Feature films
''Moonlight''
Arguably his most critically acclaimed film was ''Moonlight'' directed by Barry Jenkins. The film takes themes of sexuality and explores them in a harsher urban environment. The cinematography of ''Moonlight'' took contemporary film-making and put a new lens on it. With a relatively low budget of 1.5 million dollars, there weren't a lot of resources that were able to be spent on things like underwater camera gear for example. However, challenges like these made it possible for Jenkins and Laxton to think outside of the box on how they would be able to pull certain shots off. This ingenuity gives birth to the cinematic language of the film and it projects boldly with every scene.''If Beale Street Could Talk''
After the commercial success of ''Moonlight'', the next film for the two filmmakers would be a tragic love story between Tish Rivers played by KiKi Layne and a wood artist Alonzo 'Fonny' Hunt played by Stephan James as they meet begin to build a life together until Fonny is accused of a crime he didn't commit. From this point on, Tish is doing everything that she can in order to set her love free. With the film being based on a novel by James Baldwin, there are several instances where the cinematography feels "novel-like" to indicate the sense of losing oneself in any given scene and how intricately the characters traits and emotions intertwine with one another. "To find and fine-tune the precise visual grammar of Baldwin’s mastery Jenkins followed a process that served him so well with his previous Oscar-winner. One of the keys to ''Moonlight'' transcending the limitations of its $1.5 million budget – trading docu-realism for crafted visual poetry of the highest level". The language that Jenkins and Laxton created for ''Moonlight'' creates a look well beyond the low budget and shed more light on the verite style cinematography.Filmography
Short films
Television
References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Laxton, James American cinematographers Living people Year of birth missing (living people)