
Gabriel Beristain
Camera
Luis Gabriel Beristáin, ASC, BSC, AMC, is a Mexican cinematographer, producer, and television director known for his work on numerous well-known films, including The Distinguished Gentleman, The Spanish Prisoner, Blade II, and Street Kings, and several entries in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, including the Agent Carter television series. He has collaborated with filmmakers like Guillermo del Toro, Derek Jarman, David Mamet, and David Ayer. He is an active member of both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Beristain was born in Mexico City, the son of actor Luis Beristáin. His interest in filmmaking began with his involvement in Mexico's independent film scene in the seventies. He studied engineering at the Instituto Politécnico Nacional and later joined a new film studies program at the school while also producing audiovisual training materials for the health department. After filming a number of documentaries, he founded a small commercial production company before moving to Italy in 1977. At the recommendation of director Sergio Leone, he relocated to the United Kingdom, where he enrolled in the prestigious National Film and Television School, which accepted only 25 students a year. He was one of only five foreigners to be accepted into the school and studied cinematography under Oswald Morris and Billy Williams. His first feature film as a cinematographer was the 1983 Colombian horror film Bloody Flesh (Spanish: Carne de tu carne, "Flesh of Your Flesh"), for which he won the Best Cinematography Award at the Bogotá Film Festival. His work on Derek Jarman's 1986 film Caravaggio earned him a Special Silver Bear Award at the Berlin International Film Festival. Beristain was one of several cinematographers on the 1987 anthology film Aria, which was nominated for a Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Allen Daviau suggested he move to Hollywood, where he could apply his talents and unique insight into both Mexican and Anglo cultures. Beristain has been a member of the British Society of Cinematographers since 1990 and the American Society of Cinematographers since 2002. While working on 2003's S.W.A.T., Beristain became friends with executive producer Louis D'Esposito, who, after helping form Marvel Studios, invited Beristain to do additional photography for Iron Man. He wound up in the same function in six other Marvel Cinematic Universe films and also served as cinematographer for the D'Esposito-directed Marvel One-Shot short films Item 47 (2012) and Agent Carter (2013), as well as the television series Agent Carter. Beristein would eventually have his first feature for the studio as cinematographer in 2021's Black Widow. Beristain had a son born in 1980 who lived in Austria and died in 2000. Beristain's influences are Gregg Toland, Freddie Young, Emmanuel Lubezki, and Roger Deakins. Description above from the Wikipedia article Gabriel Beristain, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Born: May 9, 1955 · Mexico City, Mexico
Filmography (44)

The Gentleman
2025

Harold and the Purple Crayon
2024

The Beekeeper
2024

Hawkeye
2021

Black Widow
2021

Havana Kyrie
2019

MacGyver
2016

Marvel's Agent Carter
2015

The Strain
2014

Sabotage
2014

Marvel One-Shot: Agent Carter
2013

Marvel One-Shot: Item 47
2012

The Avengers
2012

Magic City
2012

There Be Dragons
2011

Hawaii Five-0
2010

Princess Kaiulani
2010

And Soon the Darkness
2010

Iron Man
2008

Street Kings
2008

The Invisible
2007

The Sentinel
2006

The Shaggy Dog
2006

The Ring Two
2005

Incident at Loch Ness
2004

Blade: Trinity
2004

S.W.A.T.
2003

Blade II
2002

Molly
1999

Jerry Seinfeld: I'm Telling You for the Last Time
1998

Tale of the Mummy
1998

The Spanish Prisoner
1997

Trial and Error
1997

The Ghost and the Darkness
1996

Dolores Claiborne
1995

Greedy
1994

Fatal Instinct
1993

Bound by Honor
1993

The Distinguished Gentleman
1992

K2
1991

Waiting for the Light
1990

Aria
1987

Caravaggio
1986

Bloody Flesh
1983
