Peter Lyons Collister ASC
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I have been so happy with my Monstro since I tested Jarred's with Phil a long time ago. It is so smooth and I love the skin tones. I also love that I can hold a VistaVision camera in the palm of my hand.
All my testing was models on chairs and beautiful aerials and vistas. Then awhile ago I went to Paramount to shoot a scene from the upcoming Spongebob film. On stage, western saloon set.
I shot on the Sigma Cinema primes because I might buy them. What I found all of a sudden when I was shooting actors and dialogue and moving camera was that I had to adjust to the reduced Depth of Field. I was lighting to a T/4 and still I had to tell the director that I couldn't hold splits. All those decades understanding DOF with 35mm and Super 35 and we mentally get used to knowing what kind of split we can expect with a T/2.8-4 or a T/2. Now we really have to re-assess. Not that this is a bad thing but it is interesting.
Also the lack of zooms (which is fine with me) will make many TV directors go insane.
And if you are planning on shooting actors at a T/1.5 in a room then you will be figuring some stuff out. My AC here in Vancouver just wrapped a Netflix film on Alexa 65. He has some strong opinions.
Let me be clear I am excited about Large Format but it is not so simple.
Interested to hear your thoughts.
All my testing was models on chairs and beautiful aerials and vistas. Then awhile ago I went to Paramount to shoot a scene from the upcoming Spongebob film. On stage, western saloon set.
I shot on the Sigma Cinema primes because I might buy them. What I found all of a sudden when I was shooting actors and dialogue and moving camera was that I had to adjust to the reduced Depth of Field. I was lighting to a T/4 and still I had to tell the director that I couldn't hold splits. All those decades understanding DOF with 35mm and Super 35 and we mentally get used to knowing what kind of split we can expect with a T/2.8-4 or a T/2. Now we really have to re-assess. Not that this is a bad thing but it is interesting.
Also the lack of zooms (which is fine with me) will make many TV directors go insane.
And if you are planning on shooting actors at a T/1.5 in a room then you will be figuring some stuff out. My AC here in Vancouver just wrapped a Netflix film on Alexa 65. He has some strong opinions.
Let me be clear I am excited about Large Format but it is not so simple.
Interested to hear your thoughts.
