A wide industrial shot from the film "Metropolis"

Cinematographers behind 15 iconic films in movie history

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May 18, 2022
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Cinematographers behind 15 iconic films in movie history

A cinematographer is vital to developing the look and feel of a successful film. Responsible for the camera and lighting crew, the choices a cinematographer makes play a critical role in how the picture turns out overall. Their work impacts everything鈥攖he look, color, lighting, and frame of every single shot in a movie, of which there can be thousands.

Therefore, it comes as no surprise that many of the most iconic films of all time were made possible by the greatest cinematographers. Many of these artists worked closely with directors to create some of the most indelible images and scenes in cinematic history.

dug into film history, chose 15 movies iconic for their cinematography, and researched the director of photography (the cinematographer) behind the project, their work on the movie, how their cinematography stands out in the film listed, and gave an example shot from the movie. The list skews heavily toward the 20th century and was guided by the American Society of Cinematographers'  in cinematography history. user ratings and Metascores are provided for popular and critical context.

Click through for a look at these 15 iconic movies and the cinematographers who made every shot memorable.

Karl Freund: 鈥楳etropolis鈥 (1927)

- Director: Fritz Lang
- IMDb user rating: 8.3
- Metascore: 98
- Runtime: 153 minutes

Karl Freund was a cinematographer who worked on over 100 films over the course of his career. He was famous for essentially of another well-known film, 1931鈥檚 鈥淒racula,鈥 when the director left mid-shoot. 鈥淢etropolis鈥 is not only regarded as one of the earliest examples of a science fiction film but also among the many cinematic touchstones to emerge from the German film goliath Universum Film-Aktien Gesellschaft, which was a trailblazing force of the silent film era.

Freund鈥檚 work depicting the urban landscape in 鈥淢etropolis鈥 was heavily influenced by the futurist Italian architect Antonio Sant鈥橢lia. In recent years, numerous filmmakers have endeavored to bring Freund鈥檚 work to life with sound and music, including that of Freddie Mercury and Loverboy.

Jack Cardiff: 鈥楾he Red Shoes鈥 (1948)

- Directors: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
- IMDb user rating: 8.1
- Metascore: data not available
- Runtime: 135 minutes

The cinematography for a film called 鈥淭he Red Shoes鈥 was always going to be important. After all, audiences need to feel moments of high drama and importance when the titular shoes make their appearance. The film follows the story of a ballerina consumed by her twin passions for dance and desire for love.

Cardiff鈥檚 work masterfully renders the flashes of red shoes across the screen as symbols of both desires. He used something called to bring the film鈥檚 colors to the forefront of a viewer鈥檚 consciousness. This required extreme levels of skill and was tremendously expensive, but the end result left audiences dazzled.

Stanley Cortez: 鈥楾he Night of the Hunter鈥 (1955)

- Director: Charles Laughton
- IMDb user rating: 8.0
- Metascore: 99
- Runtime: 92 minutes

鈥淭he Night of the Hunter鈥 is widely considered one of the most visually arresting movies ever made. Stanley Cortez worked in extremely close and intimate detail with all the other major players in the film. He had long philosophical conversations with the movie鈥檚 director and writer and helped ensure the entire film was shot in . Cortez created eerie sets, full of shadowy buildings and distant hillscapes, along with a pond that plays a pivotal role in the story.

Freddie Young: 鈥楲awrence of Arabia鈥 (1962)

- Director: David Lean
- IMDb user rating: 8.3
- Metascore: 100
- Runtime: 218 minutes

鈥淟awrence of Arabia鈥 takes place almost entirely in the desert. Freddie Young was almost 60 when he worked on the film and had been thinking about making a similar movie since the 1920s. Perhaps the scene for which he鈥檚 best remembered is the one with Omar Sharif emerging from a desert mirage. Young made the shot possible with . He鈥檇 brought it to film from Panavision in the United States for just such an occasion.

