David Russell Boyd, A.S.C. is an American cinematographer and director of television and film known for his role as director of photography for the Fox television series Firefly and the AMC series The Walking Dead.[1] He also worked as cinematographer on the first three episodes of HBO's Deadwood. On the NBC television series Friday Night Lights[2] he served as director of photography on 18 of 22 episodes in the first season and moved up to direct two more. He also directed the film Home Run, which was released in 2013.
Early life
Boyd was born in Cripple Creek, Colorado, to a military father, and spent his early childhood in Paris, France. He was inspired to become a cinematographer after stumbling onto the set of Is Paris Burning?, where he was spontaneously recruited by the crew to drag cables for camera and lighting equipment.[3] While attending the University of California, San Diego as physics major, he took an elective film-watching class called "Thursday Night at the Movies." The class was taught by Jean-Luc Garande, a veteran of the French New Wave and colleague of Jean-Luc Godard. Garande inspired Boyd to drop his physics major and attend the UCLA Film School to become a cinematographer and director.[4]
Career
Television
For the first ten years of his career, Boyd worked primarily as a documentary cameraman and camera operator. His big break came when he met actor-turned-director Charles Haid, who hired him as DP on the television seriesBuddy Faro. Boyd shot nine episodes between 1998 and 2000, and subsequently served as DP on the series Big Apple and the Syfy miniseries Firestarter: Rekindled.
Boyd served as director of photography on all 14 episodes of the cult series Firefly, imbuing the science fiction property with a Western-inspired aesthetic.[5][6] Boyd got the job after quoting a line from The Searchers during an interview with creator Joss Whedon.[7] Whedon and Boyd developed a look for the series inspired by Golden Age Western films and the 1981 film Outland.[8] Boyd worked to incorporate lighting into the show's recurring sets,[9] much like Gilbert Taylor's work on Star Wars twenty years prior.[10] The series' interiors was shot almost entirely utilizing two handheld cameras on 35mm film, using wide-angle lens and wide focal lengths to create a sense of claustrophobia and confinement within the ship's interior.[11] Boyd's work on the series has become some of the most well-known and widely acclaimed of his career.[12]
^Gingold, Michael (August 2, 2017). "Barbara Crampton Talks PUPPET MASTER: THE LITTLEST REICH". Birth.Movies.Death. Archived from the original on September 7, 2017. Retrieved September 19, 2017. Barbara Crampton: "Well, my role in [Puppet Master] was a cameo; I was there for one day. I did it with my then-husband David Boyd, who played my boyfriend and is a director now. He was the 1st camera assistant on Re-Animator and From Beyond, and we got together on From Beyond".