I Shot That: Camera Survey of 45 of the Top Fall 2025 Films

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Over the course of the year, the IndieWire Craft team asks directors of photography to tell us about the cameras, lenses, and looks of their films. We start around Sundance and just can’t stop asking the questions, really, because different crews can use the same camera packages (the ALEXA 35 is crushing it) for wildly different reasons, because the specific requirements of shoots can lead to innovative problem-solving, and because we love to read cinematographers talking about all the things that make shooting film special (whether or not their budget can afford to swing shooting on actual film stock).

Now that we are rocketing toward the winter, we’ve collected some of the festival stalwarts and new fall films and asked their cinematographers, as we always do, why the tools they chose were the right ones for the job. Sometimes, the right answer has to do with lightness, speed, and wandering around Warsaw with Charli XCX, as was the case on Pete Ohs’ “Erupcja,” where Ohs used the same hacked Canon 5D he’s been making films with since 2012. “With a 5D, we just looked like tourists in Warsaw, which made filming all over the city a breeze. We also had the sense we were doing some French New Wave/’70s Polish cinema vibe, so any rougher edges of the final image was an aesthetic we were happy to embrace,” Ohs told IndieWire.

In other circumstances, the equipment is a means to a more philosophical end. The great Malik Hassan Sayeed returned to feature filmmaking on “After The Hunt” and cited the chemical process film itself as crucial to the process of capturing the story. “There’s a kind of emotional texture in film,” Sayeed told IndieWire. “Imperfections and accidents that feel alive, much like the characters themselves. That tactile quality helped ground the story in something more human and instinctive.”

Even where the inhuman is concerned, specific film choices can help illuminate the unspeakable, as is the case with Dan Lauston’s work on Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein.” Lauston told IndieWire that he and Del Toro toned down the sharpness of the ALEXA 65 and the Leica Thalia lenses to soften the skin tones but not touch the blacks. “And we love black,” Lauston said. Below, find out what some of the best working cinematographers loved, and how they captured it on their projects this year.

Films are listed in alphabetical order by title.

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