Linus Sandgren
Linus Sandgren is a Swedish cinematographer acclaimed for his innovative visual storytelling in high-profile films, most notably earning the Academy Award for Best Cinematography for his work on La La Land (2016).[1] Born on December 5, 1972, in Spånga, Stockholm, Sweden, Sandgren has become a sought-after collaborator for directors seeking distinctive cinematic aesthetics, blending practical effects, film formats, and emotive lighting to enhance narrative depth.[2] His career spans independent Scandinavian projects to blockbuster Hollywood productions, marked by multiple awards including a BAFTA for La La Land and an ASC Award nomination for First Man (2018).[1][3] Sandgren's early training included studies in graphic design and illustration at Berghs School of Communication, followed by film at Stockholm Film School, which laid the foundation for his technical expertise.[3] He began his professional journey as a camera assistant in the late 1990s before transitioning to cinematographer in 1999, with his debut feature being the Swedish fantasy drama Storm (2005), for which he won the Guldbagge Award for Best Cinematography from the Swedish Film Institute.[3][4] Relocating to Los Angeles in 2001, he initially built his reputation through commercials, earning four Cannes Lions awards while working with directors such as John Hillcoat and Tom Hooper.[3] His entry into Hollywood features came in 2012 with Gus Van Sant's Promised Land, shot in Super 35mm anamorphic format, which opened doors to larger-scale projects.[2][3] Among Sandgren's most defining collaborations are those with David O. Russell on American Hustle (2013) and Joy (2015), where his dynamic, period-infused visuals captured the essence of 1970s and 1980s America.[2] His partnership with Damien Chazelle produced two Oscar-nominated works: La La Land, utilizing 35mm and 16mm film stocks with a 2.55:1 anamorphic ratio to evoke classic Hollywood musicals, and First Man, employing IMAX and handheld techniques to immerse audiences in the intensity of NASA's Apollo program.[5][1] Further highlights include No Time to Die (2021), blending practical stunts with atmospheric lighting for the James Bond franchise, and Saltburn (2023), featuring gothic, voyeuristic shots that heightened the film's psychological tension.[2] In 2024, Sandgren was announced as the cinematographer for Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Messiah (upcoming), replacing Greig Fraser and continuing his streak of visually ambitious sci-fi epics following Babylon (2022) and Don't Look Up (2021).[6] His recent projects include Jay Kelly (2025), directed by Noah Baumbach, and the upcoming Wuthering Heights (2026), directed by Emerald Fennell.[7][8] A member of both the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) since 2019 and the Swedish Society of Cinematographers (FSF), Sandgren's oeuvre emphasizes collaboration, technical innovation, and emotional resonance, solidifying his status as one of contemporary cinema's premier visual artists.[3][9][2]Early life and education
Early life
Linus Sandgren was born on 5 December 1972 in Spånga, a district of Stockholm, Sweden.[10] He is the son of Swedish film producer Bertil Sandgren, whose work in the industry provided an early environment connected to filmmaking.[11] Sandgren grew up in Stockholm, surrounded by the influences of Scandinavian culture, including its emphasis on design and visual storytelling. As a child, he was drawn to cinema, often watching James Bond films in theaters during his teenage years, which inspired him to take up free diving and scuba diving as hobbies.[3][12] This fascination with film led Sandgren, alongside friends, to experiment with making short action and romance films using Super 8 cameras during his adolescence, marking the beginning of his engagement with visual arts.[12] These formative experiences in Stockholm laid the groundwork for his later pursuits in graphic design and film studies.[3]Education
Sandgren pursued his initial formal training in the visual arts at the Berghs School of Communication in Stockholm, where he studied graphic design and illustration.[3] This program equipped him with foundational skills in composition and visual aesthetics, aligning with his early ambition to become an illustrator.[13] Following his studies at Berghs, Sandgren enrolled at the Stockholm Film School, a prominent institution for filmmaking education in Sweden, where he honed his technical expertise in cinematography and narrative filmmaking.[12][14] As an alumnus, he credits this training with bridging his artistic background to practical on-set work, initially as a camera assistant.[3] These educational experiences collectively shaped Sandgren's initial approach to visual storytelling by integrating graphic design principles—such as color theory and framing—with the dynamic elements of film production, fostering a style that emphasizes emotional depth through deliberate imagery.[13][12]Career
