Dean Semler


Dean William Semler Australian cinematographer and film director. He won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography for Dances with Wolves, and Australian Film Institute Awards for Best Cinematography for Razorback and Dead Calm.

Early life and education

Dean William Semler was born in Renmark, and grew up in South Australia.
He later said that the film which made the most impression on him as a child was David Lean's 1946 film of the Charles Dickens novel Great Expectations. He was given small Coronet still camera when he was 14, and took photographs of the landscape.
At the time, there were no film schools in southern Australia, so he had no formal training in photography.

Career

1970s

Semler's first work in the production industry was as a camera operator at a local television station. Later, he began making documentary and educational films for Film Australia. He was the cinematographer for A Steam Train Passes, Moving On, Let the Balloon Go, and A Good Thing Going.
In 1971, he worked with ethnographic filmmaker Ian Dunlop at Film Australia to film a special Yolngu ceremony organised by Wandjuk Marika to honour his father, Mawalan Marika, who had been a co-creator and signatory of the Yirrkala bark petitions in 1963, and died in 1967. The ceremony took place after the disappointing result of the Gove Land Rights Case. The resulting film, called In Memory of Mawalan, was released in 1983.
In 1976, he again worked with Dunlop to film the Yolngu Djungguwan ceremony in Arnhem Land. This is an initiation ceremony of the Rirratjingu and Marrakula clans taking several weeks, designed to teach young boys about discipline as well as respect for Yolngu law and traditions. The resulting film, entitled Djungguwan at Gurka’wuy, has been preserved at the National Film and Sound Archive.

1980s

Semler was cinematographer on Stepping Out, in 1980. The film was a documentary feature directed and produced by Chris Noonan, about a group of intellectually disabled people who give a performance at the Sydney Opera House.
Semler was the cinematographer on the film Hoodwink with a screenplay by Ken Quinnell, and in the same year, for Mad Max 2, which led to international attention for his work. He followed up on Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Semler was also a cinematographer for the acclaimed Australian miniseries Bodyline. In the late 1980s, Semler was the cinematographer for several popular films, such as Cocktail, and Young Guns.

1990s

In 1989, Semler was hired as cinematographer for Kevin Costner's Dances with Wolves, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography.
Semler lensed the comedy City Slickers and the action film Last Action Hero in the early 1990s. In 1995, Semler again worked with Costner on his film Waterworld. In 1992 Semler was the cinematographer for The Power of One.

2000s

In the 2000s, Semler was the cinematographer for a range of movies that included comedies and action films. In the mid-2000s, Semler was the cinematographer for the football comedy The Longest Yard and Just My Luck. In 2006, Semler worked with Mel Gibson again for the film Apocalypto.

Recognition and honours

In 2002 Semler was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia.
He is an accredited member of both the Australian Cinematographers Society and the American Society of Cinematographers.

Filmography

Feature films

DirectorFirestorm The Patriot
Cinematographer
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1974Moving OnRichard Mason
1976Let the Balloon GoOliver Howes
1981HoodwinkClaude Whatham
1981Mad Max 2George [Miller (director)|George Miller]
1983Kitty and the BagmanDonald Crombie
1983UndercoverDavid Stevens
1984RazorbackRussell Mulcahy
1985The Coca-Cola KidDusan Makavejev
1985Mad Max Beyond ThunderdomeGeorge Miller
George Ogilvie
1987BullseyeCarl Schultz
1987Going SaneMichael Robertson
1987The LighthorsemenSimon WincerAlso camera operator
1988CocktailRoger Donaldson
1988Young GunsChristopher Cain
1989Farewell to the KingJohn MiliusAlso camera "A" operator
1989Dead CalmPhillip Noyce
1989K-9Rod Daniel
1990ImpulseSondra Locke
1990Young Guns IIGeoff Murphy
1990Dances with WolvesKevin Costner
1991City SlickersRon Underwood
1992The Power of OneJohn G. Avildsen
1993Super Mario Bros.Rocky Morton
Annabel Jankel
Also 2nd unit director
1993Last Action HeroJohn McTiernan
1993The Three MusketeersStephen Herek
1994The Cowboy WayGregg Champion
1995WaterworldKevin Reynolds
1997Gone Fishin'Christopher Cain
1997Trojan WarGeorge Huang
1999The Bone CollectorPhillip Noyce
2000Nutty Professor II: The KlumpsPeter Segal
2001HeartbreakersDavid Mirkin
2002D-ToxJim Gillespie
2002DragonflyTom Shadyac
2002We Were SoldiersRandall Wallace
2002XXXRob Cohen
2003Bruce AlmightyTom Shadyac
2004The AlamoJohn Lee Hancock
2005The Longest YardPeter Segal
2005StealthRob Cohen
2006Just My LuckDonald Petrie
2006ClickFrank Coraci
2006ApocalyptoMel Gibson
2007I Now Pronounce You Chuck & LarryDennis Dugan
2008Get SmartPeter Segal
2008AppaloosaEd Harris
20092012Roland Emmerich
2010Date NightShawn Levy
2010SecretariatRandall Wallace
2011In the Land of Blood and HoneyAngelina Jolie
2012Parental GuidanceAndy Fickman
2013Grudge MatchPeter Segal
2014Heaven Is for RealRandall Wallace
2014MaleficentRobert Stromberg
2015Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2Andy Fickman
2015The Last Witch HunterBreck Eisner
2015The Ridiculous 6Frank Coraci
2016The Do-OverSteven Brill
2017Sandy WexlerSteven Brill
2019Playing with FireAndy Fickman
2026Summer GoldCaroline Zelder

Documentary film
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1980Stepping OutChris Noonan
1983In Memory of MawalanIan DunlopAbout Mawalan Marika

Television

TV movies
YearTitleDirector
1976Do I Have to Kill My Child?Donald Crombie
1978A [Good Thing Going]Arch Nicholson
1986Passion FlowerJoseph Sargent
1998The Clean MachineKen Cameron

TV series
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1968-1970This Day Tonight10 episodes
1980The RussiansArch NicholsonDocumentary series
1988Great PerformancesRodney FisherEpisode "Melba"