Real camera test!
Hobbit
Prometheus
Girl with the Dragon Tatoo
The Social Network
Etc.
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Real camera test!
Hobbit
Prometheus
Girl with the Dragon Tatoo
The Social Network
Etc.
Shashbugu, you must be living in a different reality then I am. In my world (high end commercials, features) you don't get to dictate the post workflow most of the time. Yes, native R3D editing is a lovely thing, but if the client has chosen a post house that doesn't use that workflow, then you have to go along with what they are doing. So for you to dismiss FCP the way you did, is a bit questionable at this moment because many places are still using it, and still demand to have ProRes delivered to them. Will that change in the future, probably. I see a lot of people speaking in terms of self-contained pipelines, which is fine if the projects you work on allow for you to have full control. But many of us are hired by clients as a cog in the wheel and we need to adapt and make things work, whether we think it's the ideal way or not. Personally, I feel I can make RED workflow fairly easy for clients but it still doesn't mean they will go that route. There are going to be other factors that go into their decisions.
So please, try to keep an open mind about this when firing back at people who have to contend with these issues every day. Just because you know the RIGHT way to do something, doesn't mean that's going to be the way it's done out in the real world.
This might be a good time to do a workflow test also... ?
We have already had a few ask for more time (a delay in the date) so that some new cameras could be included in the test.
Jim
Steve... You are a very wise man! :)
The "all raw" idea, is all of a sudden "not so good" in larger production with specialist functions. Actually offline/online and specificc delivveries forrrrr specifiic needs is a huuuuuuge timesaver and problemsolver.
People seem sometimes to think that all RED productions are performed by one-man-bands or RED-only houses.
I'd guess that statistically in "total minutes of RED mral pproduced" that is actually not the case.
And in mixed environments, you'll have to find good workflows for different kind of scenarios and productions. From direct to delivery (why a simple prores transcode in RCX), to a full DI/VFX pipeline.
Niceeeee ing is that RED can fullfill both those needs.
Bad thing is when people start to confuse the pipelines... :)
No, he's saying you can take R3D media straight from the camera and go direct to edit. All too often people blame workflow hang-ups on RED when they really should be looking at the other tools in their pipeline. They should be questioning the tools that are holding them back from working with RED the way they want.
Several NLE systems, even systems like EDIUS that are targeted at fast turn-around broadcast editing, allow you to drop R3D files right into your bin or directly onto your timeline and edit just as if they were DV, ProRes, etc.. We have been able to connect RED media directly to a PC or Mac and drag the R3D clips straight from the media onto the timeline in Premiere and edit, without transcoding, copying etc.. for over 3 years now. Same within Sony Vegas Pro software. And yes, R3D files do require a lot more CPU horsepower -- mostly due to the wavelet decode. But before you pass judgement and complain about that aspect, just ask yourself this. How well do your systems handle 4K ProRes 4444 or 4K X264, etc.. ???
I've got two workstations here that can play back 5K EPIC footage at 1/2 res full quality in real-time without stressing and without a RED Rocket. One of them I built for about $3K. People who are finding R3D workflow to be difficult or too slow or <insert lame excuse here> are just doing it wrong. Period. Of course, there are also the types who want it to be too difficult and too slow because they're still trying to recoup other investments...
Apple is *finally* bringing support for R3D (and several other formats) to FCPX later this year. As for FCP7, it's EOL and lacks support for a lot of newer formats, not just R3D. Not to mention that it's stone-dead in so many other ways. 32bit, single-threaded, no GPU acceleration... I understand that a lot of people like it and they're comfortable there (I really like FCP as well), but all things come to an end and it's time to move on. ARRI and many of the companies making small ProRes recorders have made a killing by targeting the "you can have my FCP when you pry it from my cold, dead fingers" crowd by offering the native ProRes solution. But like all things, it too will come to an end and has all but run it's course. The whole external recorder thing is so 2010 and best left for DSLR territory (and the Canon C500, hehe). Now that many of these NLE softwares also support ARRI RAW natively, ARRI is beginning to feel pressure from those wanting a more reasonable (affordable and on-board) RAW recording solution.
To get this thread back on-track, I think this is where RED needs to place more focus in these camera tests. There is a shit ton of misinformation, FUD and straight-up lies that continue to circulate within the industry when it comes to R3D post workflow. Few people seem to question RED's image quality these days and the proof can be found all over the place from the big screen to local broadcast, RED is all over the place. It's time to start educating people on how quick and painless working with R3Ds can actually be. With native support for 4K/5K in systems like Adobe CS, we can deliver high quality 1080p/2K, or 4K or whatever, working direct from the RAW R3D files. No transcoding. No conform. Just edit, color finish.
If the attractive new camera (which has been out for years at this point) doesn't drop right into your workflow without jumping through hoops, perhaps it's not the camera's fault? I think we're more than past the stage of where people need to analyze their workflows and have the honesty to say, "hmmm... I guess my workflow is crap." Or at least consider the possibility that it's "dated".
End to end solutions are always good. Here's another idea Jim. Stream the events on the web. I know that image quality won't translate to the web but a lot f other parts of the discussion might. Especially the workflow side of things. I thought what was done at Reduser event at NAB was great to have streaming. You can get a lot more people involved this way. In fact, I would do these types of things on a regular basis. For example, you could do a RED-Adobe workflow session. A RED-Avid session, etc.
I would very much like to see the black magic cinema camera included, hopefully they take part!
Jim, throwing out another idea. This again flies in the face of the camera testing competition, and I apologize if these suggestions are more irritating than helpful. I know Reducation is a commercial venture, so I have no idea if this could work for your bottom line but I'll throw it out there anyway. What about building a RED Channel, a web portal for videos that cover a lot of ground on getting the most out of the cameras, various post workflows, troubleshooting, etc. With the right PR, I think this could really go a long way to reaching the masses, allowing many people to see how this whole system works, and to have facts rather than hearsay.
You could have internal RED experts talking about exposure, how to use the in-camera tools, etc.
You could have guest DPs, like Jeff Cronenweth explain how they shoot with RED.
You could have specific workflow topics such as using a native workflow with RED.
How to grade with RED footage in Resolve.
How to blackshade a camera.
RED for producers workshop.
The possibilities are endless.
Again, this may not make any sense based on the business model, so I can't speak to that. Just throwing this out there, because I know quite a few people who would probably tune in. In my mind the best way to counter myths is to simply provide the correct information and make it widely available.
Just thinking out loud here. :-)
Jim,
Its unfair to ask every camera manufacturer to come to your place to do camera test with whatever you said about and not everyone will participate for one simple reason being they are your direct competitor.
It will be better you participate in Zacuto's 'The Great Camera Shootout' as mentioned by Steve Weiss about how many email he send you for your agreed terms but no response. Never late you can still do it outside asking people like Vincent Laforte or Philip Bloom without Red sponsoring the event and It eventually turns out not to tell who is better rather which is better for conditions based on.
So it would be better if someone do it independently and you too can represent for Epic rather than doing in Red Studio, which will be of now use. Else you can ask ASC to do the test.
This is not an advise rather level playing field.
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