Vittorio Storaro


Vittorio Storaro, A.S.C., A.I.C. is an Italian cinematographer widely recognized for his work on numerous classic films including The Conformist, Apocalypse Now, and The Last Emperor. In the course of over fifty years, he has collaborated with directors such as Bernardo Bertolucci, Francis Ford Coppola, Warren Beatty, and Woody Allen.
He has received three Academy Awards for Best Cinematography for the films Apocalypse Now, Reds, and The Last Emperor, and is one of three living persons who has won the award three times, the others being Robert Richardson and Emmanuel Lubezki.

Early life

Storaro was born in Rome. The son of a film projectionist, Storaro began studying photography at the age of 11. He went on to formal cinematography studies at the national Italian film school, Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, when he was 18.

Career

Storaro is considered to be one of the greatest and most influential cinematographers of all time. He has worked with many important film directors, in particular Bernardo Bertolucci, with whom he has had a long collaboration. His philosophy is largely inspired by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's theory of colors, which focuses in part on the psychological effects that different colors have and the way in which colors influence our perceptions of different situations.
He first worked with Bertolucci on The Conformist. Set in Fascist Italy, the film has been described as a "visual masterpiece."
Also in 1970, he photographed The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, the directorial debut of Dario Argento and a landmark film in the giallo genre.
The first American film that Storaro worked on was Apocalypse Now. Director Francis Ford Coppola gave him free rein on the film's visual look. Apocalypse Now earned Storaro his first Academy Award.
He worked with Warren Beatty for the first time on Reds, and ended up winning his second Academy Award.
Storaro won a third Academy Award for The Last Emperor, directed by Bertolucci. Three years later he received a nomination, but did not win, for the Beatty film Dick Tracy.
In 2002, Storaro completed the first in a series of books that attempt to articulate his philosophy of cinematography more substantively.
He was cinematographer for a BBC co-production with Italian broadcaster RAI of Verdi's Rigoletto over two nights on the weekend of 4 and 5 September 2010.
Woody Allen's Café Society was the first film that Storaro shot digitally. He used the Sony F65 camera.
In 2017, Storaro was honored with the George Eastman Award. The same year he also attended the New York Film Festival at which he debated with Ed Lachman on cinematography and its transition to digital.
His other film credits include 1900, Last Tango in Paris, ', One from the Heart, Bulworth, The Sheltering Sky, ', Ladyhawke, Tango, and Goya en Burdeos.
With his son Fabrizio, he created the Univisium format system to unify all future theatrical and television movies into one respective aspect ratio of 2.00:1. As of 2020, this unification has not happened, and the universal replacement of 4:3 televisions by large, wide-screen displays greatly reduces the need to modify scope-ratio films for home theater presentation.

Personal life

Storaro is known for stylish, fastidious, and flamboyant personal fashion. Francis Ford Coppola once noted that Storaro was the only man he ever knew that could fall off a ladder in a white suit, into the mud, and not get dirty.

Filmography

Selected Credits:

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards
YearCategoryFilmResultRef.
1980Best CinematographyApocalypse Now
1982Best CinematographyReds
1988Best CinematographyThe Last Emperor
1991Best CinematographyDick Tracy

British Academy Film Awards
YearCategoryFilmResultRef.
1980Best CinematographyApocalypse Now
1983Best CinematographyReds
1989Best CinematographyThe Last Emperor
1991Best CinematographyThe Sheltering Sky

Primetime Emmy Awards
YearCategoryFilmResult
1986Best Cinematography for a Miniseries or SpecialPeter the Great
2001Best Cinematography for a Miniseries or SpecialFrank Herbert's Dune

Cannes Film Festival
YearCategoryFilmResultRef.
1998Technical Grand PrizeTango, no me dejes nunca

American Society of Cinematographers
YearCategoryFilmResult
1988Outstanding CinematographyThe Last Emperor
1991Outstanding CinematographyDick Tracy
2001Outstanding Achievement in CinematographyDune
2001Lifetime Achievement Award