Acclaimed cinematographer Harris Savides dies
Savides worked with Gus Van Sant, David Fincher, Sofia Coppola
The Associated Press
Posted: Oct 12, 2012 9:11 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 12, 2012 9:09 AM ET
Cinematographer Harris Savides, seen on the set of Sofia Coppola's Somewhere and a collaborator of Gus Van Sant and David Fincher, has died at the age of 55. (Franco Biciocchi/Focus Features/Associated Press)
Harris Savides, the acclaimed cinematographer who worked frequently with Gus Van Sant and David Fincher, has died at 55.
Savides died Wednesday night, his representatives at The Skouras Agency confirmed Thursday. They did not release a cause of death. He died in New York, where he'd spent most of his life, the American Society of Cinematographers said.
Savides was known for vividly recreating the hazy hues of 1970s cinema in films like Fincher's Zodiac, Ridley Scott's American Gangster and Sofia Coppola's Somewhere, and for mesmerizingly fluid, long takes with Van Sant in movies including Last Days, Elephant and Gerry. He was also the director of photography on Van Sant's more mainstream movies, Finding Forrester and Milk.
The last film he shot was Coppola's The Bling Ring, based on the true story of Los Angeles teens who burglarized celebrities' homes, which is due out next year.
Memorable videos
Savides, who'd initially intended to be a fashion photographer, also shot several influential music videos in the mid-1990s. He often worked with director Mark Romanek on clips including Michael and Janet Jackson's famously expensive, black-and-white Scream, Nine Inch Nails' intentionally damaged, distorted Closer and Madonna's radiant Rain.
'Harris taught me so much about the meaning of real beauty and the power of simplicity'—Mark Romanek, director
Many in the film world reacted with sadness and appreciation, both people Savides had worked with and those who admired him.
"A beautiful and incredibly amusing man, Harris taught me so much about the meaning of real beauty and the power of simplicity," said Romanek, director of One Hour Photo and Never Let Me Go who'd known Savides for 22 years.
"He expressed these essential notions in his life and in his work. I was blessed to know him. Today, I feel a great emptiness."
Coppola said: "Like everyone who met him, I loved Harris. I learned so much about filmmaking from him and we have his beautiful work to remember him by. He was a great artist and a great man. He will always inspire those of us who worked with him to do our best."
Donnie Darko director Richard Kelly wrote on Twitter: "Watching Criterion of THE GAME. So sad to hear about the passing of Harris Savides, one of the truly great cinematographers of all time."
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