Agnès Godard
Agnès Godard (born 28 May 1951) is a French cinematographer. She is most famous for her long-running collaboration with filmmaker Claire Denis. For her work, she has won a César Award.
Godard originally studied journalism, but switched to film after several years, graduating from La Femis (then known as IDHEC) in 1980. Her first project as a cinematographer was Wim Wenders' 50-minute Room 666, made for television. There she met Claire Denis, who was working as Wenders' assistant director.
Godard spent much of the 1980s working as an assistant camera operator or focus puller on films by Wenders, Joseph Losey, Peter Greenaway and Alain Resnais. She also served as director of photography on a short film directed by legendary cinematographer Henri Alekan. Her first collaboration with Denis was the director's debut feature, Chocolat, where she served as the camera operator; she has been Denis' regular cinematographer since 1990, when the two worked together on a documentary about Nouvelle Vague filmmaker Jacques Rivette made for the French television series Cinema, de Notre Temps.
Source: Article "Agnès Godard" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Acting
Crew
Movie
Paris, Texas
First Assistant Camera
1984
Movie
Wings of Desire
Assistant Camera
1987
Movie
Hunting & Gathering
Director of Photography
2007
Movie
Beau Travail
Director of Photography
2000
Movie
Trouble Every Day
Director of Photography
2001
Movie
Let the Sunshine In
Director of Photography
2017
Movie
The Falling
Director of Photography
2015
Movie
A Zed & Two Noughts
Focus Puller
1985
Movie
Sister
Director of Photography
2012
Movie
Home
Director of Photography
2008
Movie
Golden Door
Director of Photography
2006
Movie
Tresor
Director of Photography
2009