmax, le Corbeau
at November 13, 2006 6:31 PM
comment #4
nemo
says ...
"The shot has a quiet, meditative alone-ness...and yet the Taschen book photography shows some 23 or 24 people were involved, including two large sun reflectors and a long section of parallel metal track."
It was seeing some behind-the-camera stills like that in a book that made me realize that as easy and natural as it looks, movie acting might actually be hard work.
It's one thing to act intimate and natural when you're alone or with one other person you know and trust. It's another thing to do that with a camera inches from your face, a mike hanging over your head, hot lights blazing in your face, cables snaking all over the place, a dozen or two dozen crew members hanging around watching you, the whole thing took hours to set up, and the crew is waiting to tear it all down and set up the next shot before they break for lunch, and the whole time the big taxi meter is ticking, clicking up thousands upon tens of thousands upon millions of dollars.
Posted by nemo
at November 14, 2006 8:40 AM