Peter James (cinematographer) explained

Peter James
Birth Date:7 March 1947
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation:Cinematographer, director of photography
Yearsactive:1973–present

Peter James (born 7 March 1947 in Sydney) is an Australian cinematographer and director of photography.[1] James is a member of the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC),[2] an organization that offers membership to directors of photography only "by invitation, based on an individual’s body of work".[3]

James has been either cinematographer or director of photography on more than thirty films since 1973 when he worked on the Australian film Avengers of the Reef. James has won Australian Cinematographers Society's (ACS) Milli Award four times,[4] Australian Film Institute's Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography three times[5] and was nominated for the award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Miniseries or Movie at the 56th Primetime Emmy Awards for his work on the 2003 television film And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself.[6]

In 1999, James was inducted into the Australian Cinematographers Society Hall of Fame for having "made a substantial contribution to the industry and the Society, as well as having left a legacy of fine work and having been responsible for training and influencing others."[7]

Filmography

Short film

YearTitleDirectorNotes
1971Willy WillyGregory Ropert
1973TransitionGraham Shirley
1976Rate of ExchangeEdward Ogden
1977A Calendar of DreamingsGeoffrey BardonWith Jack Doyle
1980Blackhearted Barney BlackfootYvonne Mackay
2017Football DadsAnna Yosin

Feature film

YearTitleDirector
1973Avengers of the ReefChris McCullough
1976CaddieDonald Crombie
1978The Irishman
1981The Killing of Angel Street
1984The Wild DuckHenri Safran
1985RebelMichael Jenkins
1987The Right Hand ManDi Drew
Echoes of ParadisePhillip Noyce
1989Driving Miss DaisyBruce Beresford
1990Mister Johnson
1991Black Robe
1992Rich in Love
1993AliveFrank Marshall
The Thing Called LovePeter Bogdanovich
My LifeBruce Joel Rubin
1994Silent FallBruce Beresford
1996DiaboliqueJeremiah S. Chechik
Last DanceBruce Beresford
1997Paradise Road
1998The Newton BoysRichard Linklater
1999Double JeopardyBruce Beresford
2000Meet the ParentsJay Roach
2001Bride of the WindBruce Beresford
The Man Who Sued GodMark Joffe
2005The PacifierAdam Shankman
Cheaper by the Dozen 2
200827 DressesAnne Fletcher
2009Mao's Last DancerBruce Beresford
2010Yogi BearEric Brevig
2018Ladies in Black[8] Bruce Beresford

TV movie

YearTitleDirector
1976McManus MPBMax Varnel
1981The Monster's ChristmasYvonne Mackay
2003And Starring Pancho Villa as HimselfBruce Beresford
2006Orpheus

Documentary works

Short film

YearTitleDirectorNotes
1977Mick and the MoonGeoffrey BardonWith Jon Falkenmire
1984Palace of DreamsHimself

Film

TV movie

Notes and References

  1. http://www.flickeringmyth.com/2013/08/picture-perfect-conversation-with.html "Picture Perfect: A conversation with cinematographer Peter James"
  2. http://www.theasc.com/society/index.php?pagename=ASC_Roster American Society of Cinematographers Roster
  3. http://www.theasc.com/society/index.php?pagename=About_the_ASC The Legacy Lives On
  4. http://www.cinematographer.org.au/awards/national/milli The Milli Award
  5. http://www.afi.org.au/AM/ContentManagerNet/HTMLDisplay.aspx?Section=2009_Awards_PDFs&ContentID=5758 AFI Award Winners, Feature Categories 1958–2008
  6. http://tv.nytimes.com/show/68410/And-Starring-Pancho-Villa-as-Himself/details And Starring Pancho Villa as himself
  7. http://www.cinematographer.org.au/awards/national/halloffame Hall of Fame
  8. Web site: The Screen Guide Ladies in Black 2018 . . 22 September 2018.