Myself, I'd rather rent a BNCR package for little or nothing and pay extra grips to move the camera between shots...
I knew things were pretty much going downhill when I saw bottled water labeled as having "No Trans Fats"
Film has a response that is a curve, with an entry and exit toe in the profile. Most video is very linear, and altering the curve tends to crush or expand tones, often in a way that seems somewhat unnatural. I find the differences more evident in low light and night shots; often those types of scenes are daylight shots altered later. One of the new Kodak Vision films is actually very good in low light conditions, which can allow some very interesting shot set-ups in certain scenes.
Ciao!
Gordon Moat Photography
I knew things were pretty much going downhill when I saw bottled water labeled as having "No Trans Fats"
In yesterday's Arizona Republic bussniess section there is a rather long article on theaters going digital, the cost of a duplicate film is 1200 to 1500 while a hard drive in 200 to 300. So far only new theaters are digital, but the 3 large chains expect to retro fit all theaters, nation wide, by 2011. I have a link, I read the paper.
OK, so where's the link?
Not doubting what you've said is what you read in an article (doubt that it is true though, probalby really bad reporting, as theatres have no incentive to replace 35mm projectors, just incentive to build new digital theatres), but we would all like to read it, no doubt.
In yesterday's Arizona Republic bussniess section there is a rather long article on theaters going digital, the cost of a duplicate film is 1200 to 1500 while a hard drive in 200 to 300. So far only new theaters are digital, but the 3 large chains expect to retro fit all theaters, nation wide, by 2011. I have a link, I read the paper.
What about archival issues? What if classic movies such as Casablanca or Vertigo were only stored digitally? As long as the vault is fire proof a master negative is just about fool proof.
It seems to me that a digital master even if backed up multiple times could de edited or altered. Changing the work forever.
I knew things were pretty much going downhill when I saw bottled water labeled as having "No Trans Fats"
Admittedly it was few years ago that I worked for Peter Jackson, but Avid for picture cutting and Protools for sound post were the weapons of choice, and of course all the computer generated visual effects were, well computer generated, and what a relief it was to get away from the tangles involved in the usual endless changes that are made daily in post on any feature film. The only slowdown was transferring 35mm film to Avid files in real time and conforming and printing negs for theatrical assessment.
And as one who had some responsibility, in another job, for the condition of release prints I can only say bring on digital projection and distribution as soon as possible. I had to check a print of "The Piano" for the Sydney premiere and was appalled to see a huge jump cut; the projectionist happily told me that he had had an accident, so he whipped out 20 feet, but he had spliced it well, so it would be OK on the night! (unlike his, and my, private parts if the director had seen that) So digital projection keeps those few projectionists left away from their ripping and scratching techniques.
regards - Ross
Yeah, as I have pointed out in the past, even copying the file from one system to another, say from a 16 bit Windows platform to a 64 bit Apple platform, can introduce rounding errors when the files are opened by a graphics program in 64 bit OS.
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