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  1. #151  
    None of those were for sale in 2006, the Olympus quad-HD camera is still just a prototype after five years as far as I know. The Dalsa Origin was the only production-ready (by which I mean people were shooting small projects on it) 4K camera that predated the Red One but it wasn't for sale nor in large production. I don't know when the Phantom 65 came out but I think it was a year later than the Red One.
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  2. #152  
    Senior Member Mark Andersen's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by David Battistella View Post
    Wasn't it Robert Altman who said:

    "the cheapest part of making a film is the film"

    David
    That may be true but on many smaller projects its more significant. When I was shooting stock imagery on 35mm celluloid, it would cost me about $90 a minute just to turn the camera on. That was film, processing, shipping and telecine, plus a lot of time on my part. Today when I turn on the camera it's only about 50 cents a min. for Hard drives to archive the footage. I am sure a lot of smaller projects are in a similar boat, corporate stuff, music videos, docs etc. where there isn't huge sets and actors dwarfing the film stock budget.
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  3. #153  
    Senior Member Mark Andersen's Avatar
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    What is Epic? It's opportunity, potential, a level playing field. It's not inexpensive, but so much more affordable than cameras used to be. The Epic won't turn you into Gordon Willis, Greg Toland or Conrad Hall any more than a Fender guitar will make you Hendricks or Clapton. But it will give you the potential and ability to try. The game has changed, the rules are different and the future is bright Red.
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  4. #154  
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    Quote Originally Posted by David Mullen ASC View Post
    None of those were for sale in 2006, the Olympus quad-HD camera is still just a prototype after five years as far as I know. The Dalsa Origin was the only production-ready (by which I mean people were shooting small projects on it) 4K camera that predated the Red One but it wasn't for sale nor in large production. I don't know when the Phantom 65 came out but I think it was a year later than the Red One.
    Thanks David, I thought they had gone production with the one where they stitched sensors together through a prism. Did the viper people ever release a shd? It is irrelevant anyway, last year ambarella released a consumer camera chipset that could record 5mp video, and I suspect that they will have a shd one this year. The chipset can actually pull more than 8mp 60fps uncompressed off the sensor, but nobody has bothered to hack one to record it, even the cheap one I have here. So, shd is is going to become more common place. the past is the past.
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  5. #155  
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    Quote Originally Posted by David Battistella View Post
    Wasn't it Robert Altman who said:

    "the cheapest part of making a film, is the film"

    David
    When you're on a low-budget or no-budget film, certainly not. Film stock and lighting gear kill these projects.

    People like Christopher Nolan, David Lynch and Darren Aronofsky, who got their break doing low-budget DIY feature films, certainly took far longer to complete them because they had to save up to buy film stock.

    Nolan's "Following" took a year. Lynch's "Eraserhead" took four.

    Not to mention that cameras as sensitive and noise-free as the EPIC also allow you to shoot with practical lights in a lot of situations. This means you can have an extremely small crew if that's what you can afford.

    I'm not saying that the "industrial" way of shooting is going or should go way, but allowing a smaller, more intimate filmmaking to grow with professional results to back it up will be a true revolution.

    Maybe the coming of a second "New Wave" of cinema worldwide.

    In the next few years you will be able to edit and finish natively an entire feature lenght film shot on 4K using a laptop hooked up to a 10 TB Thunderbolt hard drive while drinking coffee in your bedroom. This is incredibly huge.

    Let the ideas and not the budget speak for themselves. A lot of filmmakers these days hide behind craft and don't have anything to say.

    In fact that's what 90% of Hollywood films do. The bells and whistles are there to divert people from the fact that there is zero content.
    Last edited by Thomas Church; 08-01-2011 at 10:58 AM.
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  6. #156  
    No one ever did, not 4K, not SHD [quad-HD]. Dalsa had the Origin and then came the RED One. Some could argue that a few cameras had 4K or better sensors for acquisition, but none other than Dalsa and RED actually recorded in a "4K" format. The Genesis, for example, uses a 5760x2160 CCD sensor. But instead of a Bayer pattern color filter array, it uses RGB stripes. The sensor CFA literally has one column of RED pixels adjacent to a column of green pixels adjacent to a column of blue pixels and so on and on and on... It met with a lot of harsh criticisms on release. Conversely, it has also been an example used to hotly debate the resolution claims of RED... The Thomson Viper is another example, similar to Genesis and almost as hotly debated, as it has 4320 vertical pixels on its sensor...
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