
Originally Posted by
Steve Gibby
Thank you David, Stuart, Rob, and other experienced industry veterans on his thread for your comments...
At the top of this forum there has been a sticky I wrote way back in 2007 explaining the difference between EFP (electronic field production) and ENG (electronic news gathering), and defining the strengths and weaknesses of Red One for each of those types of production. In that sticky and ever since I've emphasized that Red One wasn't a good choice for ENG - primarily because of time pressure in the field, and the quick turnaround nature of news work. Sure, the terms EFP and ENG are dated, but then again isn't the term "film" also dated even worse? Tons of people on Red User continually say they're going "film" something with Red One and Epic - but they just use that anachronistic term because it has had such a common and descriptive use in the motion media industry. For the same reason the terms EFP and ENG will continue to be used - but as with the anachronism of using "Film" to describe a shooting style, EFP and ENG also now describe shooting styles and equipment setups rather than their original meaning to describe separate industries.
Its really surprising how many people in the motion media industry, particularly those who haven't worked in the EFP and ENG industries, that erroneously lump all no-cine production into the catch all moniker of "ENG". EFP styles of shooting and ENG shooting have historically shared many equipment and camera setup commonality - but with its longer turnaround times for programs, and generally longer time and care put into image acquisition and editing, EFP work is very different than news gathering.
Lets talk about Red One. The camera obviously was designed to be a modular digital cinema camera - but it also EFP industry features (zebras, RS422, support for EFP/ENG zoom lens servos, etc.). Why are features like that included in Red One? Because as Red has said from the beginning - including Jim Jannard, Stuart English, etc. - Red One was secondarily designed to be used for mobile EFP style work - and thousands of EFP professionals (myself included) have done just that since 2007 - used Red One for mobile EFP work.
Is Red One ideal for mobile EFP work? Yes and no. If someone knows what they're doing, realizes that mobility requires minimizing weight, and thinks their way through their camera setups, yes, Red One can be excellent for mobile EFP work. For me, even though I tested out 2/3" EFP/ENG zooms on R1 clear back in 2007, for resolution, weight, and image purposes I settled on using a range of Nikon (and one Canon) 35mm still lenses on R1 - exposing quickly via zebra (and histogram) and eye focusing quickly by operator using image magnification. For lack of a better term I labeled that approach "mobile EFP" the hybrid meaning the use of 35mm still lenses, some cine style techniques, and many traditional EFP style techniques. Horses for courses...
The list of mobile hybrid EFP style genres of production Red One (and now Epic) have been used for is exhaustive - documentaries of various kinds, alternative sports, adventure travel, food, cultures, home improvement, wildlife, outdoor, nature, music, corporate - IE a huge range of cable network television programs.
So what about Epic? Being smaller, with a wide variety of frame rate capabilities, and having multiple EFP-friendly features (zebras, various outputs, Genlock, etc.) Epic is IMO a significantly more capable EFP camera than Red One. Again, mobile hybrid EFP users of Epic are opting for lightweight setups, Canon lenses (and Nikon when the mount is available), mostly no matte boxes (screw on filters or clip on MB), using image magnification to eye focus by operator, and exposing quickly using zebras and histogram.
So what about Scarlet X? I'm still analyzing the specs and haven't used one, but from the specs I'd say Scarlet X may be a reasonably good mobile hybrid EFP style camera - unless you shoot in EFP genres which frequently need higher frame rates (sports, wildlife, etc.). But for documentary work setup with Canon or Nikon lenses, a small on-camera light, a short shotgun, and a dual wireless receiver on a L-bracket, Scarlet X could be a good choice - depending of course on the experience and skill sets of the user.
What about the 2/3", 3k raw shooting, high frame rate, fixed 8x Scarlet that was canceled? IMO it would have been far and away the most mobile EFP capable camera from Red. For the work I do, which by choice is about 85% mobile EFP work, the Scarlet Fixed would have been used extensively by myself, my crews, and thousands of other mobile EFP professionals. I completely understand Red's strategy in creating Scarlet X to compete in the mid-cost s35 cine style industry. That said, I'm quite unhappy that Red didn't simply choose to stratify their products by offering Scarlet X AND Fixed Scarlet. In my opinion Red could sell 100,000+ Fixed Scarlet in the short term.
End note: I've found my friend David Mullen to have a vast amount of technical and creative knowledge in both the cine-style industry and even in the EFP style industry. My friend Stuart likewise, with the added bonus for this forum and thread that before coming to Red he had a distinguished career with Panasonic developing lines of EFP cameras, including the Varicam. Rob Gardner has a long and solid background in field production. Each of these guys has very experienced opinions as a veteran - and I do to.
In the end the terms EFP and ENG won't be disappearing, just as the term film hasn't. Those terms are part of the overall fabric of the comprehensive motion media history. the bottom line for each motion media professional (or aspiring pro) is to closely analyze what genres and styles of production your passion lies in - then to pick the field production equipment that satisfies your particular needs. There are no perfect camera systems out here - but there are camera systems which can be adapted widely for many genres and styles of production - and among them are the cameras that Red offers.