Veteran Claire Denis colleague reveals how she navigated a male-dominated profession and where she sees it going in the future.
Agnes Goddard made history in 2001 by becoming the first woman to take home the César Award for Best Cinematography on her own (Marie Perrenau shared it with three men in 1997 for her documentary “Microcosmos”). The film “Beau Travail,” a poetic parody of “Billy Budd” that explores masculinity in the French Foreign Legion, won Godard the award.
Prior to a new film series showcasing her work, she sat down for an interview in New York and stated, “I thought it was humorous because the film was about all these men.” “That was humorous. I had a small grin on my face. It wasn’t retaliation. Yet it was humorous. Yet, there were no news stories on the historic event. Nobody brought it up at the time, she said.
Although there are now more women working as cinematographers than ever before, the sector was quite specialized 30 years ago when Goddard, now 71, first started her career. There were occasionally some complications, according to Goddard. “They believed that since we were “weak” or “fragile,” we might not be capable enough. When performing this kind of task, I believe you need to have a really firm conviction in it. That is difficult at times. Yet if you persevere through it, you’ll find the power to get past it.
Goddard and Dennis first met while working as assistants on the Wim Wenders set of “Paris, Texas.” Goddard then assisted Dennis as camera operator on the film “Chocolate,” and the two then collaborated on the Jacques Rivette documentary “Cinema, de Notre Temps.” in the 1990s. Since then, they have collaborated on practically all of Dennis’ projects. Godard’s vibrant lighting designs and fluid camera movement influenced Dennis’ distinct directing style as well as her partnerships with other filmmakers, many of whom are female.
Goddard has filmed three movies with Swiss-French director Ursula Meier over the past ten years, starting with “Home” in 2008 and continuing with “Sister” in 2012 and “The Line” this year, which made its US debut last week. Goddard traveled to New York to take part in a mini-retrospective of his work at Metrograph, which also featured “Jaquet de Nantes” by Agnes Varda, “Beau Travail,” and “Trouble Every Day,” another significant Denis collaboration. Was.
Goddard continues to work with Dennis, with whom he just decided on an idea for a new movie; nevertheless, he also collaborates with up-and-coming directors. The German filmmaker Marika Engelhardt’s debut feature film, “Rabia,” about a woman who journeys to Syria to join extremist rebels, was just shot by her. The movie is currently preparing for its appearance in Cannes, where Goddard will be a member of the impartial jury that selects the main competition picture to receive the Special Craft Prize.
To illustrate, Godard shot Juliette Binoche dancing in a bar with her boyfriend in the 2017 Dennis drama “Let the Sunshine In” to ease the romantic tension in the scenario. She explained, “I was attempting to add my beat to the camera and match the beat of their music.” “It adds a new rhythm to the scene’s existing rhythm. It is made up.
If Goddard lacks a distinctive style as a cameraman, it is on purpose. “With movies, there are so many possibilities to learn new things,” she remarked. To determine what is convenient for the director, a technician must be chameleonic.
Goddard expressed her worry about the prevalence of amateur videos in the digital age. Because the photographs are distributed in such a simplistic manner, she suggested that the DOP’s position might be under danger. “Yet, I believe that those that carry out this work are extremely uncommon globally. They are the guardians of image quality. Let’s hope that actual pictures will go back in time.
Strand Releasing’s “The Line” is now showing in a few cinemas.
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