Qumra Master Darius Khondji Underlines Power of Storytelling Through Light

Doha: Qumra Master Darius Khondji, the acclaimed Iranian-French cinematographer whose body of work (Se7en, Delicatessen, Uncut Gems, Mickey 17) has defined some of the most memorable visual experiences in contemporary cinema, highlighted the power of light and its vital role in the composition of authentic art.

According to Qatar News Agency, reflecting on his first collaboration with Qumra 2025, the annual industry incubator event by Doha Film Institute, Khondji stated: "The institute is fantastic for filmmakers. I wish we had this in other countries." During his two-hour master class, Khondji took audiences behind the scenes of his celebrated projects, including acclaimed filmmaker Shireen Nishat's Tooba, a compelling work of art that "explores the movement of people from their homeland to an imagined utopia." The powerful allegories about life that Khondji captured on screen for Tooba, he says, "come from the director. I remember her words when she was describing to me what she wanted to make with the film, and I just photographed. As cinematographers, we are like musicians, playing the sound and music given by the composer."

Khondji's frames, dark and broody in Se7en (1995) and hopeful and effervescent in Okja (2017), all stem from his early passion for photography. "I remember going to the Louvre and taking pictures of the statues and looking at the light on them. I was very interested in minimalism and I was always reducing things to the most simple [forms] with light." A two-time Oscar nominee, Khondji perfects his craft with a creative approach over technical, constantly innovating in a way that defies categorization. His impressive versatility as a cinematographer is evident in The Lost City of Z (2016), capturing the darkness of the jungle in natural light, contrasted with the spellbinding climax in flames, and in the frenetic Uncut Gems (2019), shot in available light inside an apartment.

Khondji, whose father owned several movie theatres, said his early memories of cinema revolved around "listening to soundtracks of Egyptian films, Italian neorealist films, mainstream European films, and Indian films. I remember having this background of sound and feeling." To this day, music is crucial to his work. "If I don't like the music, we do some okay photography, but my mind won't be in it." Asked about his advice for emerging filmmakers who strive to stand out, he said that everyone has a distinct inner voice. "It's important to understand and accept your difference. If I had to make a film myself today and I'm not a young filmmaker-even for me, it would be difficult to have a unique voice. We have to find it within ourselves, then put it on screen."