Early career in Sweden
Sandgren's entry into the professional film industry came after completing his studies at the Stockholm Film School, where he transitioned from camera assistant roles in the late 1990s to full cinematographer responsibilities starting in 1999. His initial work focused on smaller Swedish productions, allowing him to develop his craft in a collaborative, resource-conscious environment typical of the Scandinavian film sector. Early assignments included short films and entry-level features, such as Födelsedagen (1999) and Järngänget (2000), which provided foundational experience in narrative visuals on tight schedules.[3][2] A pivotal moment arrived with his debut feature, the fantasy-thriller Storm (2005), directed by Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein. This visually inventive project, blending psychological depth with action elements, showcased Sandgren's emerging style through dynamic camera work and atmospheric lighting, shot primarily in Sweden using practical locations and modest production setups. The collaboration with Mårlind and Stein marked the start of key partnerships in the Swedish industry, emphasizing Sandgren's ability to elevate genre storytelling within budget constraints.[15][16][17] He followed this with the crime thriller Easy Money (Snabba Cash, 2010), directed by Daniel Espinosa, where he captured the gritty underworld of Stockholm through handheld techniques and natural light, demonstrating growth in handling tense, location-based shoots with limited resources. These projects highlighted his adaptability in the Swedish scene, where low budgets often necessitated creative problem-solving and experimentation with available equipment to achieve polished results.[18][19]Breakthrough in Hollywood
After establishing a foundation in Swedish cinema, Linus Sandgren relocated to Los Angeles in 2001, where he built his reputation through commercials, earning four Cannes Lions awards while working with directors such as John Hillcoat and Tom Hooper.[3] His entry into Hollywood features came in 2012 with Gus Van Sant's Promised Land, shot in Super 35mm anamorphic format, which opened doors to larger-scale projects.[2] Sandgren's breakthrough came with the 2013 crime comedy American Hustle, directed by David O. Russell, marking his first major U.S. feature credit.[3][20] In American Hustle, Sandgren navigated production challenges by employing extensive Steadicam work and scattering light sources across sets to maintain intimacy with the actors amid the film's chaotic narrative, collaborating closely with production designer Judy Becker to evoke the 1970s era.[20][21] Critics praised his dynamic visuals for their rich vividness and sharp widescreen compositions that captured the story's swirling energy and period authenticity.[22][23][24] Sandgren's momentum continued with The Hundred-Foot Journey (2014), directed by Lasse Hallström, a cultural dramedy filmed partly on location in southern France, where he addressed challenges in contrasting the vibrant aesthetics of Indian and French culinary worlds while coordinating practical effects for restaurant interiors.[25][26] The film's visuals received acclaim for their lush, mouthwatering depictions of food preparation, enhancing the story's themes of cultural fusion and sensory appeal.[27][28][29] Reuniting with Russell for the biopic Joy (2015), Sandgren tackled the demands of portraying inventor Joy Mangano's rags-to-riches arc by using fluid, energetic camera movements to convey invention and resilience, while balancing ordinary domestic settings with heightened dramatic moments.[30][31] Reviewers lauded his cinematography for infusing the film with bold vibrancy and a sense of propulsion that mirrored the protagonist's determination.[32][33] These successive collaborations solidified Sandgren's reputation in American cinema, paving the way for his initial partnership with director Damien Chazelle on the musical La La Land (2016), which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Cinematography and further elevated his international profile.[2][34]Ongoing collaborations and recent projects
