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If you haven't seen them already, Gravity and Collateral are really good too, as is The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Fincher's version)..
If you really want to get blown away, watch Baraka. No plot, just amazing visuals.
BRAM STOKER S DRACULA and the Godfather films being other favourites.
But we all know the obvious ones. Mann's feature length Miami Vice from '06 is stunning and one of the more visually unique movies you're likely to see.
In The Mood For Love (pretty much anything Christopher Doyle shoots)
http://vashivisuals.com/cinematography-ipcress-file/
Frank Miller was probably the only one who could capture the work of Will Eisner the way he did.
I think Sin City is visually sumptuous, but a lot of that is green screen work etc, and not necessarily that of a cinematographer.
Whenever someone asks me why I think the Oscars are a laughable load of shit I simply remind them that Life of Pi won for cinematography, when 85% of that movie is digital effect. Don't get me wrong, that film is gorgeous, but it should have won (and it may have) for effects work etc, not cinematography.
THIS. This right here. Thank you.
:-O
Well, that's disgusting.
[-(
I personally liked Frank Griebe's work on The International, starring Clive Owen. It had a very cold, industrial aesthetic.
That Guggenheim shootout is one for the ages.
The entire atmosphere, but certainly the shots of the coach crossing the screen in autumn colours, and the shot of the Tree (also great cudos for the production designer, Rick Heinrichs)
North by Northwest - cinematography by Robert Burks, who also filmed Rear Window, Vertigo and other Hitchcock greats
That shot of Cary Grant entering the UN Building, standing in the field before the cropduster comes after him
In the Mood for Love - cinematography by Christopher Doyle
Each time Maggie Cheung walks along that wall for another takeaway rice dish - pure poetry
La Giovanezza/Youth - cinematography by Luca Bigazzi
Those alpine meadows splash from the screen, making that natural environment enhance the sense of alienation and isolation.
Io sono l'amore - cinematography by Yorick Le Saulx
Tilda Swinton walking around Milan in great solitude, shot from a low angle
Henry, Portrait of a Serial Killer - cinematography by Charlie Lieberman
The overall gruesome and menacing atmosphere
The Elephant Man - cinematography by Freddie Francis
Never saw so much tones in a B&W movie
Carol - cinematography by Edward Lachman (also filmed Far from Heaven)
Wonderful how the grain of the pellicule adds warmth to the image, and makes it tangible
Welcome to the forums! And thank you for the insightful recommendations.