Martinez went from rental house worker to film loader to camera assistant to camera
operator to cinematographer. He's covered the Olympics, NBA Championships and even
photographed President Bill Clinton while he was in the White House.
His most pivotal moment came in 2001, when he worked on Ali, the Muhammad Ali biopic starring Will Smith. The filming took him around the world,
including Mozambique. While shooting in Africa, he was taken by the poverty of the
continent, but also by the joy exuded by its people.
A few years later, his infant son passed away from heart complications. Martinez became
even more inspired to make an impact with his work. He and his family packed up and
moved to Kenya to make a TV pilot for a children's TV program inspired by Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood.
The show never got picked up as a series, but it earned him more experience in filming
independent movies and at international locales. He worked as a camera assistant for
Fast and Furious, Oblivion, Flight Plan and Spider-Man 3.
In 2016, he received the biggest break of the career -- the job of cinematographer.
The producers of the Netflix series Queen of the South promoted him from camera operator to director of photography so he could create the
looks for the show's travels to Mexico, Berlin and Malta.
As cinematographer, he is responsible for all the photography of the show, working
along with the director to translate the script for its theme, style and all things
technical.
"You're responsible for the camera, and the camera is the character," he says.
He is currently shooting National Treasure, a Disney+ series based on the movies, which will star Catherine Zeta-Jones.
With so many streaming platforms, he says Hollywood is just craving to tell more stories,
and that's opening up more possibilities.
"It's been 20 years in the process and I feel like I'm living in the moment -- the
golden age of storytelling," he says. "I worked hard to get here. It's exciting to
see what's ahead."