vintage glass + 4,5, or 6K cameras = a look that many people are liking.
|
|
vintage glass + 4,5, or 6K cameras = a look that many people are liking.
It's not necessarily true. I recently did several episodes of a major dramatized cable show in two days, and I'm guessing I did at least 100, maybe 120 defocused close-ups in the entire show (out of 1400 shots). Many with tracking power windows. The key is: the hair is sharp, the eyes are sharp, the clothing is sharp... but the skin in their faces is slightly soft. We keep it as a preset, pop that in as an extra node, problem solved. Literally 1 minute per shot, plus maybe another :30 seconds to finesse the tracking window.
We agree, but if only the skintone is soft, you won't notice it if it's done in a way to glamorize and beautify the actor. There is a point where "too much is too far." A brilliant mixer I know does the same thing in audio: "taste +1." Back off a little bit from going too far, and that's usually the right place to go. I'd call it the selective equivalent of a 1/4 Promist -- maybe a 1/2 if the client insists.I don't think lowering the resolution of the cameras is the right idea. However, let's all admit that for some types of close-ups, we need to soften the image and therefore are also lowering the resolution.
We can't color-correct worth a damn if the material isn't shot well to begin with. Good colorists are always in service to the work of the DP. We can make good work better, but we can't make crap work great. Given sufficient time -- and 16 hours is reasonable for an average 43-minute network dramatic show -- we can easily make the show better, smooth over the rough spots, make everything consistent, tell the story, preserve the DP's looks, and keep the show on budget.
BTW, I'm consistently floored at how good Smash looks, particularly in how good you're making Angelica Houston look. And I laugh every time at how well you guys keep the camera reflections out of the mirrors in the rehearsal hall. Damn near amazing. I've had to wind back on the DVR to check, and each time, I say, "damn! David got away with it again!" You're a bloody miracle worker.
Thanks! Most medium shots I use a #1/4 Hollywood Black Magic, on other scenes it may be a #1/4 Classic Soft Black... but for some tighter shots, I either use the #1/2 version of those filters or a black net I made from a fine black tule or veil material I found at a fabric store. My colorist is great too, Sam Daley at Technicolor.
David Watkin was right when he said that it was all about lighting more than diffusion, though, any light that comes from an angle creates a shadow on a face, and a diffusion filter just makes that shadow fuzzy, it doesn't get rid of it.
Now that I'm back in L.A. I've had to supervise the grade over some sort of data connection between Technicolor LA and Technicolor NYC, that's been interesting because now I'm looking at a large Plasma TV rather than the DLP projector in a D.I. theater, and the two devices are not exactly the same. Noise, for one thing, is more heightened on the Plasma display.
Yes, the wall of mirrors! I have to constantly remind directors lining up shots to take them into account, and every time we end up at one end of the room, the mirrors reflect the off-camera corner at the opposite end, so any equipment, video village, etc. all has to move, many simple shots still end up seeing 90% of the whole room due to the mirrors, leaving a small area to hide in. And I wish more often I could light through the daylight windows with some big soft sources but the mirrors on the opposite wall see the same windows, so it's like lighting for a 360 degree move many times. Luckily the mirror panels can be crooked a little, creating a few dead spots in the reflections to hide things in, but as soon as the camera moves, what's hidden can be revealed again.
David Mullen!!!
I started this thread for the quality and integrity of information that you have been so generous and thoughful to share.
To the rest who have read and will benefit from this discourse, enjoy!
FWIW going back to the Dark Night I thought that Maggie Gyllenhaal was lit LESS attractively in that film then just about anyone I've ever seen her in. Personally, I feel like Pfister didn't do her any favors.
I dunno. One can make a wild guess on the total "K" of 15-perf Imax 70mm, and I don't think the human subjects in The Dark Knight looked bad at all. High-res alone doesn't make people look bad; bad lighting and bad makeup do. Diffusion (lens, lighting, and in post) can always help.
To me, the key is just to control the sharpness. Knock it back when you need to, take advantage of it when you need to emphasize it. Resolution is just another part of the Swiss army knife of tools available to the DP.
| « Previous Thread | Next Thread » |