Derek Doublin
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C500 or Gemini. Hmmmmm.
C500 or Gemini. Hmmmmm.
I'm pretty torn right now. My next camera will either be the C500 II or the Red Gemini. I've previously owned a C300 I, Red Dragon and a C200. Of those 3 cameras, I liked the image of the Red Dragon most of all, which is why I'm considering the Gemini.
That being said, the usability/durability of Canon cameras is undeniable. My original C300 I is still going. It's been all over the continent. It's been dropped, banged, soaked, etc. It's been through 110 degree deserts in Arizona and through -30 degree blizzards in Alaska and northern Minnesota. It's still going. It's been working for 8 years straight now and every button still works. No issues with it at all. It looks like shit at this point, but it's NEVER been serviced. Not once.
The C500 II ticks off so many boxes. It's got endless power on a tiny battery. It's got touch screen autofocus. It's got full frame. It's got built in XLR with a built in scratch mic. It's got a 10 stop ND. It's got dual card slots and an extra SD for backups/proxy. It's got physical buttons. And it's usable out of the box. Aside from the lack of higher frame rates, it has everything you could ever want.
The Gemini has RedRaw and ProRes. It has higher frame rates. And it has the Red image (which is a big one).
I shoot all kinds of stuff. I am sometimes thrust into editorial and doc scenarios where I have to shoot by myself on-location with minimal equipment. Other times I am shooting commercials for major brands with decent crew sizes and medium sized budgets. I can't help but think the C500 II is a better fit for the variety of shooting scenarios I work in. That being said, I really do love everything I shot with the Dragon. It just looked so filmic and beautiful out of the box (at lower iSOs). I wouldn't even be considering the Gemini right now if it weren't for my experience with the Dragon. Every time I looked at the monitor on the Dragon, I would smile. It just looked so cinematic to me.
That all being said, I think the Dragon's image looked cinematic to me due to a combination of traits (and even flaws) that I'm not so sure are present in the Gemini today. As we move closer and closer to cameras that can universally capture perfectly clean, high resolution, raw images with high bitrates and high dynamic range, the camera sensor becomes less of a factor in the equation as the playing field is leveled. I would argue that the skills and tools of the person doing the post work/color grade is becoming more important than the camera sensor. And the usability features of the camera begin to trump its image acquisition capabilities. When all the cameras out there can capture more data than our eye can visibly see, it's all in how you bend, push and work that infinite data. In which, case shouldn't you just pick the most user friendly camera out there?
Does anyone out there own a C200 and a Gemini?
And if so, how do you feel the images from those two cameras compare to each other?
C500 or Gemini. Hmmmmm.
I'm pretty torn right now. My next camera will either be the C500 II or the Red Gemini. I've previously owned a C300 I, Red Dragon and a C200. Of those 3 cameras, I liked the image of the Red Dragon most of all, which is why I'm considering the Gemini.
That being said, the usability/durability of Canon cameras is undeniable. My original C300 I is still going. It's been all over the continent. It's been dropped, banged, soaked, etc. It's been through 110 degree deserts in Arizona and through -30 degree blizzards in Alaska and northern Minnesota. It's still going. It's been working for 8 years straight now and every button still works. No issues with it at all. It looks like shit at this point, but it's NEVER been serviced. Not once.
The C500 II ticks off so many boxes. It's got endless power on a tiny battery. It's got touch screen autofocus. It's got full frame. It's got built in XLR with a built in scratch mic. It's got a 10 stop ND. It's got dual card slots and an extra SD for backups/proxy. It's got physical buttons. And it's usable out of the box. Aside from the lack of higher frame rates, it has everything you could ever want.
The Gemini has RedRaw and ProRes. It has higher frame rates. And it has the Red image (which is a big one).
I shoot all kinds of stuff. I am sometimes thrust into editorial and doc scenarios where I have to shoot by myself on-location with minimal equipment. Other times I am shooting commercials for major brands with decent crew sizes and medium sized budgets. I can't help but think the C500 II is a better fit for the variety of shooting scenarios I work in. That being said, I really do love everything I shot with the Dragon. It just looked so filmic and beautiful out of the box (at lower iSOs). I wouldn't even be considering the Gemini right now if it weren't for my experience with the Dragon. Every time I looked at the monitor on the Dragon, I would smile. It just looked so cinematic to me.
That all being said, I think the Dragon's image looked cinematic to me due to a combination of traits (and even flaws) that I'm not so sure are present in the Gemini today. As we move closer and closer to cameras that can universally capture perfectly clean, high resolution, raw images with high bitrates and high dynamic range, the camera sensor becomes less of a factor in the equation as the playing field is leveled. I would argue that the skills and tools of the person doing the post work/color grade is becoming more important than the camera sensor. And the usability features of the camera begin to trump its image acquisition capabilities. When all the cameras out there can capture more data than our eye can visibly see, it's all in how you bend, push and work that infinite data. In which, case shouldn't you just pick the most user friendly camera out there?
Does anyone out there own a C200 and a Gemini?
And if so, how do you feel the images from those two cameras compare to each other?