Jack N. Green Explained

Jack N. Green
Birth Name:John Niel Green
Birth Date:August 10, 1939
Birth Place:San Francisco, California, U.S.
Occupation:Cinematographer
Years Active:1986–present

John Niel Green (born August 10, 1939),[1] is an American cinematographer and film director best known for his Oscar-nominated collaborations with actor/director Clint Eastwood, taking over from Eastwood's previous collaborator Bruce Surtees.

Biography

Early life

Green was born in 1946, in San Francisco, California, to Trudy and John Green, Sr.[2] [3]

His parents were photography enthusiasts. Their home-made darkroom had a strong artistic impact on Green. At age 17, Green graduated from both high school and barber college, expecting to become a career barber.

Early career

A regular barbershop customer, cameraman Joseph Dieves—who had been a combat cameraman in World War II—excited Green with tales of the trade. Green eventually joined Dieves to work on small television productions for various production companies, including San Francisco’s W.A. Palmer. In 1965 Dieves sponsored Green's union membership.

In the summer of 1966, Green was assistant cameraman for a documentary, in Oregon, about the movie The Way West. His work was chiefly on aerial shots.

In 1968, Green moved to Hollywood where he began his career as an assistant to Emmy-winning cinematographer Donald M. Morgan. He worked primarily on aerial unit photography, shooting helicopter exteriors for the film Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. After being laid off, he fell in with Michael W. Watkins, who got him a job as a camera operator on the Jonathan Demme film Fighting Mad. He spent much of the 1970s and early 1980s freelancing as an operator under DPs like William A. Fraker, Ric Waite, Harry Stradling Jr., and Bruce Surtees, shooting films like Bronco Billy, 48 Hrs., Pale Rider, and Beverly Hills Cop.[3]

Clint Eastwood films

He first met Clint Eastwood on the set of the film The Gauntlet, and proceeded to operate on every single Eastwood film until being promoted to DP on Heartbreak Ridge after being recommended by Surtees.[3] Because of Eastwood's tendency to reuse the same crew from film-to-film, Green shot every Eastwood-directed film between 1986 and 2000, their final collaboration being Space Cowboys.[3] Green's work on the 1992 western, Unforgiven earned him nominations for an Academy Award and a BAFTA Award for best cinematography. He was also a nominee for the ASC Award for the 1995 film, The Bridges of Madison County.

Recent career

Since 2000, Green has worked on over fifteen films in genres ranging from science fiction (Serenity) to action (A Man Apart) to comedy (50 First Dates, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Hot Tub Time Machine). He made his directorial debut with Traveller, a 1997 crime drama starring Bill Paxton and Mark Wahlberg. Green has been a member of the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) since 1992.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleDirector
1986Heartbreak RidgeClint Eastwood
1987Like Father Like SonRod Daniel
1988BirdClint Eastwood
The Dead PoolBuddy Van Horn
1989Pink Cadillac
Race for GloryRocky Lang
1990White Hunter Black HeartClint Eastwood
The Rookie
1991DeceivedDamian Harris
1992Love CrimesLizzie Borden
UnforgivenClint Eastwood
1993Rookie of the YearDaniel Stern
A Perfect WorldClint Eastwood
1994Trapped in ParadiseGeorge Gallo
1995Bad CompanyDamian Harris
The Bridges of Madison CountyClint Eastwood
The NetIrwin Winkler
The Amazing Panda AdventureChristopher Cain
1996TwisterJan de Bont
1997Absolute PowerClint Eastwood
Jan de Bont
TravellerHimself
Midnight in the Garden of Good and EvilClint Eastwood
1999True Crime
Girl, InterruptedJames Mangold
2000Space CowboysClint Eastwood
2001Pretty When You CryHimself
2003A Man ApartF. Gary Gray
Secondhand LionsTim McCanlies
200450 First DatesPeter Segal
Against the RopesCharles S. Dutton
2005The 40-Year-Old VirginJudd Apatow
SerenityJoss Whedon
2007Are We Done Yet?Steve Carr
2008My Best Friend's GirlHoward Deutch
2010Hot Tub Time MachineSteve Pink
Diary of a Wimpy KidThor Freudenthal
2011Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick RulesDavid Bowers
2014The LettersWilliam Riead
Left BehindVic Armstrong
2020The PendantJeffrey N. Albert

Television

YearTitleDirectorNotes
1993The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr.Bryan SpicerEpisode "Pilot"
1997Eastwood on EastwoodRichard SchickelDocumentary film

Short film

YearTitleDirector
2001Golden DreamsAgnieszka Holland
2012ReignKimberly Jentzen

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryTitleResult
1992Academy AwardsBest CinematographyUnforgiven
BAFTA AwardsBest Cinematography
Boston Society of Film CriticsBest Cinematography
Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationBest Cinematography
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics AssociationBest Cinematography
National Society of Film CriticsBest Cinematography
1995American Society of CinematographersOutstanding Achievement in CinematographyThe Bridges of Madison County
1998Society of Camera OperatorsPresident's Award
2003Big Bear Lake International Film FestivalLifetime Achievement Award
2009American Society of Cinematographers

References

  1. Kay Weniger: Das große Personenlexikon des Films. Band 3, Berlin 2001,, p. 375.
  2. Udel, James C.: "Cinematographer Jack N. Green’s Aerial Work Led to Gigs on Clint Eastwood Movies," August 2, 2019, Variety, retrieved October 2, 2021
  3. Web site: JACK N. GREEN. www.cinematographers.nl. 2017-08-28.