Nick Morrison
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I've been meaning to post some compelling "notes" I've been jotting down from recent issues of American Cinematographer. Here goes:
ON THE EPIC BEING MUCH CLEANER THAN FILM - From The Amazing Spiderman
Let that sink in for a second. The Epic was SO CLEAN they had to completely RE-RENDER all the effects to match. Whereas before, film was so textured they would DIRTY UP the FX to match! So a complete 180 in terms of noise when using EPIC.
ON THE CONTINUED USE OF "STILLS" LENSES ON MAJOR MOTION PICTURES - From The Master
So, one of The Master's main portrait lenses was a Hasselblad. Most of the 35mm footage was shot on Panavised Jena stills lenses. And we should assume (like on Dark Knight) that most of the 65mm Panavision lenses are also derived from medium format stills lenses. So...most of this acclaimed movie was shot on stills glass, in one way or other.
Obviously, getting the glass "Panavized" makes these stills optics a 1000 times easier to work with. But to all the snobs out there hating on stills glass, this is another major motion picture that should give you pause to think.
In fact, the film makers go out of their way to PRAISE how sharp the stills glass is. Even on 35mm.
My takeaway form this...if you can get great stills glass...and cinemod it properly so it works for you...you can do some sick shit with it.
ROGER DEAKINS MAY HATE RED, BUT HE CLEARLY LOVES RAW - From Skyfall
All I can say is...Mr Deakins...if you loved how good the 2.5k ArriRaw looked...imagine how good 5K Epic Raw would have been! But you are a genius so...you get a pass.
ON THE EPIC BEING MUCH CLEANER THAN FILM - From The Amazing Spiderman
"The imagery was incredibly clean, with almost no noise," says [Visual Effects Supervisor Jerome Chen]. "Normally, when CG elements are combined with filmed images, we add grain in the composite to dirty it up and help integrate it, but the Epic images presented a different set of challenges. In many cases, our CG images had more noise than the footage! Imageworks renderer, Arnold, makes beautiful, realistic images, but they can be noisy. We increased the quality settings in the software to combat the noise, but that can have an exponential effect on how long it takes to render an image."
Let that sink in for a second. The Epic was SO CLEAN they had to completely RE-RENDER all the effects to match. Whereas before, film was so textured they would DIRTY UP the FX to match! So a complete 180 in terms of noise when using EPIC.
ON THE CONTINUED USE OF "STILLS" LENSES ON MAJOR MOTION PICTURES - From The Master
Panavision optical engineer Dan Sasaki also provided them with a T2.8 300mm medium format lens built from a Hasselblad telephoto lens with Zeiss optics, which Malamaire calls "a great clos-up lens". The crew dubbed this "The Doris Lens", naming it for Quell's hometown sweetheart (played by Madisen Beaty), the subject of some of The Master's most striking portraiture.
They also decided to shoot some of the movie on 35mm spherical 1:85:1. The lenses they used for this work were inspired by one Malamaire owned. He explains, "I'm crazy about old still photography cameras, and I had a 6x6 medium format camera from the 1960's that had the sharpest lens I've ever seen: an 85mm Zeiss Jena. I brought that lens to Dan Sasaki, and he Panavised it. We used it to shoot some of the 35mm tests, and it cut really well with the 65mm material. The depth of field is different, but the sharpness is very close. Dan tracked down a whole set of 35mm Zeiss Jena lenses that Panavision had already rehoused." These lenses, called "The T2 set", became part of the show's package, which also included a Panaflex Millennium Xl and a set of Zeiss Ultra Speed MK IIs
"Cutting from 35mm to 65mm felt smoother because of the sharp Jena glass, which yields a look similar to [that of] the 65mm lenses. There is a sense that something is different, but it's a small difference. I think it's mainly in the camera work."
So, one of The Master's main portrait lenses was a Hasselblad. Most of the 35mm footage was shot on Panavised Jena stills lenses. And we should assume (like on Dark Knight) that most of the 65mm Panavision lenses are also derived from medium format stills lenses. So...most of this acclaimed movie was shot on stills glass, in one way or other.
Obviously, getting the glass "Panavized" makes these stills optics a 1000 times easier to work with. But to all the snobs out there hating on stills glass, this is another major motion picture that should give you pause to think.
In fact, the film makers go out of their way to PRAISE how sharp the stills glass is. Even on 35mm.
My takeaway form this...if you can get great stills glass...and cinemod it properly so it works for you...you can do some sick shit with it.
ROGER DEAKINS MAY HATE RED, BUT HE CLEARLY LOVES RAW - From Skyfall
The uncompressed ArriRaw format was also a new development for the Alexa since In Time. Deakins notes, "We were told Skyfall would get an Imax release, so how our images would look on that giant screen was a big consideration. I shot tests comparing Uncompressed HD, which I used on In Time, and ArriRaw, and we blew those images up and watched them on an Imax screen at Swiss Cottage. It was quite startling; both images looked pretty damned good, but the ArriRaw had a definite advantage."
All I can say is...Mr Deakins...if you loved how good the 2.5k ArriRaw looked...imagine how good 5K Epic Raw would have been! But you are a genius so...you get a pass.
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