Following his breakthrough with La La Land, Sandgren has maintained a long-term collaboration with director Damien Chazelle, serving as cinematographer on three consecutive feature films that showcase evolving visual storytelling in ambitious narratives. Their partnership began with the vibrant, dance-filled musical La La Land (2016), continued with the intimate, documentary-style lunar mission drama First Man (2018), and culminated in the exuberant, chaotic Hollywood epic Babylon (2022), where Sandgren pushed the boundaries of 35mm film stocks to capture the film's opulent, period-spanning excess. This trilogy highlights Sandgren's adaptability in blending practical effects, natural lighting, and dynamic camera movement to support Chazelle's rhythmic, emotionally driven visions.[35][36] Sandgren has also forged key partnerships with other prominent directors on high-stakes productions, expanding his portfolio into satire, action, and psychological thriller genres. For Adam McKay's satirical comedy Don't Look Up (2021), he employed Kodak 35mm film to lend a textured, urgent realism to the film's apocalyptic ensemble cast and rapid-fire media sequences, emphasizing scale through wide anamorphic lenses that amplified the story's global stakes. In Cary Joji Fukunaga's No Time to Die (2021), Sandgren navigated the largest production of his career to date, shooting on 35mm anamorphic to evoke the romantic soul of the James Bond franchise while incorporating IMAX-certified sequences for heightened action in exotic locales like Italy and Jamaica, where practical stunts and natural environments drove innovative framing for epic scope.[37][38][39] More recently, Sandgren teamed with writer-director Emerald Fennell for the gothic thriller Saltburn (2023), where he crafted a fluid, oil-painting-like aesthetic on Kodak 35mm film, using academy-ratio framing and distorted lenses to mirror the film's themes of obsession and class intrusion within the sprawling English estate settings. This project underscored his growing role in intimate yet visually lavish stories, blending classical influences with modern provocation to heighten psychological tension.[40][41][42] In July 2025, Sandgren was announced as the cinematographer for Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Part Three (working title Dune: Messiah), replacing Greig Fraser due to the latter's commitments on other projects. Production began in summer 2025 and wrapped in November 2025, with the film scheduled for a 2026 release. This marks his entry into the franchise's visually groundbreaking sci-fi universe, emphasizing a shift to 35mm film stock—including IMAX sequences—for enhanced texture and immersion in the desert epic's vast, otherworldly landscapes. The collaboration reflects Sandgren's evolution toward even larger-scale innovations, leveraging his expertise in film-based cinematography to build on the series' legacy of technical ambition while introducing a fresh stylistic layer to its high-impact action and philosophical depth.[43][44][45][46]Cinematic style and techniques
Influences and philosophy
Sandgren's background in graphic design profoundly shaped his visual sensibility, emphasizing composition and color theory as foundational elements in his cinematographic approach. Having studied graphic design and illustration at Berghs School of Communication in Stockholm, he transitioned to film with a designer's eye for balancing form and narrative intent.[3] His influences draw from classic Hollywood aesthetics, including Technicolor processes and CinemaScope framing, which inspire his use of vibrant palettes to heighten emotional resonance. Sandgren has cited admiration for filmmakers like Roger Deakins, whose mastery of light and shadow informs his own pursuit of images that serve the story's emotional core rather than mere prettiness. Among Swedish influences, he references artists like Anders Zorn for their dramatic handling of light on faces, blending painterly techniques with cinematic realism.[26][47][48] Philosophically, Sandgren views cinematography as a tool for evoking emotions akin to music, prioritizing the capture of feeling over literal documentation of events. He advocates blending realism with stylization to create immersive worlds, using lighting and composition to underscore character arcs—such as contrasting hard, dramatic spots with soft sources to reflect internal conflicts. This approach stems from his belief that colors and textures can romanticize or ground scenes, making the abstract tangible.[15][26][49] At its heart, Sandgren sees cinematography as a collaborative endeavor, integral to storytelling through close partnership with directors and crews. In interviews, he describes it as leadership that aligns visual elements with the script's emotional truth, fostering teamwork to achieve in-camera authenticity over post-production fixes. "Read the script, listen to the director, make sure you two ground your visual storytelling in the script," he advises, underscoring his commitment to shared vision.[26][50]Notable techniques in key films
