zerocool22 Posted July 29, 2017 Share Posted July 29, 2017 Hello, Has anybody here used a arriscope anamorphic lens? Do you think they are better then a iscorama imagewise? I am having problems finding any usefull information on them. Not sure what a good price would be for a single arriscope anamorphic lens. But if a iscorama beats it, I might hunt for a iscorama instead. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tony wilson Posted July 30, 2017 Share Posted July 30, 2017 arriscope are movie lens iscorama is not arriflex and zeiss where pretty crap at anamorphics for years zeiss used moller for making anamorphic projection optics arrii used a famous super talented designer from denmark jan jacobson for ultrascope system using fast zeiss optics ultrascope where designed as movie optics later arri used a couple of folks from zeiss and isco for the arriscope arri is a massive rental house and maker of millions of metal parts plus thousands of cameras they had to work faster than say leica or zeiss. a movie might be starting in 6 months 10 months sometimes 3 months so they had to cut corners because of time issues isco understand bent glass many issues where engineering related but like the todays crummy iomo systems modern rebuilds can transform everything the arri isco glass is designed movie glass vintage used on many cinema releases iscorama maybe amazing and unmatched even today in the sub 10 thousand dollar realm but is was never designed as a proper movie lens. it was used on movies like the battle of britain for crash cams and aerial work but kowa 8z was used on crash cameras on many movies in the 1980s even movies like rambo where he takes on the russians. better blowing up a kowa than a panavision,jdc or technovision 40 thousand dollar optic. iscorama was not used or improved for movie productions because the movie industry is a tight nit thing probably isco did not think to bribe the correct rabbi in hollyweird at this stage panavision dominated arriscope ultascope have expensive 1.4 or 1.7 movie optics inside which are worth money alone. you could use a proskar on a movie today it would not make it a movie lens. iscorama is such an abused term now every turd is iscorama vintage anamorphics suffer from imperfect engineering assemblies and even more so, bad strip down and reassembly over the years arri isco and zeiss the weak link will be arri engineering instead of leaving that to moller or isco arri built assembled themselves. arri camera engineering is superb but you cannot rush without losing something as i said arri had very little experience in anamorphot area even though they made test lens with zeiss isco in the 1950s always sub contract arriscope is rare ish as is ultrascope isco getting a little with all the hipsters dropping them on the floor some of the arriscope ended up in india then faded away rarely rebuilt the glass is good that is what matters. a man wanting an easy life will look for an iscorama or the cheaper options a man with spunk will grab some movie arri optics the new zeiss anamorphics are probably the bigeest leap forward in design since chretien as close to state of the art as it gets today vantage hawk are hiring out sets of fake vintage optics which is the opposite of what zeiss is doing hawk are building in the error from the past and charging serious big bucks for a rental zeiss arriscope is worth a lot more than iscorama i would think a little finger for iscorama a kidney for the arri Ian Edward Weir, zerocool22, Tito Ferradans and 2 others 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zerocool22 Posted July 30, 2017 Author Share Posted July 30, 2017 THANKS, So you would recommend me to buy the arriscope instead of an iscorama then. A 50mm arriscope at 5000€ would that be a good deal? (Its just so hard to find any reviews/pricings on those lenses). And before dropping that amount of cash, it would be good to know if it is worth it, and I can still resell it in some years without losing too much money on them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tony wilson Posted July 30, 2017 Share Posted July 30, 2017 if you have to ask the question you should get a kowa 8z or an iscorama movie optics where mede in sets the historical and filmaking value is in the set complex assemblies need old men to repair or improve just because google is shit with a lack of information means nothing. just means some hipster blogger has played with some old beat up lens and he says that it was not good. rushed past engineering bad past repair or patch up can be sorted today jan jacobson did not mess about if he was around today he would be working with christopher nolan the later arriscope used similar designs to the earlier ultrascope but with more help from zeiss and isco without testing the optic who knows what it is worth is it pl,bncr arri bayonet some russian mount does the optic have chips rainbow compression the focus helicoid may be good now for gentle landscape work but not for aggresive movie use but will never be great without a big expensive rebuild that is why the rental companies buy them up cos they can throw big money at a modern rebuild. if these things are turds why have vantage hawk spent a million dollars reverse engineering back in all the bloody past optical error the past stuff is good cos those old farts cared and did not cut costs it cost whatever it cost they tried to out do each other they where proud today it is all idea theft and trading on the past and undercutting if the optic is local test an iscorama test a kowa then go and test the 3.5 kg heavy beast arri arm flex zerocool22 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HockeyFan12 Posted July 30, 2017 Share Posted July 30, 2017 I would try out the Arriscope before buying. I think optically it shares a basic design with the Iscoramas but it lacks a lot of the "look" people want with anamorphic lenses. It's low distortion, low flare, etc. Since these lenses are about look, not performance, I would DEFINITELY try before buying. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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