About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: James Miller, Clive Painter, Mike Southon, Erwin Hillier, Oswald Morris, Geoffrey Unsworth, Birt Acres, Chris Menges, Freddie Young, Douglas Slocombe, Peter Suschitzky, Shaun Troke, Paul Bryers, Guy Green, Gilbert Taylor, David Herrington, Giles Nuttgens, David Eggby, Charles Rosher, Robin Jacob, Peter MacDonald, James Kenyon, A. A. Englander, Dick Pope, Paul Mayersberg, Simon J. Smith, Anthony Dod Mantle, David Kerr, Christopher Challis, Billy Williams, Peter Newbrook, Fred LeRoy Granville, Jack Hildyard, Shona Auerbach, Robert S. Baker, Denys Coop, Davide Cinzi, Ian Wilson, Julian Gilbey, Robert Krasker, David Tattersall, Arthur Ibbetson, Roman Osin, British Society of Cinematographers, Wilkie Cooper, Ernest Palmer, Roy Kellino, Alex Thomson, Ernest Steward, Sam Mitchell, Roger Pratt, Harry Waxman, John Read, Michael Reed, Arthur Grant, Paul Elliott, Reginald Wyer, Desmond Dickinson, Ronnie Taylor, Sean Bobbitt, Geoffrey Faithfull, Dennis Lewiston, Cyril J. Knowles, Hugh Miles. Excerpt: James Henry Dominic Miller (18 December 1968 - 2 May 2003) was a Welsh cameraman, producer, and director, and recipient of numerous awards, including five Emmy Awards. He often worked with Saira Shah with whom he founded and operated an independent production company called Frostbite Productions in 2001. He was killed by a single shot fired by a soldier from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on 2 May 2003 while filming a documentary in Rafah. The soldier who shot him was identified in the press as Captain Hib al-Heib, a Bedouin Arab in the IDF. The Israeli Military Police investigation into Miller's death closed on 9 March 2005 with an announcement that the soldier suspected of firing the shot would not be indicted as they could not establish that his shot was responsible, though he would be disciplined for violating the rules of...