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Guillermo Navarro
Mexican cinematographer and director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Guillermo Jorge Navarro Solares, AMC, ASC (born July 29, 1955) is a Mexican cinematographer and television director.[1]
He had been a frequent collaborator of Robert Rodriguez and Guillermo del Toro[2], with his work on Pan's Labyrinth earning him the Academy Award for Best Cinematography.
After making directing debut with a music video for Mia Maestro titled "Blue Eyed Sailor", Navarro then shifted to a career as a TV director of series like Hannibal and Luke Cage, and was an executive producer on the National Geographic documentary series Hostile Planet, for which he earned his first Primetime Emmy nomination.[3]
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Early life and education
Navarro was born in 1955 in Mexico City.
He began taking still photographs at age 13 when took a photography workshop in middle school, and built his own darkroom. He then worked for several years as a freelance photographer, working on everything from album covers to fashion photography. He attended the National Autonomous University of Mexico, where he graduated with a degree in Sociology.[4]
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Career
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Navarro began working in the film industry when his sister, a producer, hired him as on-set still and continuity photographer for one of her films. The experience triggered an interest in cinematography, and he began working as a camera assistant. Rather than working his way up through the Mexican film industry the traditional way, he instead moved to Paris where he became the apprentice of cinematographer Ricardo Aronovich. He worked for around 10 years before shooting his first feature.
Film
Navarro quickly formed a partnership with filmmaker Guillermo del Toro, first by shooting commercials then later his directorial debut Cronos, which won the prestigious Golden Ariel. Navarro moved to the United States in 1994, where he shot several films for director Robert Rodriguez and worked with high-profile directors Renny Harlin and Quentin Tarantino. He returned to Mexico in 2001 to shoot del Toro's The Devil's Backbone.
Television
Navarro began working as a director in 2013 with an episode of Hannibal. He has subsequently directed episodes for shows like The Bridge, Narcos, Preacher, and Luke Cage.
In 2019, Navarro worked as an executive producer on the National Geographic documentary series Hostile Planet, earning him an nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series.[5][6]
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Style
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His work often features very vivid blues and yellows which often take up most of the image, and the film's grain structure often switches between well-defined and sharp, and somewhat smoothed over or very fine.
In Pan's Labyrinth, Navarro and Del Toro had to work with a largely unfamiliar Spanish crew due to their usual crew's unavailability[7]. Navarro shot the film using his personal Moviecam Compact and Arriflex 435 ES cameras and Zeiss Ultra Prime and Variable Prime lenses. He used three different Kodak film stocks: Vision2 200T 5217, Vision2 500T 5218, and Vision 250D 5246, depending on the lighting conditions under which a scene was filmed. Much of the film was shot using day for night, underexposing the film three or four F stops. He purposefully kept lighting effects that could only be attained with sunlight, which jarred the image when it passed itself as night, creating an aura of experimentation. Because of the awkwardly-shaped spaces of the fantasy sets, Navarro had to be creative with his lighting, finding places to put his lamps that also didn't disrupt the image. A lot of light was strictly attained by bouncing it into the set. For certain scenes, the crew also drilled tiny holes into the walls of the set and placed little lights into the spaces.[8]
Filmography
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Cinematographer
Feature film
Television
Music video
Director
Short film
- Blue Eyed Sailor (2012) (Also producer)
Television
Music video
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Awards and nominations
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References
External links
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