In 1970, when he called Orson Welles out of the blue and offered his services, Gary Graver was a young cinematographer who’d trained the hard way, filming the war in Vietnam for the U.S. Army. Welles politely brushed him off, at first. Luckily — for Welles and the rest of us who love movies — he called Graver back within minutes and invited him to meet, right away. “Only two cameramen have ever sought me out,” Welles later told him. “You, and Gregg Toland,” the ingenious maverick... More >>>