"The Revenant" was shot with a hand-held digital video camera without any artificial lighting.
Yes

- buy the way I just did not saw the Revenant

! But what I saw from a preview was exiting.
Concerning the color (blue sky, dark green of trees, a.s.o) it seams to me to look like Kodachrome!
(in parts very saturated - but also (not comparable with Kodachrome) with pale colors : a so called
mixed color management. Sure it was digital - but nothing to say against if it is looking nice at last.
What I will not say is that Kubrick with his films had bad photogtaphy. It is the oposite of that for sure. But there is also today a real good photography in films ( not in every case oft course but "sometimes".)
And Terence Malik is one of that directors today, who astablished a modern look (with his new D.O.P. I mentioned) by the way he changed "John Toll" who was responcible for "The thin red line"
Toll isn't involved in Terence Malik films any longer.
What makes Kubrick unforgettable in concern of photography in films ?
To me the visual effects in 2001 (wrong color photography) , the SFX in 2001, AND the moving camera in Shining (steadycam) beside the absolute symetric framing in many many shots of shining! One may feel that symetry is overdriven but the last issue concerning conception of Stanley Kubrick :
"EVERY SINGLE SHOT IN HIS MOVIES SEAMS TO BE ABSOLUTE MOTIVATED"
we of course miss such total motivation in films today !
Exeption (to me ) : Terence Malik :
If you "WANT" to see this : there is a lot. (of course this is "just" interpretation)
A cuote to the New Color Photography of the late 60th for example.
There are some better shots wich will make it more clear - but sorry I can't find it such quick as
I want

! Shots from the lower middle class residential area of Malik's protagonists.
Like this there :
(C) Joe Maloney
(just if you want to see this

) but seriously I am quite sure Malik has intended - because there is much much more - and you will wonder about if you remember the visual effects of Kubrick in 2001:
Do you perhaps remember Kubricks Epilog ?
Malik did it with dinosauriers:
But he ended not in space like Kubrick - he came back to his lower middle class protagonist :
end of part one.