7th Edition Of The Angenieux Excellences In Cannes: Tribute To Bruno Delbonnel AFC ASC
Since 2013, as an official partner of the Cannes Film Festival, Angénieux has been paying a tribute to a prominent director of photography during the « Pierre Angénieux ExcelLens in Cinematography » ceremony. This event turns the spotlight on worldwide masters of light, directors of photography, without whom cinema would not exist.
After Philippe Rousselot (AFC*, ASC*) in 2013, Vilmos Zsigmond (HSC*, ASC) in 2014, Roger A. Deakins (BSC*, ASC) in 2015, Peter Suschitzky (ASC) in 2016, Christopher Doyle (HKSC*) in 2017 and Edward Lachman (ASC), it is Bruno Delbonnel’s turn to be honored in 2019, at the 72nd Cannes Film Festival, during an exceptional evening opened by Thierry Frémaux, presented by French journalist Pierre Zéni and in presence of some of his closest collaborators.
Bruno Delbonnel is a world-renowned French director of photography
Born in Nancy in 1957, Bruno Delbonnel first studied philosophy, then graduated from ESEC in the camera and light section, before filming his first and only film at the age of 20 : a short film, Rare Realities. On this film, Jean-Pierre Jeunet was his assistant and Henri Alekan, his DOP. Alongside the master of black and white photography, he discovered his passion for light was stronger than directing. He then began working as a camera assistant during fifteen years for commercials and some feature films, then as a DOP.
Bruno Delbonnel @Mitya Ganopolsky (FAUST)
His career took on an international dimension in 2001, thanks to his collaboration with Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Thanks to his work on Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain, he won the European Cinema Prize for the best director of photography and was nominated at the same time for the César, the BAFTA and the Oscar for best picture. Particularly noticed for his avant-garde work, he has a different approach to light and makes production designers his best allies on filming, so that sets are designed to be filmed at short focal length, shots framed at 27mm, his preferred focal length. Now Bruno Delbonnel continues his visual research at the service of the movies he enlightens and finds inspiration in music, architecture or abstract painting – challenging himself such as “trying to create a light between Mark Rothko and Shostakovich” – and developed collaborations with some of the greatest directors : Tim Burton (Dark Shadows, Big Eyes, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children), the Coen brothers (Inside Llewyn Davis, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs ), Alexandre Sokourov (Faust, Francofonia), Joe Wright (Darkest hour) or David Yates (Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince) and of course his old mate, Jean-Pierre Jeunet (Un Long dimanche de fiançailles).
His collaborations earned him five Oscar nominations for Best Picture (for Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain in 2002, Un long dimanche de fiançailles in 2005, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince in 2010, Inside Llewyn Davis in 2014 and Darkest hour in 2018).
In parallel to the tribute paid to the already established career of a director of photography, Angénieux also wants to highlight the promising work of a young film professional. This is how, during this exceptional evening, the director of photography Modhura Palit based in Calcutta, India, will be given a special encouragement, offering her the opportunity to use the best of the Angénieux technology for the images of her next project.
Modhura Palit studied cinema at the Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute, one of India’s leading film schools. Member of the Indian Women Cinematographers Collective (IWCC) as well as of the Eastern India Cinematographers Association (EICA), she is part of the Busan Asian Film Academy ( AFA ), and she took part in the Looking China Youth Film Project in 2015. Thanks to this project, she travelled across China and directed, lit, edited and produced the short documentary The Girl across the stream in 18 days. This film won the 2nd Runner Up Prize. Since then, she has been working on short-films, video clips, corporate films and three feature films.
Modhura Palit – Tous droits réservés
About Angénieux lenses in Bruno Delbonnel’s filmography
Among his equipment, Bruno Delbonnel has been using Angénieux lenses, particularly on the following films:
- The Woman in the Window by Joe Wright / Optimo 17-80 and 28-340
- The Ballad of Buster Scruggs by Joel and Ethan Coen / Optimo 24-290
- Darkest Hours by Joe Wright / Optimo 17-80
- Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Tim Burton / Optimo 17-80 and 24-290
- Big Eyes by Tim Burton / Optimo 17-80
- Inside Llewyn Davis by Joel and Ethan Coen / Optimo 17-80
- Dark Shadows by Tim Burton / Optimo 17-80
- Faust by Aleksandr Sokurov / Optimo 17-80 and 24-290
- Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by David Yates / Optimo 17-80 and 24-290
“As header picture: Bruno Delbonnel and Tim Burton during Dark Shadows shooting ©Leah Gallo”