Journal of Alta California

IMAGE MAKERS

Cinematographers are the eyes for the audience: what they see through their lens determines what we see. Camerawork is the most visible part of film- and TV-making, but the artists responsible for the craft are, to most viewers, invisible. A recent tragedy made Halyna Hutchins, who was accidentally shot and killed on the set of Rust, the face of her profession just as she was ascending in it—revealing some of the dangerous working conditions in film and television today. (This roundtable was conducted before Hutchins’s passing.)

It’s been a male-dominated field for the past century, and a few cinematographers (a.k.a. directors of photography, or, more commonly, DPs) have risen to the top of the ranks: take Gordon Willis, known within the trade as the Prince of Darkness, who shot the shadowy Godfather trilogy; or 15-time Oscar nominee (and two-time winner) Roger Deakins, who has painted beauty in every frame of his films, from The Shawshank Redemption to 1917. Only three years ago, Rachel Morrison became the first female DP to earn an Oscar nomination, for her work on the Netflix film Mudbound.

But that imbalance is slowly shrinking, as the rise of streaming services has blown open the gates for many previously unheard voices (and unseen visions). What’s it like to shoot for both the epic canvas that

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Journal of Alta California

Journal of Alta California4 min read
The Slag Heap of History
They finally dismantled the Confederate statues on a summer Saturday morning. Shoppers were heading to Charlottesville’s downtown farmers market when the crane and flatbed truck arrived to cart away the controversial memorials to Robert E. Lee and Th
Journal of Alta California15 min read
‘Look Out or You’ll Be Poisoned’
The attempted murder happened on an ordinary spring day at the Carmel artist colony in 1914. The novelist Alice MacGowan went to get something to eat from the cooler on the back porch of her home overlooking the bay. When she took a bite of leftover
Journal of Alta California2 min read
Supernova
Thea Matthews was born and raised on Ohlone land, San Francisco. She holds an MFA in poetry from New York University, and her poetry has appeared in Southern Indiana Review, Interim, Tahoma Literary Review, the New Republic, and other publications. C

Related Books & Audiobooks