Glen Winter

Glen Winter
Other names Glen Thomas Winter
Occupation Television director, cinematographer, producer
Years active 1994–present

Glen Winter is a Canadian television director, cinematographer, and producer.

He is well known for his work on The WB/The CW's Smallville, Arrow, The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow.

Career

Winter began his career as a filmloader on Mark Rydell's Intersection. He worked on several films as a camera operator such as; The Crow: Stairway To Heaven, MVP: Most Vertical Primate, and Air Bud: Seventh Inning Fetch. As a cinematographer his work included: Stone of Destiny, Rags, and Dead Heat.

He serves as the director of the pilot episode of CBS' Supergirl, which premiered in late 2015.[1] The series was developed by The New Normal co-creator Ali Adler, Arrow and The Flash executive producers Andrew Kreisberg and Greg Berlanti. He directs the series' second and eleventh episodes as well.

Smallville

Winter had a mainstay position on the Superman prequel series Smallville, on which he first served as second unit director of photography, and then series cinematographer. He later went on to direct 12 episodes, including "Cyborg", introducing the titular hero, "Fallout", "Crimson", "Blue", "Traveler", "Committed", "Legion", first collaboration with DC Comics' Geoff Johns and introduces the titular group of heroes from the future; "Infamous", "Idol", featuring the Wonder Twins, the first part of the TV movie "Absolute Justice", "Hostage", and "Shield", showcasing the supervillain Deadshot.[2]

Arrow, The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow

In Legends, we had a couple of complicated action sequences that we didn't have a lot of time to do. This is a part of the process that I actually really enjoy. You seemingly have something that is unshootable in the time and money, where you have to go, "Okay, how do we make this shootable and still make it dynamic?" I just break it down into variable chunks. I want to put the audience in the middle of the action. I try to think of a way to shoot each action beat within the scene so it's not necessarily always the same. I'll shoot one piece off a crane. I'll do one piece hand-to-hand. I'll do one piece off a camera car. I just see the movie in my head.

—Winter on his direction style of Legends of Tomorrow, and beyond.[3]

In spring 2012, Winter signed on to another DC Comics produced series, Arrow. After starting as series cinematographer, he segued to episode directing. His first effort was written by frequent collaborator, and DC Comics CCO, Geoff Johns. Entitled "Dead to Rights", the installment was met with fan and critical acclaim.[4] He went on to direct second season episodes "Broken Dolls", "Blind Spot", and "The Promise".[2]

He helmed Arrow's third season premiere, "The Calm".[5] He then directed the first episode of 2015, "Left Behind".[6]

Starting with the fourth season premiere, "Green Arrow", Winter was named a producer on Arrow.

He served as the director of photography on the pilot of Arrow's sister-series The Flash. He went on to direct the fourth episode, "Going Rogue", in which the supervillain Captain Cold is introduced. He next helmed the series' 8th installment, which features a crossover event with Arrow, "Flash vs. Arrow"; and the 13th "The Nuclear Man", featuring the exploration of the titular hero.[7][8][9] During the latter portion of the season, he was named as producer.

In September 2015, it was confirmed that Winter would helm the pilot for the Arrow/Flash spin-off Legends of Tomorrow. The series focuses on a band of tag-team heroes and villains made up from the Arrowverse, traveling through space and time to stop the maniacal Vandal Savage. It was later confirmed that Winter would also serve as a producer on the series. Winter said of directing the 2-part pilot episode, he was most proud of a technically challenging battle involving The Atom. "He flies out of [Martin] Stein's pocket. [The creators] write, "Atom basically comes in and shoots up the place." I'm like, "Oh, my god. How am I going to do that? What is that? What does that even look like?" I decided I didn't want to do it in a bunch of cuts. I wanted it to feel like one flowing, big piece. I shot it on the camera car. I shot it on high-res at 6k. We did it in one take."[3][10]

References

  1. Winter, Glen (February 26, 2015). "Incredibly proud and humbled to be directing the #supergirl pilot! Grateful to @GBerlanti @geoffjohns @AJKreisberg @AliAdler". Twitter. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Glen Winter". TV.com. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
  3. 1 2 Cairns, Brian (January 29, 2016). ""LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" DIRECTOR PROMISES TO "PUSH THE BOUNDARIES" OF SUPERHERO ACTION". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
  4. Busch, Jeena (February 27, 2013). "Arrow: Geoff Johns and Glen Winter on What's Coming". fan TV. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  5. Guggenheim, Marc (July 8, 2014). "One day to go before the start of production on Arrow Season 3…". Twitter. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
  6. Guggenheim, Marc (October 22, 2014). "Arrow Ep. 3x10 begins filming today. Co-written by @erikoleson.". Twitter. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  7. "Episode Title: (#104) "Going Rogue"". The Futon Critic. Retrieved October 11, 2014.
  8. Beedle, Tim (October 6, 2014). "The Flash: On the Set with Candice Patton". DC Comics.com. Retrieved October 11, 2014.
  9. Ng, Philiana (July 27, 2014). ".@GBerlanti revealed that the eighth episode, which is one of the crossovers, of #TheFlash is called "Flash vs. Arrow." #SDCC". Twitter. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  10. Guggenheim, Marc (September 9, 2015). "Legends of Tomorrow begins production today. @GBerlanti @AJKreisberg @philklemmer @Glen__Winter". Twitter. Retrieved September 10, 2015.

External links

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