One of the more beloved below the line categories is here! Continuing a tradition I’ve been keen on for a while now, I’m ranking the new crop of Academy Award winners. For nearly all of the Oscar categories, you’ll see me list the top 25 recipients of that prize. Sometimes, our newest winner will appear. Other times, they’ll be relegated to the Honorable Mention category. Who knows, maybe one or two won’t even make the cut? It’s a list series that I’ll do each and every single year, in the weeks after the ceremony concludes. So, while this is a fun way to think about the Oscars in the aftermath of the latest telecast, it’s also a beginning for another column here on the site. Of course, definitely show us your own lists as well, in the comments section below. We’re definitely keen to know what you think!
This week, I’m doing Best Cinematography. The newest winner is, of course, Lol Crawley for The Brutalist, with Hoyte van Hoytema winning for Oppenheimer the year before. Previously, James Friend took home the Oscar for All Quiet on the Western Front. The prior winner to that, Dune, features some very strong work from the until-now perpetually underrated Greig Fraser, but with such a phenomenal category, will he/it even remain in the top 25? What about Friend? Everyone has a different type of cinematography, or cinematographer, that they love, so your mileage may vary here. For me, DP’s like Roger Deakins and Janusz Kaminski are at the top of the class, so their films are going to be well represented. Movie-wise, Schindler’s List takes top honors still, but I think my ranking is, overall, pretty diverse, with some utter classics of cinema sharing space with very new flicks. Take a gander below and see…
Here are what I consider to be the 25 best winners of the Best Cinematography Oscar, to date:
25. Russell Metty – Spartacus
24. Sven Nykvist – Fanny and Alexander
23. Conrad Hall – Road to Perdition
22. Burnett Guffey – Bonnie and Clyde
21. Lol Crawley – The Brutalist
20. Vittorio Storaro – Apocalypse Now
19. Greig Fraser – Dune
18. Robert Krasker – The Third Man
17. Emmanuel Lubezki – Gravity
16. Boris Kaufman – On the Waterfront
15. Hoyte van Hoytema – Oppenheimer
14. Ernest Haller and Ray Rennahan – Gone with the Wind
13. Linus Sandgren – La La Land
12. Conrad Hall – American Beauty
11. Geoffrey Unsworth – Cabaret
10. Vilmos Zsigmond – Close Encounters of the Third Kind
9. Roger Deakins – 1917
8. Néstor Almendros – Days of Heaven
7. Robert Surtees – Ben-Hur
6. Guillermo Navarro – Pan’s Labyrinth
5. Janusz Kamiński – Saving Private Ryan
4. Freddie Young – Lawrence of Arabia
3. John Alcott – Barry Lyndon
2. Roger Deakins – Blade Runner 2049
1. Janusz Kamiński – Schindler’s List
Honorable Mention: Alfonso Cuaron (Roma), Daniel L. Fapp (West Side Story), Loyal Griggs (Shane), Jack Hildyard (The Bridge on the River Kwai), Anthony Dod Mantle (Slumdog Millionaire), and Erik Messerschmidt (Mank)

Stay tuned for another category early next week!





I know it’s a BTL category but I think of it is ATL in a way .
A few changes not that many .
25.Road to Perdition
24.Saving Private Ryan
23.JFK
22.1917
21.West Side Story
20.Bonnie and Clyde
19.Sunrise The Story of Two Humans
18.Gravity
17.The Third Man
16.A Place in The Sun
15.Leave Her To Heaven
14.Fanny and Alexander
13.Rebecca
12.Oppenheimer
11.Lawrence of Arabia
10.An American In Paris
9.The Aviator
8.Laura
7.Master and Commander the Far Side of The World
6.Hud
5.Schindler’s List
4.Cabaret
3.Black Narcissus
2.Roma
1.Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon
Honorable Mentions
The Defiant Ones
Slumdog Millionaire
A River Runs Through It
Who’s Afraid of Virgina Woolf
From Here to Eternity
Titanic
Reds
The Brutalist
It’s definitely seen as the cream of the below the line crop.