logo
#

Latest news with #AmericanSocietyofCinematographers

Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild
Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild

Mandy Walker was 15 when she realised what she wanted to do with her life. Her mother had taken her to see an obscure Spanish movie, The Spirit of the Beehive, and Mandy was mesmerised. 'I remember thinking, 'Why is this so different from an Australian film? Why do I feel like this place and this story is in a different country? How did they make me understand this sense of place?' And then I started looking into it, what a cinematographer does.' For more than 30 years, Walker has been doing what a cinematographer does, picking up a raft of peer-voted awards, and BAFTA and Oscar nominations and an AACTA Award win (all for Elvis) along the way. And last weekend, she collected perhaps the greatest honour of her career to date – being elected president of the prestigious American Society of Cinematographers. Loading She is the first Australian and the first woman to hold the position and she is, she admits, immensely proud on both counts. But it's on the gender front that she most wants to make her mark. 'I've been part of a minority as a woman cinematographer,' says Melbourne-born Walker. 'I think it's still less than 10 per cent are women, so I feel like I'm a good person to champion that cause.' Founded in 1919, the ASC is one of the oldest professional bodies in Hollywood. It is 'neither a labour union nor a guild', but rather something like an exclusive club. 'Membership is by invitation only,' its website proclaims, 'extended to directors of photography who have demonstrated outstanding ability with distinguished credits in the industry and good personal character.' Despite the American bit, its 471 members come from around the world, though Walker identifies diversity as another area she wants to improve. 'It's still, like, 80 per cent white men who do my job,' she says.

Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild
Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild

The Age

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Shining light: The Aussie woman heading up Hollywood's oldest guild

Mandy Walker was 15 when she realised what she wanted to do with her life. Her mother had taken her to see an obscure Spanish movie, The Spirit of the Beehive, and Mandy was mesmerised. 'I remember thinking, 'Why is this so different from an Australian film? Why do I feel like this place and this story is in a different country? How did they make me understand this sense of place?' And then I started looking into it, what a cinematographer does.' For more than 30 years, Walker has been doing what a cinematographer does, picking up a raft of peer-voted awards, and BAFTA and Oscar nominations and an AACTA Award win (all for Elvis) along the way. And last weekend, she collected perhaps the greatest honour of her career to date – being elected president of the prestigious American Society of Cinematographers. Loading She is the first Australian and the first woman to hold the position and she is, she admits, immensely proud on both counts. But it's on the gender front that she most wants to make her mark. 'I've been part of a minority as a woman cinematographer,' says Melbourne-born Walker. 'I think it's still less than 10 per cent are women, so I feel like I'm a good person to champion that cause.' Founded in 1919, the ASC is one of the oldest professional bodies in Hollywood. It is 'neither a labour union nor a guild', but rather something like an exclusive club. 'Membership is by invitation only,' its website proclaims, 'extended to directors of photography who have demonstrated outstanding ability with distinguished credits in the industry and good personal character.' Despite the American bit, its 471 members come from around the world, though Walker identifies diversity as another area she wants to improve. 'It's still, like, 80 per cent white men who do my job,' she says.

Rust review — film drenched in blood cannot escape off-screen tragedy
Rust review — film drenched in blood cannot escape off-screen tragedy

Times

time02-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

Rust review — film drenched in blood cannot escape off-screen tragedy

After the screen snaps to black at the end of Rust, a message appears reading: '… for Halyna.' After that, a quote is ascribed to Halyna Hutchins: 'What can we do to make this better?' Then, her name fades to its spelling in her native Ukrainian. After a card bearing the name of Joel Souza, the director, the next card reads: 'Cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, ASC.' These memorial codas from the American Society of Cinematographers are touching, even if Rust's official release in America feels an acutely queasy exercise after the accidental death of Hutchins on the set of Rust in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in October 2021. Alec Baldwin, who plays the film's protagonist, was positioning a revolver during filming when it went

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store