Geoffrey Unsworth: 鈥2001: A Space Odyssey鈥 (1968)

- Director: Stanley Kubrick
- IMDb user rating: 8.3
- Metascore: 84
- Runtime: 149 minutes

鈥2001: A Space Odyssey鈥 is another science fiction film set in the future. Geoffrey Unsworth used a number of unusual techniques to achieve the movie鈥檚 futuristic look, among them being the  in the walls of the film鈥檚 centrifuge. It was difficult for the cameramen to get shots inside the centrifuge that didn鈥檛 expose some of the hidden lights and the lenses had to be set to wide-angle nearly all the time. This meticulous coordination of lighting, camerawork, and set design is just one of many creative and logistical solutions Unsworth came up with when looking to set a film in what was then an unimaginable future.

Gordon Willis: 鈥楾he Godfather鈥 (1972)

- Director: Francis Ford Coppola
- IMDb user rating: 9.2
- Metascore: 100
- Runtime: 175 minutes

鈥淭he Godfather鈥 is easily one of the most iconic films ever made. Gordon Willis鈥 work on the film is widely considered to have influenced almost every cinematographer who came after him. Willis used techniques such as placing actors intentionally in darkness to simultaneously solve lighting issues and do character work. He used a  in similar ways. When they beamed down on Marlon Brando, they did the double work of not only illuminating him, but also conferring a gravitas upon Brando essential to his character and the plot.

N茅stor Almendros: 鈥楧ays of Heaven鈥 (1978)

- Director: Terrence Malick
- IMDb user rating: 7.8
- Metascore: 93
- Runtime: 94 minutes

N茅stor Almendros won the Academy Award for his work in 1978鈥檚 鈥淒ays of Heaven.鈥 The film is set in 1916 among the oilfields of rural Texas. It is heavily atmospheric and features stark and stunning shots of the Texan landscape, combined with dramatically contrasting lighting. Almendros鈥 achievement is all the more stunning for the fact that he worked on the film while he was . No one would have ever been able to tell on set and it wasn鈥檛 until a later interview when the film鈥檚 star, Richard Gere, let it slip that Almendros had worked on the film nearly blind.

Vittorio Storaro: 鈥楢pocalypse Now鈥 (1979)

- Director: Francis Ford Coppola
- IMDb user rating: 8.5
- Metascore: 94
- Runtime: 147 minutes

From the opening shots of 鈥淎pocalypse Now,鈥 set on the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, no one who has ever seen the film will be able to forget its stunning visuals鈥攁nd Vittorio Storaro certainly had his work cut out for him making the film. Storaro intentionally used colors and light in contrast to the darkness of the jungle while filming in the Philippines. He worked closely with famed director Francis Ford Coppola and has said that one of his preeminent memories from making the film was arriving to find Coppola鈥檚 , and wondering if he鈥檇 be able to pull off the effect Coppola wanted. Needless to say, he delivered, and was rewarded with an Academy Award.

Jordan Cronenweth: 鈥楤lade Runner鈥 (1982)

- Director: Ridley Scott
- IMDb user rating: 8.1
- Metascore: 84
- Runtime: 117 minutes

鈥淏lade Runner鈥 is famous for its use of light and shadow. Much of that was the work of cinematographer Jordan Cronenweth. Director Ridley Scott wanted the movie鈥檚 feeling to evoke the film noir of the 1940s and 鈥50s. Cronenweth by using strong shafts of light along with backlighting. He also used high-contrast and unusual camera angles in order to deliver a look and feel similar to another template Scott laid out鈥攖hat of the film 鈥淐itizen Kane.鈥

Robby M眉ller: 鈥楶aris, Texas鈥 (1984)

- Director: Wim Wenders
- IMDb user rating: 8.0
- Metascore: 78
- Runtime: 145 minutes

Robby M眉ller has been called the 鈥渕aster of light鈥濃攁nd after one viewing of his work on 鈥淧aris, Texas,鈥 it鈥檚 not hard to see why. The film centers on characters in extreme emotional states, and M眉ller鈥檚 expert use of light manages to mirror those states. Set in the harsh, hot plains of Texas, M眉ller鈥檚 light has been called , as opposed to the typical film set lighting, and contrasts palpably with the darkness many of the characters are grappling with inside.

