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Word: cameraman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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MOST HOPEFUL SIGN: The cinematography prize for Sven Nykvist, Ingmar Bergman's great cameraman. Hollywood can occasionally recognize production merit that is not ingrown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Big Show, 1974 | 4/15/1974 | See Source »

...Including four Americans: Photographer Sean Flynn, who was captured in April 1970 while on assignment for TIME; CBS Cameraman Dana Stone; UPl's Terry Reynolds; and NBC Correspondent Welles Hangen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: The Missing Journalists | 2/4/1974 | See Source »

...Chief Roy Rowan, for instance, was in Peking to cover a reception given by the Chinese for visiting Ethiopian dignitaries last February. Rowan was jogging early one morning when a bearded man leaned out of a taxicab and frantically ordered him to stop. The man was a French television cameraman who had been assigned to record the first signs of the American presence in Peking but was having trouble locating Americans. "Finally, I saw a foreigner running in the freezing cold wearing a blue sweatsuit with red and white stripes," the cameraman explained. "I figured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Dec. 31, 1973 | 12/31/1973 | See Source »

Director Roeg, formerly a cameraman (Petulia) has made two previous films: Performance, which he co-directed, and Walkabout. Both had a disquieting beauty, a dreamlike sense of dislocation and, most of all, a reliance on the visual vocabulary of the cinema to build and sustain the narrative. Don't Look Now is Roeg's best work so far -the most deliberate and contained. Much of the movie's power comes from images that carry a kind of glancing, indefinable threat and remain in some dark corner of the imagination. They are immediate but not quite real, like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Second Sight | 12/10/1973 | See Source »

...Turner, like the final product. Criticism generally comes from others. Wiseman rarely has trouble getting permission to film. At the Memphis juvenile court, as with most of his six earlier documentaries, he began shooting scarcely a day after he arrived. He handles the sound himself and uses only one cameraman. "The filming is the research," he says. "If you look around without a camera, you just see things you wish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Don't Cry Yet | 10/8/1973 | See Source »

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