
Darius Khondji found his name on the lists of top cinematographers in the world after
his startling work on David Fincher's "Seven" (1995), in which the light
almost became more frightening than the dark and contrasts were oblique. His range
was well-established with "Stealing Beauty" (1996), for director Bernardo
Bertolucci, in which the colors had great passion, yet the photography never subsumed
the story of a young woman (Liv Tyler) finding romance.
Khondji is becoming a director's favorite because he does not allow the visuals to
overwhelm the story, rather they get under the skin and into the hearts and minds
of the audience to enhance and trigger the emotions.
If cinematography can marry story archetypes, Khondji has found a way. His inky
shadows touch on emotions, but don't submerge into an atmospheric bog. This was particularly
true on "Evita" (1996), in which the lighting was a baroque opera in and
of itself, setting Eva Peron as goddess in one sequence, exposing the darkness of
her life in another. Rarely had there been such a varied palette within one movie
and Khondji's efforts were rewarded with an Oscar nomination.
Born in Tehran on the 21st october 1956 to a Iranian father and an French mother,
Khondji was raised in Paris and studied film at New York University. Returning to
France, he was hired by cinematographer Bruno Nuytten as an assistant cameraman,
and by 1987 had worked his way up to chief operator. In 1988, he made his feature
debut as director of photography on "Embrasse-moi" for director Michele
Rosier.
His work first came to international attention with "Delicatessen" (1991),
directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro, for whom he also shot "The City
of Lost Children" (1995). The latter was about a mad scientist trying to steal
the dreams of children, and the film had the feel of the neverworld, the state of
semi-consciousness between being awake and being asleep, where light pierces to keep
the soul within the body and darkness to let it breathe on its own.Darius continued
his collaboration with Jeunet on Alien Resurrection (1997).
His latest work has been on David Fincher's Panic Room with Jodie Foster and Forest
Whitaker.
Sent by Darius Kadivar
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