As an award winning cinematographer, William Molina has over thirty years of experience behind the camera, including all aspects of live action, time lapse, green screen, special effects, 24P digital video, HD and 65mm large format cinematography. His credits range from commercials and episodic television to feature films.

In 1993, William received a National Academy of Television Art and Sciences Emmy nomination, Best Cinematography for his work on the Discovery special “Oceans of Air”.

In 1996 and 1999, The International Cinematographer’s Guild Film Showcase honored William's work on "Le Baton" and "Reducing Stanley" respectively with Artistic Achievement in Cinematography.

Born and raised in Mexico City, William is fully bilingual in English and Spanish. He attended film school at Trinity University and graduated in 1984 with a Bachelor of Arts in Film/Television and a minor in Theater Arts.

His first 16mm student film, “Revelation” was selected as a Mountain and Southern Regional Finalist in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences 1981 Student Film Awards and was subsequently awarded the University Film and Video Grant for "The Diverse Reflection".

Over the years, William has worked on numerous projects covering all aspects of film and video production. In 1987, William moved to Los Angeles and has worked steadily as a filmmaker on several independent low budget feature films and episodic television shows. Most recently, William received a Gold Remi Award at the 2010 Worldfest Houston International Film Festival for his political feature documentary "Truth Be Tolled".

Feature film credits include, “Where Truth Lies” (Molina’s moody cinematography is pic’s strongest tech credit - Variety Weekly Film Review), “Dusting Cliff Seven”, "Reversal" (A very well crafted film. It has the look and feel of a major budget studio release - Dove Foundation) and the award-winning documentary series "Truth Be Tolled".

Television credits include NBC’s series “The Pretender”, the original Showtime series "My First Time", and The History Channel's "Decoding the Past: Mayan Doomsday Prophecy". The stunning images photographed by William for the inspirational short film "Chichén Itzá" received a Gold Remi Award for Best Cinematography at the 2007 Worldfest Houston International Film Festival.

"Two Ton Tuesday Live" also received a Gold Remi Award (stage/concert performance) at the 2006 Worldfest Houston International Film Festival.

William is a member of the International Cinematographer's Guild Local 600 and the Society of Camera Operators (SOC).