I would say it's the complete opposite. With the names you have mentioned, all their work sticks out for a reason (and that's because they're some of the best).
You sort of give off the impression that a cinematographer does more work than the actual director of the film does. Film is an entirely collaborative process, which you have noted, but there's much more to a director's job then getting other people to do the work for him/her. A film follows the vision of what a director wants and he needs to orchestrate and tell everybody what they need to do to go along with said vision. When it comes to angles, this is usually decided by the director. Lenses are chosen based upon what the director wants in a shot.
When it comes to an important job at being subtle, the credit for that should go to an editor. You know you have a good editor when you don't even notice the cuts.
Personally, my favorite cinematographer is John Alcott
I respectfully disagree. Cinematography is
not supposed to be noticeable. Even Wally Pfister has mentioned this, and his work
is subtle. He uses natural light as opposed to artificial light, because a scene with fancy, staged lighting would feel unnatural, and
would be noticeable.
I personally love Pfister because he's (usually) not in your face with his approach. Unless it's a scene
called for by the
story to be visually arresting. Story always comes first, and cinematography helps tell the story, and if you as a viewer are focusing more on the lighting and angles instead of what's actually happening, something is wrong.
The Prestige:
The Dark Knight:
This is my favorite scene in The Dark Knight because it's so brilliantly executed. When the Joker is holding Rachel with the knife, the camera is going
around them at a medium pace.
1. It follows the Joker by slowly creeping to our
right.
2. Then the camera moves
left. "You look nervous."
3. Then it moves to the
right and stops. "One day they carve her face."
It gives the viewer the unsettling feeling that the Joker is
all around you. You can't escape him. The trick is that
he's all around
us when it's actually
us that's moving around
him. It's an amazing piece of work.
That technique is used several times in TDK, but it's never used in Batman Begins.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFBB8Yo7yu0
[YT]bFBB8Yo7yu0[/YT]
It's used again near the beginning when Alfred and Bruce are in the Bat-Bunker right before they're on the boat with the Russian ballet.
Now, in MY opinion, I could very well be wrong, and if I'm in fact wrong, I'll totally apologize and admit defeat... but this stuff is NOT the work of Christopher Nolan - it's the work of Wally Pfister. And that's no disrespect to Nolan (I love the guy immensely), but he should thank his lucky stars that he has Wally, because it's stuff like this that made that movie so incredible.
NOTE: There seems to be a subtle theme of "circles" in TDK. Things going around and back again. There are several "returns" to previous dialogue (the scene after Rachel dies and Alfred brings food to Bruce has almost the exact dialogue as in Batman Begins when he sees Young Bruce, and it's the exact same music.) Something "full circle" is apparent several times throughout both movies.