Cinematography Prizes: ASC and Oscar
Wednesday, January 11, 2017 at 7:50PM
NATHANIEL R in Arrival, Bradford Young, Cinematography, Greig Fraser, James Laxton, Moonlight, Oscars (16), Rodrigo Prieto, Silence

The American Society of Cinematographers recently added an very welcome category called "Spotlight" in which they note the work of DPs working in films with either very limited releases or festival only entries. It's a smart way to draw attention to work that might otherwise go unnoticed. In this new category they've nominated Lol Crawley for Childhood of a Leader (which we recently discussed), Gorka Gomez Andreu's work on the Georgian Oscar submission House of Others, Ernesto Pardo for the Mexican film Tempestad, and Juliette van Dormael's lensing of the Belgian film Mon Ange (My Angel). Why there are only 4 honorees and not the traditional 5 we do not know.

But the marquee category is of course Theatrical Motion Pictures. And here's the beauties they most loved looking at this year...

Bradford Young for Arrival
1st ASC nomination. Also his first BAFTA nomination. One previous Spirit nomination for Selma. Other key credits: A Most Violent Year, Pariah, Ain't Them Bodies Saints

Grieg Fraser for Lion
1st ASC nomination. Also his first BAFTA nomination. Previously won the NYFCC prize for Zero Dark Thirty. (He arguably should've won the Oscar a long time ago for Jane Campion's Bright Star (2009) but that film was roundly ignored by awards bodies.)

James Laxton for Moonlight
1st ASC nomination. Two spirit nominations for Medicine for Melancholy and Moonlight. Recently won the critical trinity (NY, LA, NSFC) for this very film. I believe he's the youngest of the cinematographers listed here. His debut feature was Medicine for Melancholy (2008).


Rodrigo Prieto for Silence
3rd ASC nomination. Two previous BAFTA nominations. Previously nominated for 1 Oscar for Brokeback Mountain. Other key credits: Babel, Lust Caution, 8 Mile, Frida, Passengers, Argo, The Homesman, Wolf of Wall Street

Linus Sandgren for La La Land
1st ASC nomination. Also his first BAFTA nomination. Other key credits: American Hustle, Joy, and the upcoming Battle of the Sexes also starring Emma Stone.

You'll immediately notice that apart from Prieto this is quite a young DP field. We MIGHT have an all fresh blood Oscar list this year behind the camera. Not that the ASC and Oscar agree wholeheartedly in any given year. Here's how it's gone in the past ten rounds. Oscar usually replaces one of ASC's choices in their nominations. So if they do who are the most likely recipients of that switcheroo? Well, Oscar LOVES Robert Richardson (Live by Night) and Roger Deakins (Hail Caesar) so you can never totally count either of them out. The Academy also really likes Harry Potter movies so former Oscar winner Philippe Rousselot could be a surprise for Fantastic Beasts. There's also the very outside possibility they'll latch on to a foreign or indie title (The Handmaiden? American Honey?) or the under-honored Jackie or the over-honored but buzzing Nocturnal Animals

2015 Oscar's Lineup was 4/5 rejecting ASC choice Bridge of Spies in favor of The Hateful Eight
2014 Oscar's lineup was  4/5 rejecting ASC choice Imitation Game in favor of Poland's Ida 
2013 Oscar's lineup was 5/5... but the ASC had 7 nominees that year so matching was easy-peasy
2012 Oscar's lineup was 4/5 rejecting ASC choice Les Miserables in favor of Django Unchained
2011 Oscar's lineup was 4/5 rejecting ASC choice Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy for War Horse
2010 Oscar's lineup was 5/5 match  
2009 Oscar's lineup was 4/5 rejecting ASC choice Nine for Harry Potter #somethingorother 
2008 Oscar's lineup was 4/5 rejecting ASC choice Revolutionary Road for Changeling
2007 Oscar's lineup was 5/5 match
2006 Oscar's lineup was 3/5 match rejecting ASC choices Apocalypto and The Good Shepherd for The Prestige and Pan's Labyrinth

Who would you be voting for this year? 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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