Cinematographer

Role

Creates recorded moving-image material through camera, light, composition, movement, and visual rhythm.

Description

A Cinematographer creates moving-image material through camera, light, composition, movement, and visual rhythm. In immersive work, this may include conventional footage, 360 video, stereoscopic capture, documentary material, projection media, or filmed elements placed inside real-time environments.

The cinematographer helps determine how recorded material feels: intimate or distant, grounded or stylized, observational or directed, realistic or heightened. In immersive media, these choices must also respect the participant’s body, viewing position, and attention.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within capture and recorded-media production, cinematography often supports hybrid forms. Filmed characters, documentary scenes, video textures, live-action plates, and captured environments may be combined with spatial audio, interactive structure, or real-time scenes.

Scope Note

May include image composition, lighting, camera movement, exposure, visual continuity, lensing, recorded performance, environmental capture, and coordination with editing, color, sound, and technical integration.

Boundary Note

Cinematography strongly affects editing, color, integration, and playback, but it does not usually own those later processes. The role focuses on the creation of the recorded image.

Collaboration Note

Commonly works with directors, Directors of Photography, camera operators, lighting teams, editors, colorists, sound teams, producers, and technical integration roles.

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