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  1. #41  
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    I asked this same question 20+ years ago in a suite at the American Film Market to the President of DeLuxe Labs, Bud Stone. He said it was lighting.
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  2. #42  
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gunleik Groven View Post
    Or just a 60 year old Angie... Or whatever glass you have and shoot and light for what you have...


    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...=1#post1032111
    Which lens did you use? That looked amazing!
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  3. #43  
    Senior Member Victor MOREIRA's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alexey Datsenko View Post
    Could you please advice how to get "film look" picture for shooting cinema.
    I see "Pirates of Carribian 4". "Prometeus" and etc and I see a amazing "film look" picture but I have been trying to get with Epic and could not. I was try to make color correction in Redcine-X but it is don't look like "film look".
    Could you please tell me how on movies shoot on Epic is getting such amazing "film look" picture?

    1. Color correction in Da Vinci?
    2. Magic Bullet?

    Or maybe something else?

    Thank you
    How to get "Superstar look" in real life for celebrity ?

    1. Gucci ?
    2. Ferrari ?

    Or maybe expensive things ?

    No sarcasm here.
    YOU define your own cinema look. As soon as people go to cinema to watch your movie, you have that "film look".
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  4. #44  
    Senior Member Zakaree Sandberg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alexey Datsenko View Post
    Could you please advice how to get "film look" picture for shooting cinema.
    I see "Pirates of Carribian 4". "Prometeus" and etc and I see a amazing "film look" picture but I have been trying to get with Epic and could not. I was try to make color correction in Redcine-X but it is don't look like "film look".
    Could you please tell me how on movies shoot on Epic is getting such amazing "film look" picture?

    1. Color correction in Da Vinci?
    2. Magic Bullet?

    Or maybe something else?

    Thank you
    cameras arent magic boxes that make everyone a DP..

    production design, lighting, makeup, costumes, props.. all these things go into making it have a "look"

    but most importantly, since we are talking about the photography... its all about lighting..
    Zakaree Sandberg
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    RED MX - 1015
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  5. #45  
    Just a quick hint:

    What I always do in Davinci Resolve is to put a film-out LUT on the first node.
    My LUTs are generated with THX Cinespace and mimic a film print on Kodak stock.
    I think you can get some free LUTs on http://www.lightillusion.com/
    or here: http://www.arri.com/camera/digital_c...generator.html
    The red footage is always decoded with REDlog film.

    Like this you have a good starting point for grading as the process is similar as if you would work with scanned film in LOG space which will be printed on film.
    Most feature films are made like this. Even when they are released on DCP the whole grading is set up with a LUT simulating a 35mm release print. For the DCP the look gets baked in.

    Cheers
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  6. #46  
    Senior Member Matthew Love's Avatar
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    Here's something I did which to me gave it a bit of a "filmic" look, in my opinion. Dropped my saturation and boosted contrast, went into the luminance curve and after that played with the red channel. I started off in red log and white balanced off a grey card. Played a bit with the grain look on redcine as well. Started in redcolor3/redlogfilm.
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  7. #47  
    Senior Member Steve Sherrick's Avatar
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    The "film look" is often oversimplified. What makes something look cinematic, something that we attribute to those great movies we have seen over the years is a perfect storm of all departments working in perfect harmony to create indelible images that get imbedded deep into our psyche so that when we see something that doesn't quite have that same impact on us, we are well aware of it.
    Steve Sherrick
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  8. #48  
    Senior Member Curran Giddens's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Sherrick View Post
    The "film look" is often oversimplified. What makes something look cinematic, something that we attribute to those great movies we have seen over the years is a perfect storm of all departments working in perfect harmony to create indelible images that get imbedded deep into our psyche so that when we see something that doesn't quite have that same impact on us, we are well aware of it.
    Love this ^^


    http://www.SolarSystemStudio.com/

    EPIC-M #508, EPIC-X #124
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  9. #49  
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Sherrick View Post
    The "film look" is often oversimplified. What makes something look cinematic, something that we attribute to those great movies we have seen over the years is a perfect storm of all departments working in perfect harmony to create indelible images that get imbedded deep into our psyche so that when we see something that doesn't quite have that same impact on us, we are well aware of it.
    WELL said.
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  10. #50  
    Senior Member Karim D. Ghantous's Avatar
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    Okay. If 'film look' means 'as opposed to interlaced video,' then the answer is easy and has been available for decades: frame rate. The lower the frame rate, the more the 'film look'.

    Sure, there are lots of nuances. But mere particulars such as grain, contrast, DOF (heaven forbid that this cow is not sacred!), frame float, shutter angle, exposure, resolving power, lighting etc. have almost nothing to do with the film look as I've defined it above.

    Keep in mind that film has subtle properties such as dynamic resolving power: the lower the contrast, the lower the resolving power (within limits). Just another reason why I love film, despite being more and more pro-digital for pragmatic reasons. Sigh.
    Good production values may not be noticed. Bad production values will be.
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