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Everything posted by fuzzynormal
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I'll contend that regardless of what editing system you want to use. FCP, Premiere, iMovie, AVID, Sony, Media100, an iPad app, an old Video Toaster, Moviola, or a pair of scissors with some glue; where you make the edits is more important than how you do it. Which is why as long as you have something that allows you to splice, you can effectively edit. To assume otherwise is a mistake I think. It's akin to the enthusiast buying a $8K Leica and saying that he's a serious photographer simply because he has good gear. It doesn't really work that way. Yes, good gear elevates the skill. It certainly may motivate it as well. However, it doesn't really create it. That needs to come from the film creator. --And Fincher could make the same movies he makes on any gear. In fact, I'd argue his movies might even be better if he parsed back the advanced technology he uses sometimes. Digital bells and whistles are nice for a lot of stuff, no question, but the fundamentals are constant. If you know how to manipulate the basics to your advantage as a storyteller, that's the key. Asserting this sort of stuff on a tech-centric blog seems like spitting in the wind sometimes, but that's just my POV.
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Find local pros who's work you admire and hire them for shooting and editing your next job. You just assist, watch, and ask questions. And/or, request they mentor you. It's cheaper than film school and its a fast track to practical learning.
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There's not much less impressive than bragging about what editing system is used to cut a motion picture. It's editing, for goodness sake. Where you splice the cuts matter, not the razor that does it.
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Think maybe it's a light leak through the body of the camera somehow?
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This is an insight that's sometimes overlooked by gear nerds. We want everything to be latest and greatest and cheap to boot, yet to sustain a brand in a broad market sometimes corporate strategies just lead companies a different direction. I'd argue it's all pretty dang good these days anyway. It's getting to the point where IQ in the consumer space is very comparable across the board. A company has to navigate that reality. Unfortunately for us lower-end folks, a corporate strategy is not always about leapfrogging the competition with imaging specs in the newer models. It's understandable to me why Canon wants to delineate it's consumer and pro divisions. We wish it wasn't so, and that the most aggressively innovative products always won the day, but that's just not reality. Even still, we're getting loads of great products these past few years.
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Nikon D810 video quality leapfrogs Canon 5D Mark III
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Yeah, I'll need some pretty extensive therapy and may convert my religious affiliation to a Himalayan Buddhist sect in order to cope, but with a little luck I think I'll pull through. Either that or I'll just curl up into a fetal position with my old 5D and coo gently to it as I fall asleep. Eh, perhaps both. -
Nikon D810 video quality leapfrogs Canon 5D Mark III
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Okay Quirky, you win the know-more-than-the-other-random-guy-on-the-internet-award. Be sure to hang that above the mantle. -
Nikon D810 video quality leapfrogs Canon 5D Mark III
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
I hereby qualify my statement. "Canon's CAMERA, although not specifically designed to do so, was a catalyst that encouraged a new revolutionary wave of indy filmmaking." May my transgressions be forgiven! My broad original statement failed to parse enough detail! The wrath of the pedantic is upon me. That said, the new Nikon camera looks well heeled enough for folks (that actually LIKE the DSLR motion picture aesthetic, and want an awesome stills camera too) to give it some thought. For what it's worth, I had a D90, and it was awful for video. -
Nikon D810 video quality leapfrogs Canon 5D Mark III
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
It may seem weird and ironic that the brand which launched the EOS filmmaking Revolution is the same that doesn't seem to worry about it all, but at this point, who really cares? So many good alternative options, let them persue their strategy and we'll just go elsewhere. Seems like there's plenty of room for everyone. -
I always wonder if humanity could handle it. Too boring. On the other hand, a camera with exploding rainbows would be awesome.
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Panasonic LX100 first impressions review and 4K footage
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Same sensor as the gx7, yet my gx7 ain't doin no 4k. Man, I need to hire a coder to take care of that... That camera needs a hack. -
SLR Magic 2x Anamorphic - my footage and first impressions
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
I really like the anamorphic look, but I kind of disagree that it's one of the technical aesthetics that define "cinematic." Encouraging lens development though! Nice that it can be done on a budget if you really want it. -
Yeah, I like the idea that it'll hold resell value a bit more on the backend. That, with the more realistic initial retail price, makes it tempting.
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Man, I'd love to shoot this for a particular client I have. Thing is, they demand 60fps video. Still waiting for it on 4K...otherwise, this would be the ideal product for their jobs.
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Big news - Samsung NX1 with 4K, 24p and **H.265 HVEC codec**
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Fun stuff. Nothing like a good competitive kick in the pants for Canikon. -
Olympus 'beta tested' 4K firmware for E-M1, developing cine lenses
fuzzynormal replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Sweet. I can truly use this in an upcoming documentary. Refurb M1's can be had for 1k. Used, even less. Not a bad deal. Still has to offer the right frame rate though. We'll see. -
It's like the infamous explanation of pornography from a 20th century U.S. Supreme Court Judge, "(It's) hard to define, but I know it when I see it." When it comes to good cinematography, I say it's an overall quality that is a sum of all it's parts. It doesn't have to have DOF or great lighting, but if it artistically defines and supports the story, then it's happening.
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On iOS Safari, not seeing a link to the forum from the front page.
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You can experiment with thousands of ways to accompish the exporting, but I'm a big fan of K.I.S.S.. You want 25p? Keep your entire workflow in 25p 'til your final cut is created and standing alone as an individual .mov file, that way you know what you got is what you want as you want it. Once that's done, then take the next step(s).
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Neither am I, but software being weird and having so many parameters that may or may not be working appropriately, tick boxed here or not ticked boxed there... the extra step of assurance keeps the process under control. Works for me anyway. Never been a fan of Compressor myself.
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A good start is to monitor your edit playback on your own broadcast "TV" display not your computer monitor. (with the proper playback capabilities) The most likely scenario is that you inadvertently built the edit with a higher frame rate than intended and then delivered it that way. Computer monitors are progressive, so you wouldn't see an accurate representation of an interlaced frame rate. And even though you didn't shoot interlaced, since it was a high frame rate, that higher frame rate was maintained somehow throughout your post production/exporting. I'd assert this issue has nothing whatsoever to do with the camera. It's a post-production mistake. Something wasn't set up correctly in your workflow. My experience for Japan and NorthAmerican TV spots: (ntsc) I build my progressive edits/videos and then export the final clip as a self-contained stand-alone .mov file. This way I'm assured I have a true progressive .mov file at the 24p fps aesthetic I want. Then I place it on a timeline/sequence that's 59.94i and re-export under those particular settings. I'm curious though, what was the intent of shooting 96? Were you converting some of your shots into slow-mo?
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To confuse matters even more, some display/tv sets these days will actually interpolate "missing" frames in real time with their internal electronics, making slower frame rate "film" material appear more like "video." ...and don't even bother trying to explain aspect ratios to casual consumers or get them to correctly display an image as intended... It's all a friggin' mess these days.
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If you want to portray a character struggling to move forward, trapped, not making progress, stressed that they're not going to get where they need to be in time, etc. ...even though he/she is moving toward the lens, a long lens shot is a good way to show that metaphorically. "The Graduate" comes to mind. The character runs toward the lens but never seems to get closer. Of course, this cinematic trope is used as a joke in "The Holy Grail."