Thanks for the info, folks! Claudia, I'm not fond of Foma 400 for people, either. Glad you posted those direct comparisons. It's FP4 or HP5 for me with headshots. But it's my film of choice for landscapes and industrial shots, especially in 35mm or 35mm half-frame [...]
You're welcome, I'm glad they've been helpful. Your shots look great! I ditched Foma 400 altogether because I shoot mainly portraits, but maybe I should give it another whirl for my panoramic landscape shots, your examples are really good.
Seriously, I much prefer the second shot, but that's mostly due to the lighting (and the subject seems at peace and happy about things in that shot). It's a very nice photograph. The first photo looks like a mug shot, but again, I think that's more about that unflattering lighting than the film.
They were just meant to show the difference in skin tones

The lighting was really flat in the second one: not the best, but not horrible either. I think it's just a pretty bad film for portraits.
Am I the only one who thinks (ignoring facial expressions and bad-lighting) that the Foma shot looks better? Much lighter skin and less 'flat' looking.
What filters, if any, were used on those shots? If one used red and the other used orange, for example, then that would still have had more of an effect than a few extra nm range of the film.
I think you're on your own here. The lighter skin looks pasty and pretty horrible to my eyes. I much prefer the tones of tri-x.
There weren't any filters used in these shots. I purposely chose two photos of the same person taken without filters on different films, otherwise the comparison wouldn't have made any sense whatsoever.
This is another picture of him taken on ortho film
This is another bad picture on foma 400 (notice the horrible skin tone)
These are two pictures on Tri-x, one with a red filter and one with a green filter, to see the difference (the red filter one is closer to the look of Foma without any filter, while the green filter makes it look orthochromatic)