Yes, of course.....there is my answer.The movie studios use negative film because they need several positive copies of each scene for editing etc. Obviously the amateur does not need this.
Cinematographers always buy film from the same batch, and clip test every roll. This gives them exposure correct to a fraction of a stop and no colour shifts.The question has already been answered, but I have long been impressed how rigorous and demanding cinematography is. Just the differences and the reasons for them between a cine lens and a still camera lens, for example, is impressive.
It would be nice if I could get that latitude from reversal film but then I wouldn't be able to watch it on my projectors. I shoot most of my home movies on 8mm and Super 8 using my stockpile of Ektachrome 100D. If I shot it just to telecine it to digital then I would probably shoot negative film but half the fun is watching it with a projector.I would think that colour negative film would be the prefered medium because there is a greater latitude for any exposure errors. (not that there would be many)
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