HOLLYWOOD — He served as Director of Photography for Darren Aronofsky’s daring films “Requiem for a Dream,” “The Fountain,” “Noah,” “Black Swan” and, most recently, “mother!”

Now, Oscar-nominated cinematographer, Filipino-American Matthew Libatique, lenses director Bradley Cooper’s critically-acclaimed romantic drama, “A Star is Born.”

In this new take on the iconic love story, Cooper and Lady Gaga fuse their considerable talents to depict the raw and passionate tale of Jack and Ally, two artistic souls coming together, on stage and in life. Theirs is a complex journey through the beauty and the heartbreak of a relationship struggling to survive.

It was important for Cooper that “A Star is Born’s” cinematic style have a first-person perspective, with the hope of giving the audience the ability to experience the intoxicating energy of performing live before a crowd.

To achieve this sensation, Cooper and director of photography Libatique chose to film all performance sequences from the perspective of the performers: that meant the singers’ and musicians’ immediate POV and onstage interactions with each other. No wide shots of concerts from the audience perspective; the lens would live inside the performance.

Producer Bill Gerber states, “Bradley took a very specific approach with how he told the story cinematically. There are certain angles from traditional concert movies you’ll never see in this film. Instead, he and Matty put you in the middle of what it feels like to start becoming famous, what it feels like to have been famous for a long time, and what it feels like to lose that. It’s very visceral.”

Libatique has shot his fair share of music and concert videos as well as feature films.

“He’s an artist,” Cooper said of Libatique. “I got to meet him through Darren Aronofsky, who he has done many films with, and we hit it off right away. I told him we wouldn’t have a lot of days and we’d be moving fast, here’s the color palette I see, here’s a little about the opening composition, and he just got it.”

Libatique incorporated various shooting techniques, including handheld, Steadicam, long tracking shots following Jackson Maine from backstage to onstage, and so on, frequently keeping the focus extremely up close and personal on its subjects.

“Thank God for Matty and his crew, they were incredible,” Cooper emphasized. “And our camera operator, Scott Sakamoto. I found myself watching him operate, he’s like a dancer. One of the greatest of all time.”

“Black Swan” earned Matthew Libatique his first Academy Award nomination, as well as nominations from BAFTA and The American Society of Cinematographers. He was honored with both the New York Film Critics’ and Los Angeles Film Critics’ awards, as well as the Independent Spirit Award in cinematography for the same film.

Libatique has ongoing collaborations with several directors, including Spike Lee, for whom he photographed “Chi-Raq,” “Miracle at St. Anna,” “She Hate Me” and “Inside Man”; Joel Schumacher, with “Tigerland” and “Phone Booth”; and Jon Favreau, with “Iron Man,” “Iron Man 2” and “Cowboys & Aliens.”

His other feature film credits include “Venom” for Ruben Fleischer; “Straight Outta Compton” for F. Gary Gray; “Gothika” for Mathieu Kassovitz; “Everything Is Illuminated” for Live Schreiber; and “Ruby Sparks” for directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris. “A Star is Born” marks his first collaboration with director Bradley Cooper.

In Philippine cinemas starting October 10, “A Star is Born” is distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.