Roman Vasyanov

Roman Vasyanov
Роман Васьянов
Born
Roman Sergeyevich Vasyanov

(1980-10-24) October 24, 1980
Years active2002–present

Roman Sergeyevich Vasyanov, ASC, RGC (Russian: Роман Сергеевич Васьянов; born October 24, 1980, in Moscow[1][2]) is a Russian cinematographer.

Life and career

Vasyanov was born in Moscow. As a child, he was engaged in photography with his father, who worked at the ZIL automobile plant. Made photos and videos as a freelancer for magazines and newspapers. Later, thanks to his father's friend M. D. Koroptsov, he got acquainted with the profession of a cameraman.

In 1998, he entered VGIK (workshop of V. I. Yusov). At the XXIV International Film Festival VGIK, he received the prize for the best camera work in the film "Hide and Seek". While studying at VGIK, he worked as an assistant cameraman to Yu.

Vasyanov is a member of Russian Guild of Cinematographers, and American Society of Cinematographers since 2022.[3]

Filmography

Cinematographer

Year Title Director Notes
2005 Graveyard Shift Valeri Rozhnov
2006 Piranha Andrey Kavun
2007 Vice Valery Todorovsky
2008 Stilyagi
2010 Yavlenie prirody Aleksandr Lungin
Sergey Osipyan
2012 End of Watch David Ayer
The Motel Life Alan Polsky
Gabe Polsky
2013 The East Zal Batmanglij
Charlie Countryman Fredrik Bond
2014 Fury David Ayer
2016 Suicide Squad
2017 The Wall Doug Liman
Thank You for Your Service Jason Hall
Bright David Ayer
2019 Triple Frontier J. C. Chandor
Odessa Valery Todorovsky
2024 Limonov: The Ballad Kirill Serebrennikov
2025 In the Hand of Dante Julian Schnabel
2026 Après Kirill Serebrennikov

Director/writer

Awards and nominatons

Year Award Category Title Result Ref.
2008 Golden Eagle Awards Best Cinematography Stilyagi Nominated
2010 Kinotavr Best Cinematography Act of Nature Won [4]
2012 Independent Spirit Awards Best Cinematography End of Watch Nominated [2]

References

  1. ^ Roman Vasyanov, kinopoisk.ru, access date November 14, 2013.
  2. ^ a b Roman Vasyanov Archived 2013-11-14 at the Wayback Machine, spiritawards.com, retrieved 14 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Roman Vasyanov Welcomed Into Society Membership". American Cinematographer, ASC. 2022-01-13. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  4. ^ Blaney, Martin (June 14, 2010). "My Joy, Truce lead winners in Sochi". Screen International. Retrieved September 3, 2017.