Arklatexian
Member
I get the impression from all of this is that no one really needs for me to buy a 36exp, 135 Ektachrome that I don't even know if I can get decent processing with mounting from Kodak or any one else. It may be a looooog time before I can start shooting slides/dias/transpariences again and I don't have a loooog time to wait. Back to B&W............Regards!A 5 : 1 ratio was the illusion to simple tv news production with film (before video). Executive producers wanted to see not more than 6 :1 = 6 minutes film raw material for 1 minute TV news. Some editors got a ratio of 6 :1 but mostly 8 : 1 was also quite OK. At 12 : 1 - 15 :1 they
got a call to come directly to the chief. (because of the costs).
I heard about some editors were fired at 20 : 1.... (it was never caused from camera operators they should be able to work 1,5 - 2 : 1.)
Todays video television news are working with ratios of 20 - 40 : 1 (or higher) everything is allowed.
But your ratio you mentioned with film is with low budget production?
A class films often have a lenght of
4,5 hours, 5,5 hours.....Coppola was nearly bunkrupt on filmworks to Appocalypse Now due to final version of more than 8 hours and highest ratios.
So you have a ratio of 6 : 1 with special scenes sometimes 3 :1 / 4:1
because of great expensive effort (not from the film costs) and the rest is on the play of the actors and the director. 12:1 / 8:1 / 16 :1....
But don't forget the final lenght of a cinema movie. Best results in filmwork have a nearly double lenght. (The film should be in the near of 100min. and the cutting version has 185 min) so it comes to a final post production (and much of deleted scenes).
The meaning to the ratio is factor 2 - 4 (because you have to realize the concern of the final version)
So if you are just regarding the lenght of the film you know from cinema you may count in real ratios of 24:1 / 16:1 / 32:1 / (with factor x2 - from ratios given above.
with regards
PS : Coppola was co - producer and spent some private money he earned from "The Godfather" (nearly 2 million bucks) into production. But the studios cut the budget as they realized Coppolas ratio went higher and higher and he was going to burn their full money.
(ratio much over 100:1)
PPS : He gave the full rest of his private money including his house, the insurance of his mom and the money for his childs (education fond) into his crazy filmwork.
And he got his money back (with factor x 25.....)