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Cinemascope -- Best/Easiest process...

hueyfilms

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If I wanted to shoot for Cinescope what's the best way to do this?

Do I have to use an anamorphic lens? Or can I crop in post and still get the look, is this a stupid way of doing it?

I really love the look of Hard Candy I think it gives the film a very castor-phobic feel that works.

I'm really interested in doing this.

Thanks
 
You could do either. Crop in post looks like super 35. Anamorphic looks like anamorphic. You can read about the pros and cons on other forums or in books.
 
castor-phobic

castor |ˈkastər|
noun
a reddish-brown oily substance secreted by beavers, used in medicine and perfumes.
ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense [beaver] ): from Old French or Latin, from Greek kastōr.

...I think I'm castor-phobic too...
 
"Best-easiest" is almost up there with "best-cheapest" questions, though there is a difference...

Easiest is to use spherical (normal) lenses and crop to 2.40 -- the majority of scope releases in movie theaters are shot this way, maybe only a quarter are shot with anamorphic lenses.

In a film camera, the anamorphic format uses the full height of a 4-perf 35mm frame so are using a larger negative, which gives you less grain and more detail.

That advantage is a little less strong with a digital camera where using an anamorphic lens mainly just gives you some more vertical resolution compared to not cropping.

The main reason people use anamorphic lenses on a digital camera is to get anamorphic lens artifacts -- the squeezed-looking out-of-focus lights, the blue horizontal lens flare, the shallower focus from using longer focal lengths. Here is an example of that squeezed-look that backgrounds get in low-light with anamorphic:

apocalypse3.jpg
 
if you want it to look like Hard Candy, then crop, since that's what they did :)
 
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