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Documentary Releases: Cinematographer (2022) - Reviewed
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Courtesy of Lightyear |
The story of cinematographer Donald M. Morgan, the man who
shot three of John Carpenter’s films including but not limited to Christine and
Starman, is far more checkered and multi-layered than you’d think the
life of a man behind a film camera would be.
With documentary filmmaker Dan Asma’s eye-opening dialogue Cinematographer
with Morgan, The Exorcist cinematographer Owen Roizman and Unforgiven
cinematographer Jack N. Green, we’re given a portrait of how a man with
former substance abuse problems found his vocation to become one of the world’s
greatest directors of photography for some of Hollywood’s most beloved movies.
Partially a confessional with Donald M. Morgan reflecting on
his troubled past before achieving sobriety through the art and craft of film
photography, partially a celebration of cinematography and the impact it has on
viewers and those making film itself, Cinematographer is an intimate
love letter to a man long overdue for his indelible contribution to
cinema. And yet as you’re watching it,
Morgan comes across as an everyman not interested in mathematics or techniques
relative to new camera tools, approaching it as constructing a painting while
giving way to a director’s vision.
Is the cinematographer an artist or is he merely a
serviceman to the director? Well, Morgan
contests with what he brought to the table he is most definitely an artist and
for once it was refreshing to hear the stories of filmmaking told entirely and
only from the point of view of the cameraman who brought their directors’
visions to vivid life. More than
anything, the film is a testament to Donald M. Morgan’s own quest for helping
others struggling with their own substance abuse issues and the sobering nature
of sitting behind a camera to shoot a film.
As a documentary, Cinematographer though mostly
focused on Morgan bounces between interviews with Roizman and Green talking
about their relationships not only with the directors they worked for but with the
impact Morgan had on their lives.
Occasionally the film intersperses clips of footage from the works in
question these three cinematographers shot though Cinematographer avoids
becoming a clips compilation film ala Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession
(also a wonderful documentary about movies by the way). Still, most of it is filmed inside the homes
of the three key cinematographers of this documentary and as such it takes on a
greater intimacy.
A treat for film lovers and a heartfelt leaning upon the
viewer’s shoulder from an ordinary man who was once lost but found his calling
behind a film camera, Cinematographer while not a revolutionary
documentary that reinvents the wheel is kind of a heartwarming look behind the
camera at the men who shaped some of our favorite cinematic visions to have
ever appeared onscreen. By the end of
it, while revering Morgan, Roizman and Green’s filmmaking efforts, you come to
know these guys as friends who each cared deeply about their work and brought a
unique quality to the films they helped to create. Anyone interested in the movies owes
themselves a look at Cinematographer!
--Andrew Kotwicki