In La La Land (2016), Linus Sandgren employed Panavision C Series anamorphic prime lenses, particularly a customized 40mm 2x anamorphic with a close focus of 19 inches, to capture the film's expansive CinemaScope 2.55:1 frame while enabling fluid transitions from intimate close-ups to wide dance sequences.[51] This choice contributed to the dreamlike quality of musical numbers by producing distinctive horizontal lens flares and a heightened sense of depth, evoking classic Hollywood musicals while integrating modern vibrancy.[51] Complementing these optics, Sandgren prioritized practical effects over digital compositing, using backdrops, on-set colored lighting such as Fern Green LEDs and pink fluorescents, and single-take choreographed shots with cranes and Steadicam to infuse sequences like the hillside duet with organic surrealism and rhythmic immersion.[51][52] For First Man (2018), Sandgren adopted a documentary-style approach through nearly entirely handheld camerawork, utilizing Super 16mm cameras like the Aaton Xtera and Arri 416 paired with Canon zooms and Kowa primes to convey raw emotional intimacy and claustrophobic tension in astronaut family scenes and early test flights.[53] This technique, inspired by cinéma vérité aesthetics, emphasized gritty realism and immediacy, with Kodak Vision3 stocks pushed or pulled to vary grain and contrast for heightened immersion in personal struggles.[53] To contrast these intimate moments with epic scale, Sandgren incorporated IMAX filming using 15-perf 65mm cameras with rehoused Hasselblad/Zeiss primes for the moon landing sequence, delivering a 1.43:1 aspect ratio that enveloped viewers in the surreal vastness of space while seamlessly blending with 35mm footage for a cohesive, visceral narrative flow.[53] In Babylon (2022), Sandgren utilized digital intermediates at Company 3, supervised by colorist Matt Wallach, to scan and refine the film's Kodak negative, preserving its raw texture while adjusting contrast and levels post-assembly to maintain fidelity to the era's chaotic Hollywood energy.[48] Color grading enhanced period authenticity through push-processed stocks like Vision3 50D overexposed by 3-4 stops for a pale, sun-bleached desert palette in exteriors, and complex, non-repetitive hues—purples, blues, reds, and yellows—for interiors that captured the gritty, multifaceted skin tones and environments of 1920s-1930s Tinseltown without digital uniformity.[48] Similarly, for No Time to Die (2021), the digital intermediate grade at EFilm with Wallach developed a rich, location-specific palette to underscore action dynamics, employing smooth tonal transitions in IMAX sequences like the Matera chase to amplify visceral tension through heightened contrast and saturation.[39] This process also ensured authenticity in diverse settings, such as warm, romantic ambers for Jamaica and harsh neon fluorescents for Cuba, evoking cultural and emotional depth across the film's global scope.[39] In Saltburn (2023), Sandgren shot on Super 35mm using Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL2 cameras with Panavision Primo spherical lenses to achieve sharp contrast, rich depth, and distinctive red circle flares, enhancing the film's gothic atmosphere.[54] The 1.33:1 aspect ratio created a dollhouse-like, portrait framing that suited the estate's square rooms and referenced art history, while voyeuristic angles—such as peeping through doors and windows—and long tableau shots, like a 3.5-minute grave scene, heightened psychological tension.[54] Lighting emphasized practical sources, including candlelight for dinner scenes underexposed by 2/3 stop to deepen shadows, firelight for intimate moments, and PAR cans for sensual sequences, with Kodak Vision3 stocks (50D, 250D, 200T, 500T) preserving grain and nuanced warm/cool contrasts in color grading.[54]Filmography
Feature films
Sandgren's feature film cinematography credits, presented in chronological order by release year, are as follows:- 2005: Storm, directed by Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein.[12]
- 2010: Easy Money (Snabba cash), directed by Daniel Espinosa.[55]
- 2010: 6 Souls (also known as Shelter), directed by Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein.[56]
- 2011: The Crown Jewels (Kronjuvelerna), directed by Ella Lemhagen.[55]
- 2012: Promised Land, directed by Gus Van Sant.[57]
- 2012: Easy Money II: Hard to Kill (Snabba cash II), directed by Babak Najafi.[55]
- 2013: The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (Hundraåringen som klev ut genom fönstret och försvann), directed by Felix Herngren.[55]
- 2013: American Hustle, directed by David O. Russell.[2]
- 2014: The Hundred-Foot Journey, directed by Lasse Hallström.[15]
- 2015: Joy, directed by David O. Russell.[2]
- 2016: La La Land, directed by Damien Chazelle.[2]
- 2017: Battle of the Sexes, directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.[55]
- 2018: First Man, directed by Damien Chazelle.[2]
- 2018: The Nutcracker and the Four Realms, directed by Lasse Hallström and Joe Johnston.[58]
- 2021: Don't Look Up, directed by Adam McKay.[55]
- 2021: No Time to Die, directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga.[2]
- 2022: Babylon, directed by Damien Chazelle.[2]
- 2023: Saltburn, directed by Emerald Fennell.[2]