Monday 25 June 2012

Top 10 cinematographers in India.

10.Anmol Rathod.(Raktha Charitra).

9.Amit Roy.(Sarkar).

8.Santosh Sivan.(Ashoka The Great).

7.Rajiv menon.(Bombay,Guru)

6.Anand K.V.(Khakee).

5.Sundeep Chatterjee.(Chak De India).

4.Kiran Deohans.(Kabhi Kushi kabhi gham).

3.Anil Mehta.(Lagaan,Once upon a time in India).

2.Ravi K Chandran.(Dil chatha Hai).

1.Binodh Pardhon.(Rang De Basanthi).

1.Charles Rosher
1885-1974

Charles Rosher was a two-time Academy Award-winning cinematographer who worked from the early days of silent films through the 1950s. Born in London, he was the first cinematographer to receive an Academy Award, along with 1929 co-winner Karl Struss. Rosher studied photography in his youth but earned a reputation early as a newsreel cameraman, before moving to the United States in 1909. He subsequently found work for David Horsley working in his production company in New Jersey. Because early film was largely restricted to using daylight, Horsley relocated his production company to Hollywood in 1911, taking Rosher with him, and opened the first movie studio there. This made Rosher the first full-time cameraman in Hollywood. In 1913 he went to Mexico to film newsreel footage of Pancho Villa’s rebellion. In 1918, he was one of the founders of the American Society of Cinematographers and served as the group’s first Vice-President. In the 1920s he was one of the most sought-after cinematographers in Hollywood, and a personal favorite of stars such as Mary Pickford. His work with Karl Struss on F.W. Murnau’s 1927 film Sunrise is viewed as a milestone in cinematography. In addition, Rosher also received two Eastman Medals (named for George Eastman), Photoplay magazine’s Gold Medal, and the only fellowship ever awarded by the Society of Motion Picture Engineers.
Above is an example of Rosher’s revolutionary work on Sunrise.
Notable films: Sunrise (1927), The Affairs of Cellini (1934), Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936), The Yearling (1946), Annie Get Your Gun (1950), Show Boat (1951)

2.James Wong Howe
1899-1976

James Wong Howe had over 130 films to his credit, spanning from the silent era to color. During the 1930s and 1940s he was considered one of the most sought after cinematographers in Hollywood. He was nominated for ten Academy Awards for cinematography, winning twice. As well as being one of the first cinematographers to use deep focus photography, Howe pioneered techniques to augment eyes on B&W film, early dolly techniques, handheld camera techniques and shooting by unusual light sources, such as by candlelight on The Molly Maguires.
The clip is some crisp, beautiful black and white photography from Hud, for which Howe won an Oscar.
Notable films: The Thin Man (1934), Algiers (1938), Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), The Rose Tattoo (1955), Sweet Smell of Success (1957), The Old Man and the Sea (1958), Hud (1963), Funny Lady (1975)

3.Conrad L. Hall
1926-2003

Beginning with films such as Cool Hand Luke and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Hall helped liberate approaches to filming by making, as Sight and Sound puts it, “making virtues of mistakes”. Blemishes such as the sun hitting the lens, dirt getting on the lens, or other seeming distractions which would have necessitated reshoots in the past, but Hall’s approach exemplified the new wave of American cinema and helped set a template for gritty, independent films. But Hall also proved he could handle more ‘pristine’ pictures, photographing films such American Beauty later in his career. He won his first Oscar in 1969 for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and then would have to wait 30 years for his next, for American Beauty. His third Oscar was awarded to him posthumously for Road to Perdition. As well as that, he was nominated a further seven times during his life.
Above is a funny scene from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, for which Hall won an Oscar.
Notable films: Cool Hand Luke (1967), In Cold Blood (1967), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Day of the Locust (1975), American Beauty (1999), Road to Perdition (2002)

4.Christopher Doyle
Born 1952

Though born in Australia, Doyle made his mark by photographing Asian films, especially the work of Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai. His work with the director, particularly the films Chungking Express, In the Mood for Love and 2046, is lauded for their vivid splashes of colors and high saturation, and he is considered one of the most important architects of Asian New Wave cinema. He is also one of the few “superstar” cinematographers, whose reputation is often higher than the directors he works with.
Above is a clip from the film Hero, where Doyle’s attention to vivid colors was crucial to the story.
Notable films: Chungking Express (1994), In the Mood for Love (2000), The Quiet American (2002), Hero (2002), Infernal Affairs (2002), 2046 (2002), Paranoid Park (2007)

