Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Black Panther: First female Oscar-nominated cinematographer Rachel Morrison on new Marvel movie and Mudbound

Her success is a rarity in Hollywood, where women accounted for 4 per cent of all cinematographers working on the top 250 films of 2017, but she hopes that it tells more women that they can get behind the camera

Sopan Deb
Tuesday 30 January 2018 14:05 GMT
Comments
Rachel Morrison on the set of Netflix's 'Mudbound'
Rachel Morrison on the set of Netflix's 'Mudbound'

Rachel Morrison, the director of photography for Mudbound, has broken new ground, becoming the first woman to receive an Oscar nomination for best cinematography.

The film – a Dee Rees-directed period piece examining the lives of two Mississippi families, one black and the other white, circa the Second World War – is filled with gritty visuals brought to life by Morrison. Mudbound, as the title indicates, is an essential feature along with harsh wide shots that show an unromantic view of the Jim Crow-era South.

Morrison’s big break came with Ryan Coogler’s 2013 drama, Fruitvale Station. Her success is a rarity in Hollywood. According to the Centre for the Study of Women in Television and Film, women accounted for 4 per cent of all cinematographers working on the top 250 films of 2017, a decline of 1 per cent from the year before.

Morrison says it is a ‘tremendous honour’ to be the first female cinematographer to be nominated for an Oscar (Rex) (Rex Features)

Her next project is another collaboration with Coogler: the Marvel film Black Panther, which is released on 12 February in the UK. After a flight to Park City, Utah, where she is a member of the dramatic feature jury at the Sundance Film Festival, she spoke about the nomination, her career dreams and the highly anticipated superhero movie.

What does this nomination mean to you?

Morrison’s next project is ‘Black Panther’ starring Chadwick Boseman as T’Chall/Black Panther (left) and Michael B Jordan as Erik Killmonger (right). The film is out 12 February (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)

I am incredibly honoured and I’m hoping that it’s just the beginning. I hope that it tells more women that they can get behind the camera. It’s a dream I’ve been chasing my entire career and I never necessarily thought it would happen. It’s also a tremendous honour to be the first.

What are the biggest barriers you’ve faced as a woman behind the camera?

I’ve actually never seen it as a deficit. I think, if anything, I’ve always found it to be an asset because I get to stand out in a crowd. I think it’s an industry that makes a ton of sense for women. It’s all about empathy and handling emotion and visuals. I don’t know that I’ve ever found it to be a challenge. Maybe in jumping the budgets – it’s definitely taken me longer to go from indie movies to studio films than most of my male counterparts. But that would probably be the only thing I’ve experienced as being challenging.

‘Mudbound’ features Mary J. Blige (centre), Garrett Hedlund (left) and Rob Morgan (right) (Netflix)

Do you find it frustrating to be referred to as a female cinematographer?

Yeah, I think it’s ridiculous. This is a job that’s gender neutral and I can’t wait till the day that we’re just DPs (directors of photography), the way teachers are teachers and doctors are doctors and lawyers are lawyers. I think as soon as we represent more than 2 or 4 per cent, and we’re not such a crazy anomaly, then hopefully people will just start referring to us as DPs. Also, I’m excited for the work to speak for itself and not just lumped into, “Here’s what the female DPs are doing right now”.

The visuals for Mudbound are fairly dark, compared with some picturesque depictions of the South, like Steven Spielberg’s The Color Purple. How did you decide to go that route and how challenging was it compared with your other work?

Morrison’s big break came with Ryan Coogler’s 2013 drama ‘Fruitvale Station’, starring Michael B Jordan

I think it’s actually very much in line with my other work. We definitely decided to go bold or go home as far as letting dark scenes be incredibly dark. We wanted to be very careful not to glorify the period. It was showing just enough beauty to understand the hope and why people chase the dream of land ownership, but enough dark and grit to understand what the reality was actually like.

How different was your approach to Black Panther than Mudbound? I assume Black Panther was a lot more fun to film.

I certainly wasn’t going for a washed-out look in Mudbound; it’s incredibly dark. Black Panther is generally speaking a much brighter, poppier, more saturated film.

‘Mudbound’ is out on Netflix. ‘Black Panther’ is out on 12 February

© New York Times

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in