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This is what you'll use your 5D for once you've gotten your hands on the Scarlet
This is what you'll use your 5D for once you've gotten your hands on the Scarlet
This is dumb.
Taking still pics with a Scarlet (or any other RED available) will never be as hi-res as a 5D.
The idea that Scarlet won't have sufficiently shallow DOF except for the most extreme circumstances has been shot down so many times in this forum, it's amazing the concern is still coming up. David Mullen has spoken up on the subject many times.
It'll have "sufficient" shallow DOF for sure, but "creative/flexible" DOF is another story. FF sensors allow you to get really wide (without distortion) AND shallow, which creates an almost surreal effect and extreme isolation. This is REALLY useful in the majority of narrative film-making. Hence the 5D's popularity and why it won't just "die off" as soon as a higher quality camera comes to take it's place. There are already many cameras that have much better video "quality" than the 5D that people don't care for because of the boring and unappealing aesthetic of the smaller-sensored format. Nothing will really take the 5D's place until it's both higher-quality and FF or larger. 2/3" is great too, but it IS less flexible in the end... You can't really argue with that.
And you're taking videos with a 5D...
It'll have "sufficient" shallow DOF for sure, but "creative/flexible" DOF is another story. FF sensors allow you to get really wide (without distortion) AND shallow, which creates an almost surreal effect and extreme isolation. This is REALLY useful in the majority of narrative film-making. Hence the 5D's popularity and why it won't just "die off" as soon as a higher quality camera comes to take it's place. There are already many cameras that have much better video "quality" than the 5D that people don't care for because of the boring and unappealing aesthetic of the smaller-sensored format. Nothing will really take the 5D's place until it's both higher-quality and FF or larger. 2/3" is great too, but it IS less flexible in the end... You can't really argue with that.
FF isn't a movie format, period. 5D is abnormal in that way...
Huh..???...ever heard of VistaVision. It's 8 perfs horizontal through the camera..not 4 perfs vertically.
Granted not used as much...but you really should see some of the obscure films that use it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VistaVision
Vertigo tech specs: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0052357/technical
The Searchers tech specs: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049730/technical
Inception tech specs: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1375666/technical
List of VistaVision films http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_VistaVision_films
FF isn't a movie format, period...
Yes. And VistaVision is hardly what I'd call a common movie format...
Without a doubt..but that is also a cost issue. You use twice as much film you double your film stock budget.
But you started out by saying it "wasn't a movie format period". Which is not true.
FF isn't a movie format, period. 5D is abnormal in that way. Now, if you want to argue the same thing but with S35 vs. 2/3" then fine...
P.S. ...and yes, I know about the upcoming Monstro family, but that is ways off still.
I apologize if it sounded like that was disregarding it altogether, but my point was to be taken as that it's unimportant in the context of general motion pictures - it's prohibitively expensive to shoot VistaVision and, as of current, to my knowledge the only alternative is a still camera, like the 5D. Meaning FF is not exactly the standard, which was what I was trying to point out - S35 is the standard.
This current obsession with uber shallow DOF is a fad. It is a technique more useful for still photography than for motion. It is not all that common in film, certainly not to the extent that you can't keep an actor's face in focus with small movements.
Something new with a shallow depth of field ?
Thats kind hard nowadays, you have to look first at youtube to make sure you are doing something new cause everything now has a shallow depth of field. Focus ? Not so much. A blurry background ? YES !
For me the dslrs (not bad tools at all, just too much compromise) are not in the same league of af100 or nex fs100 and these are definetly not Scarlets.
I take raw and resolution over shallow DOF anyday.
Well, if you have a 5D, you can shoot with the 24mm L-series lens at 1.4... which will give you a look that is not achievable on anything else. But the point is... It's about flexibility, there is no reason to chose a tool that has less options if all things are equal. People are arguing (as usual) about two completely different things.
But a 5D isn't very flexible as a motion picture camera. It has very severe constraints you have to shoot within to get decent footage. F1.4 on a full frame sensor has limited practical application. The reason that S35 and 16mm/2/3" have remained the formats of choice for TV and motion pictures has more to do with being truly practical and flexible in demanding shooting conditions that one confronts in film making. Aronofsky didn't choose to shoot 16mm film for Black Swan because of cost savings. James Cameron didn't shoot his live action motion capture for Avatar with 2/3" HD cameras because he had no other choices. The technical and aesthetic demands of these films made the smaller formats the best choice.