5.Gordon Willis
Born 1931

Nicknamed ‘The Prince of Darkness’ for his penchant for using rich blacks and dark interiors, most famously in The Godfather films for which he is best known, Gordon Willis is famed for his innovative cinematography which has garnered him two Oscar nominations and heaps of respect. His work on The Godfather films is legendary, and his innovations include pioneering the use of warm, fuzzy, amber glows to represent nostalgic scenes of the past in The Godfather Part II, and the unique recreation of 1920s photography for Woody Allen’s Zelig.
Above is a clip showing Gordon Willis (and others) discussing the cinematography of The Godfather.
Notable films: The Godfather (1972), The Godfather Part II (1974), All the President’s Men (1976), Zelig (1977), Manhattan (1979), Zelig (1983), The Godfather Part III (1990)

6.Gregg Toland
1904-1948

Gregg Toland was not with us long, but it is a credit to his brilliance that he is so revered today. Toland was nominated five times for the Best Cinematography Oscar during a seven year golden period which lasted from 1936 to 1942, but it is his collaboration with Orson Welles on Citizen Kane that is most remembered. Though he didn’t create deep focus cinematography, he perfected it in Citizen Kane, allowing characters in the fore and background to be shot in focus at the same time. In fact, much of the film’s visual and cinematographic genius – low angles, high contrast, dark shadows – though often credited to Welles, was largely Toland’s doing. Welles later acknowledged that Toland was advising him on camera placement and lighting effects secretly so the young director would not be embarrassed in front of the highly experienced crew. So indebted was he to Toland’s work, that Welles insisted that their names appear together on the end credits. Later on, Toland worked on Disney’s Song of the South, which combined live action with animation.
Above is an example of deep focus in Citizen Kane.
Notable films: Wuthering Heights (1939), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), The Long Voyage Home (1940), Citizen Kane (1941), How Green Was My Valley (1941), Song of the South (1946)

7.Sven Nykvist
1922-2006

As Ingmar Bergman’s choice cinematographer, Nykvist was given the unenviable task of transforming the Swedish auteur’s startling, often surreal, images into reality in front of the camera. Despite this, Nykvist was noted for his subtlety and simplicity, favouring naturalistic lighting to complement Bergman’s slow, paced style of storytelling. He was unpretentious and often hidden behind his towering director, but Nykvist was still acknowledged for his work with two Academy Awards for Cries and Whispers and Fanny and Alexander. Nykvist also worked with directors such as Roman Polanski, Woody Allen and Andrei Tarkovsky. He was the first European cinematographer to join the American Society of Cinematographers, and received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the ASC in 1996.
Above is a beautiful scene from Persona. Notice the remarkable fading of light.
Notable films: The Virgin Spring (1960), Persona (1966), Cries and Whispers (1973), Fanny and Alexander (1982), The Sacrifice (1986), The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1988)

8.Vittorio Storaro
Born 1940

Vittorio Storaro (born 24 June 1940 in Rome) is a three-time Academy Award winning Italian cinematographer. He is most famous for his work on Apocalypse Now (his first Oscar), where he was given free reign by Francis Ford Coppola to photograph the film’s acclaimed visual look. He went on to win Oscars for Reds and The Last Emperor, which was directed by Bernardo Bertolucci, his most frequent collaborator. Storaro is widely regarded as a master cinematographer with a sophisticated philosophy largely inspired by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s theory of colors, which focuses in part on the psychological effects different colors have and the way in which colors influence our perceptions of different situations. With his son, Fabrizio Storaro, he created the Univisium format system to unify all future theatrical and television movies into one respective aspect ratio of 2.00:1.
The clip is a scene from The Sheltering Sky, showcasing arguably the most beautiful desert cinematography ever put on film. For a much better quality view (and longer version) of this scene, go here. You will absolutely not be disappointed.
Notable films: The Conformist (1970), Last Tango in Paris (1972), Apocalypse Now (1979), Reds (1981), The Last Emperor (1987), The Sheltering Sky (1990)

9.Sergei Urusevsky
1908-1974

Though nowhere near as prolific as others on this list, Urusevsky has earned an almost mythic status among cinematographers due to his work with Russian director Mikhail Kalatozov on such films as I am Cuba and The Cranes are Flying. His nearly unbelievable combination of deep focus, acrobatic tracking shots, subjective perspective and other remarkable cinematographic trickery was so ahead of its time that it wouldn’t be seen in the west until over a decade later. Unfortunately, his Kaltozov collaborations were largely buried by the Soviet propaganda machine, and have only recently been restored thanks to acknowledged admirers such as Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola. His spectacular camerawork, which often distracted from the proper focus of the scene, was defended by Urusevsky, remarking that, “It has never interested me, as cameraman, to just register what is going on in front of the camera.””
The above, much celebrated, clip is perhaps the most famous scene in Urusevsky’s repertoire, a balletic tracking shot from the opening of I am Cuba shows off his blistering and original camerawork.
Notable films: The Forty-First (1956), The Cranes are Flying (1957), The Unsent Letter (1959), I am Cuba (1964)
Top 10 cinematographer in world.