Robert Richardson: 鈥楯FK鈥 (1991)

- Director: Oliver Stone
- IMDb user rating: 8.0
- Metascore: 72
- Runtime: 189 minutes

Cinematography is at the heart of the plot in 鈥淛FK.鈥 After all, the film centers around footage from the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination of U.S President John F. Kennedy. Richardson of the famous Zapruder film鈥攔eal footage shot by a private citizen鈥攐f the moment Kennedy was shot in Dallas. His work for the film is an unusual blend of fact and fiction, much like the plot of the film itself. The picture takes an authentic tragedy and builds a fictional world around it. Richardson mirrors that tendency with his own work, mixing real and manufactured images together to create an immersive whole.

Janusz Kami艅ski: 鈥楽aving Private Ryan鈥 (1998)

- Director: Steven Spielberg
- IMDb user rating: 8.6
- Metascore: 91
- Runtime: 169 minutes

With its graphic scenes of combat on the battlefields of World War II, 鈥淪aving Private Ryan鈥 is a visually arresting movie. Cinematographer Janusz Kami艅ski attributes much of this powerful work to his relative youth when he worked on the film. Being young, he has said, enabled him to experiment with different photographic and lab techniques.

鈥淵outh has a lot of attributes, and one of them is that you take chances,鈥 . 鈥淐ertainly, from a visual standpoint, we took chances on that film.鈥 Some of the most memorable scenes include the unforgettable opening montage, in which the camera takes the point of view of Allied troops wading ashore at Omaha Beach, suffering high casualties from enemy fire.

Christopher Doyle: 鈥業n the Mood for Love鈥 (2000)

- Director: Wong Kar-wai
- IMDb user rating: 8.0
- Metascore: 85
- Runtime: 98 minutes

鈥淚n the Mood for Love鈥 has been , with a number of bars and fashion brands named after it and filmmakers citing it as inspiration. Christopher Doyle鈥檚 cinematography is one reason why. Doyle used many techniques and effects to evoke the mood of the film suggested by the title. He used bright, primary colors, working with the costume department to make the stars鈥 wardrobes pop alongside all the other visuals he placed in his lens, creating an atmosphere that continues to inspire today.

Roger Deakins: 鈥楴o Country for Old Men鈥 (2007)

- Directors: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
- IMDb user rating: 8.2
- Metascore: 92
- Runtime: 122 minutes

A crime story set in Texas at its core, 鈥淣o Country for Old Men鈥 is full of foreboding visuals. Roger Deakins was responsible for creating that atmosphere, along with revamping the feel of contemporary Westerns. Deakins worked with the directors to achieve this feel by shooting on film with an . The film鈥檚 stock was also shot with a Kodak Vision 2383 using 35 mm. That old-time atmosphere was conjured not just by a good eye, but also by Deakins鈥 commitment to using the same tools that would have been used during the time in which the film was set.

Emmanuel Lubezki: 鈥楪ravity鈥 (2013)

- Director: Alfonso Cuar贸n
- IMDb user rating: 7.7
- Metascore: 96
- Runtime: 91 minutes

Emmanuel Lubezki faced a unique challenge working on 鈥淕ravity.鈥 Much of the film takes place in outer space, which comes with different lighting conditions than those on Earth. Lubezki鈥檚 initial task was to come up with lighting for the film鈥檚 opening shot of Earth, as viewed from a space shuttle. Lubezki has said that he considered the work of Vittorio Storaro, in particular, when thinking of how to use lighting to achieve the desired mood. 鈥淭he light is friendly in the beginning of the movie,鈥 . 鈥淎nd during that shot it becomes more complex and more threatening and more dynamic.鈥

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