leonel escobar
Active member
Do you need anamorphic lenses to shoot Panavision 70mm? After watching Quentin Tarantino's The Hateful Eight the bokeh appeared to be circular rather than oval shape.
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My problem with 2-perf is that the image height is almost as tiny as Super 16mm (.373mm vs. .292mm), so grain starts to become an issue as well as image steadiness. Dirt is a much bigger issue in 16mm and 2-perf as well, and gate dirt is a much bigger problem hinging on how much of the frame you're using. I also think 35mm 3-perf cameras are easy to find in good shape, particularly for rental. I'm a much bigger fan of shooting in Super 35mm 3-perf and providing the ability to recompose in post if necessary. I also think 3-perf helps provide an easier way to transition to a 16x9 full-frame version, which is almost always required for video deliverables (in addition to the 2.40 letterbox version).In terms of how the image looks, however, cropping 3-perf or 4-perf to 2.40 doesn't look that different from shooting 2-perf.
Thanks, I get it now, the 2 perf goes through a anamorphic lens to go onto a 35 mm print. And when they did 70mm prints of 2 perf, I guess all they did was project between the smaller 2 perf spherical to the much larger 70mm(or Vista Vision prints?) print which is also spherical. To me, I like 2 perf from a retro perspective, since it really shows the grain and its almost twice as cheap as normal 35mm.2-perf Techniscope used spherical lenses. 4-perf 35mm Full Aperture is 1.33 : 1, so a frame that is half that in height is 2.66 : 1 Full Aperture -- Techniscope only used the Academy width though so the image was 2.35 : 1. It was blown-up and squeezed in an optical printer to create a 4-perf 35mm anamorphic copy for making CinemaScope prints.
David O. Russell made "The Fighter" and "American Hustle" in 2-perf.
In terms of how the image looks, however, cropping 3-perf or 4-perf to 2.40 doesn't look that different from shooting 2-perf.
Yeah, I agree. I often make the argument that I'm skeptical as to whether movies made prior to 1980 really have 4K of resolution, but I can't argue about 65mm spherical shows like Lawrence of Arabia or 2001. Those are beautiful, pin-sharp movies for any generation.It's hard to beat the elegant widescreen shape of 2.20 : 1 65mm spherical...
I think the cost savings is a distraction. In truth, you have to go through a digital intermediate pass, so bear in mind you're spending $100,000 to get a print in the end. If you only go with a digital DCP release, then it's no more costly than any camera. When you add up the real costs for a feature, I think film stock is very, very low on the list; the above-the-line expenses are far more critical.Thanks, I get it now, the 2 perf goes through a anamorphic lens to go onto a 35 mm print. And when they did 70mm prints of 2 perf, I guess all they did was project between the smaller 2 perf spherical to the much larger 70mm(or Vista Vision prints?) print which is also spherical. To me, I like 2 perf from a retro perspective, since it really shows the grain and its almost twice as cheap as normal 35mm.
Jim Cameron was frustrated by the amount of image lost in pan/scans for TV (particularly 1.33 standard-def TV), and didn't like the loss of resolution with 2.40 letterbox. Super 35 was his idea to provide more image area so every shot could be optimized for TV. The flaw with his reasoning is that many of the effects for his films -- particularly Aliens, Terminator 2, The Abyss, True Lies, Titanic, and so on -- were composed only with 2.40 in mind, so there was often no effects finished to the edge of the aperture plate. The live action shots were fine, but the other 1/3 of the movie all had to be blown-up and repositioned quite a bit.Certainly James Cameron also had an extremely influential hand in re-popularizing Super35 (pre-DI) in the late 1980s with films like The Abyss and into the 90s with Terminator 2, True Lies and Titanic… Once DI post processes took hold by the mid-2000s, negating having to deal with an optical printer taking its generational toll on the image, Super35 became quite attractive for its flexibility for multi format releases...
Going for a thick negative is a preference quite a few DPs have made over the years, particularly when they know they're going to go through a digital or VFX stage. I've always told my clients to over expose by about 1/3 to 1/2 a stop on film....I read somewhere (I might have the URL somewhere) that James Cameron liked to make sure his negatives were "rich" - I translate that to overexposed by maybe 2/3 of a stop. He preferred this to double-printing the IP (which minimised graininess but obviously cost more). This reduces sharpness a bit but also gives a cleaner image. David can probably tell us about that as well!
Now if we could just get a butterfly (split screen) with the 70MM film print on one side and a 4K DCP on the other... (using a hard mask on side by side projectors). How much of the Hateful 8's texture/feel/sense of era comes from use of film vs lens choice/production design/color palette/pacing/etc? How different would the color timing look between photochemical for release print vs DI to P3 DCP? Would be fun to set it up at Cine-Gear for people to experience with their own eyes...
Cheers - #19