10.Kazuo Miyagawa
1908-1999



Miyagawa is arguably the most important cinematographer in Japanese history, having worked with a who’s who of Japanese auteurs, including Akira Kurosawa, Yasujiro Ozu, and Kenji Mizoguchi. He is perhaps most famous for his work on Rashomon, where he was the first person to point a camera directly into sunlight (utilising years of study on light exposure). He was also known for using multiple camera setups for scenes, and acclaimed for his contrast of sweeping tracking shots and sharp close-ups. Other innovations on the film include using mirrors to reflect natural light and using dyed black water as rain, to make it appear more vivid on camera. He was also a master of genres, working on comedies (The Rickshaw Man), samurai films (the Zatoichi films), as wells as overseeing 164 cameramen and using over 234 different lenses for Tokyo Olympiad, often compared with Leni Riefenstahl’s Olympia as one of the greatest Olympics documentaries.
Some of Miyagawa’s stunning work on Rashomon can be seen in the clip.
Notable films: Rashomon (1950), Ugetsu (1953), Sansho the Bailiff (1954), Floating Weeds (1959), Yojimbo (1961), Zatoichi (1964), Tokyo Olympiad (1965)

Films from the Silent Era
YEAR FILM DIRECTOR COUNTRY
1915 Birth of a Nation D. W. Griffith USA
1919 Broken Blossoms D. W. Griffith USA
1919 The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari Robert Wiene Germany
1922 Nosferatu F. W. Murnau Germany
1922 Nanook of the North Robert J. Flaherty USA
1924 The Last Laugh F. W. Murnau Germany
1925 Strike Sergei Eisenstein Russian
1925 Potemkin Sergei Eisenstein Russian
1925 The Gold Rush Charlie Chaplin USA
1925 The Street of Sorrow G. W. Pabst Germany
1926 Metropolis Fritz Lang Germany
1927 Sunrise F. W. Murnau Germany
1929 The Blue Angel Josef Von Sternberg Germany

