Wally
Pfister, ASC
Batman Begins
Wally Pfister, ASC was born in Chicago and raised in the outskirts of New
York City. There was a time in his teens, when he dreamed about spending
his life playing guitar in rock bands. Music is still a main passion.
Pfister began his career shooting TV news and documentary footage in Washington,
D.C. during the transition from 16 mm film to video. Serendipity gave him
an opportunity to work with Robert Altman as a B video camera operator, and
bit actor on an HBO miniseries. Pfister had eight years of non-fiction video
camera experience, when he enrolled in the cinematography program at the
American Film Institute (AFI) and shifted his focus to dramatic filmmaking.
He launched his narrative film career working in various crew roles on ultra-low
budget films produced by Roger Corman. Pfister alternated between shooting
low budget movies and operating cameras for former AFI students, including
Phedon Papamichael, ASC, and Janusz Kaminski, ASC. In 1998, he turned down
a much better paying job as a camera operator to shoot an art house type
film called The Hi-Line on a $300,000 budget.
A young director named Chris Nolan saw The Hi-Line at
the Sundance Film Festival. He and Pfister subsequently collaborated on Memento and
later on Insomnia. Pfister’s other credits include Laurel Canyonand The
Italian Job and Batman Begins, for which he won his first Oscar
nomination.
Local 600's Online Interview of Wally
Pfister
View Trailor of Batman Begins
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