
Originally Posted by
Phil Holland
I've said it elsewhere here on REDuser and certainly in other internet and real world circles. Cameras are becoming much more than just a "what's on the sticker" concept.
It's 2020, nearly 2021. Smartphones "do 8K". But is that 8K comparable to a RED Monstro or Helium camera when it comes to image quality? Is it ideal for a practical shoot or a professional tool? Want RAW? Etc.
To put the flipside to that, you can shoot an entire film on a phone and you can shoot rather carefully to make them look very impressive in a side by side. For instance, if you asked me to make a smartphone look good I'd light flat as hell within 6-7 stops and you'd likely would have a very flexible image off that capture system.
I'm curious to thoroughly test the BMD 12K and I have about a TB of images here off it. I think it's a hell of a price point and hard to argue with, but professionally based on even what early reviewers on YouTube are discovering it 100% needs an OLPF for professional work. And I'm certain, as we've seen before, a 3rd party option will come. And in many ways I think that camera is all about 4K and perhaps 8K image making. Sort of like Komodo being ideal for a 6K to 4K workflow. It's also early days for that camera and there's a few things they are certainly working on. Which seems to be par for the course in these rapidly moving times.
We've seen a wild year in the camera space all in the last 365 days. RED Komodo, Canon C70, Sony FX6, BMD 12K, Canon C500, Sony FX9, Canon C300 MK II etc. Not to mention the mirrorless stuff like the Canon R5 and Sony A7sIII. More cameras than I'd expect during a year like this worldwide, but many things are obviously in development long before a pandemic hits the scene. It does hurt manufacturing and supply for sure.
The only thing that is worth looking at is which of these cameras fit your needs. Some people truly get it. Some people don't. Since Komodo's early adopter release I've seen people switch over to Komodo as a platform with several bodies. Saw one guy go with the C70 after the announcement. Saw another buy a Komodo after the C70 announcement. Interesting to see and hear all that.
Though I often reference Komodo as a Utility Camera, I think a lot of people don't grasp what I mean by that. Mainly I think it can be used as an A-Cam, but due to it's size, power requirements, and Global Shutter I think it inspires much more freedom where a small camera that can do those things really can flex. Apparently that's sort of why it was invented in the first place. Mounting a Ranger on a hood with a gimbal is one thing, Komodo requires far less rigging for a similar setup and you won't cry when your camera falls off the hood. Perhaps I should say you won't cry as much.
I view cameras as marketed towards pricing tiers and ideally their performance makes up for their price point. Generally speaking I'd say to date most cameras released "make sense" as to where their release price has been towards what they offer. There's a few out there that I remember going "that's about $1200-$8000" too much or whatever, but generally all have been in the ballpark. As to whether they inspire a purchase or captivate filmmakers to use them, that's a more interesting proposition. Some cameras have had a really hard time breaking into certain segments. Other's have become defacto standards now.
To that point given the wild releases in the sub-$5K arena, the $5K-$10K world, and the $10K-$20K stuff we've seen that I've listed. I'm wondering mostly what premium cameras will look like in the future and what they will offer. For instance the Arri S35 coming around the corner. Where and how that is priced will be interesting and certainly the camera will rent. And then there's whatever DSMC3 shapes up to be.
Back to Komodo, I think the biggest shockers to me is how small, quiet, and low power the thing is. Not to mention I like the images off of it. If I had to go film a remote documentary in the middle of nowhere tomorrow I'd pack up 4 Komodos and not give it a second thought.