History of Cinematography


THE HISTORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHY
PART ONE – THE BIRTH OF AN ART FORM
Human fascination with the concept of communicating with light
and shadows has its roots in antiquity. Aristotle described how sunlight
passing through a small hole projected an inverted image on the wall of a
darkened room. That is the oldest known reference to the camera obscura.
Gemma Frisius, a Dutchman, published a book containing a
drawing of a camera obscura in 1545. Thirteen years later, Giovanni
Battista della Porta, in Italy, wrote a book called "Magia Naturalis" that
described the use of a camera obscura with lenses and concave mirrors to
project a tableau in a darkened room. They might has well have been
drawing pictures in sand, because the images were impermanent.
The roots of modern photography trace back to 1816, when
Nicephore Niepce, a French lithographer, experimented with recording
images on metal plates coated with a sensitized material. In 1827, he
aimed a homemade camera out a window and recorded a picture on a
pewter plate coated with a light-sensitive chemical emulsion.
Niepce subsequently collaborated with Louis Jacques Mande
Daguerre in the development of the world's first practical photographic
system. They recorded clear, sharp images on silverized copper plates in
Daguerre's studio in 1837. Niepce gave his invention to the French
government, which put it into the public domain.
An Englishman named William Henry Fox Talbot invented the first
process for making positive prints from negative images during the 1830s.
Another Englishman, Richard Leach Maddox, discovered that the silver halide crystal is an incredibly efficient repository for capturing light. His
1871 discovery was a crucial building block for modern photography.
The oldest recorded attempt at motion picture photography was
made by an Englishman named Eadweard Muybridge. He was a
vagabond photographer who had migrated to California. In 1872,
California Governor Leland Stanford hired Muybridge to help him win a
bet by proving that there were times in a horse race when all four of the
animal's feet are off the ground. Five years later, Muybridge set 24
cameras up in a row along a race track. He attached a string to each
camera shutter, and stretched the strings across the track.
Muybridge chalked lines and numbers on a board behind the track
to measure progress. As Stanford's horse raced on the track, it tripped the
wires and recorded 24 photographs that proved that all four of the horse's
feet were off the ground at the same time.
Stanford won his bet, and Muybridge continued experimenting.
During the early 1880s, he traveled to Paris to demonstrate his multiple
camera system for other photographers and scientists. One of his hosts
was Etienne-Jules Marey, who was experimenting with the use of a single
camera for recording images in motion.
The camera had a long barrel that served as a lens, and a circular
chamber containing a single glass photographic plate. It took Marey a
second to record 12 images around the edge of the glass plate. He called
his invention chronophotography. Marey recorded moving images of men
running and jumping, fencers, horses trotting, gulls flying and cats falling.
They were permanent records of one to two seconds of motion.
Meanwhile, across the ocean in New Jersey, Thomas Alva Edison
had invented a system that recorded and played back music using wax cylinders. After his invention became popular in consumer households,
Edison got an idea for building and selling a device to consumers that
displayed moving images to accompany the music.
In 1885, at his research laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey, he
assigned W.K.L. Dickson the task of finding a way to record moving
images on the edges of records. It proved to be a daunting task.
This is where George Eastman entered the picture. Eastman became
interested in still photography in 1877, when he was a 25-year-old bank
clerk in Rochester, New York. Photography was a cumbersome process.
The photographer had to spread a chemical emulsion on a glass plate in a
pitch black area and take the picture before the emulsion dried.
In 1880, Eastman leased space in a Rochester building and began
manufacturing dry plates, which maintained their sensitivity to light.
Eastman Dry Plates played a major role in popularizing photography, but
the former bank clerk was determined to make it easier to take pictures.
In 1887, the Reverend Hannibal Goodwin, in England, invented
and patented a way to coat a light-sensitive photographic emulsion on a
cellulose nitrate base. The base was strong, transparent and thin enough to
perfect a process for manufacturing film on a flexible base.
Eastman purchased the right to use that patent in 1888. The Kodak
Brownie snapshot camera was introduced the following year. It was
pre-loaded with enough film to take 100 pictures. An ad campaign
promoted photography as a hobby for every man, woman and child. The
ad said, “You push the button, and we do the rest.” After all the pictures
were taken, the camera was mailed to Kodak, which processed the film
and returned prints to the photographer with a reloaded camera.  After Dickson saw the Kodak Brownie camera at a meeting of an
amateur photographers’ club in New Jersey, he traveled to Rochester and
met with Eastman, who agreed to provide the film needed for an
experimental motion picture camera. Dickson wrote to Edison stating,
“Eureka, this is it!” Edison replied, “Now, work like hell!”
Edison set a deadline. He wanted to display experimental films in a
motion picture projector at a world’s fair in Chicago in 1894. The film in
the Kodak snapshot camera was a 25-foot roll, 70 mm wide. Dickson cut it
down the middle, and spliced it into 50 foot long reels.
He developed the Kinetograph camera and Kinetoscope projector,
which Edison patented in the United States in 1891. Edison opened the
Black Maria Studio in Orange, New Jersey, the following year, and told
Dickson to begin producing motion pictures to showcase at the Chicago
exposition.
The Black Maria Studio got its name because it resembled the shape
of a horse-drawn police cart. The roof could be removed to let daylight in,
and the studio was on a turntable that could be revolved to follow the sun.
Dickson installed a trolley track at the Black Maria Studio that enabled
him to move the camera further away from and closer to his subjects for
more intimate shots. That was an early, intuitive step towards making
cinematography an interpretive art.
On May 20, 1891, Edison demonstrated the projector for the first
time when delegates from the National Federation of Women's Clubs
visited the company’s research laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey. A
reporter for The New York Sun wrote, “The women saw a small pine box
with a peephole about an inch in diameter. One by one, they looked through the peephole and saw moving images of a man, smiling, waving,
taking off his hat and bowing with naturalness and grace.”
Record of a Sneeze, shot by Dickson, is oldest motion picture on
record at the Library of Congress. The title of the 1893 film is literal. It
shows Fred Ott, a mechanic who worked for Edison, sneezing.
Edison patented the sprocket drive technology developed by Dickson, who also
designed, built and operated the film processor and printer. The Kinetoscope
was a sensation at the 1894 Chicago Exposition. That same year, Edison made a
business deal with Norman Charles Raff, who organized The Kinetoscope
Company and sold territorial rights to entrepreneurs who wanted to operate
peep show parlors. Within a few years more than 1,000 parlors were operating in
the U.S. and Canada.