very interesting discussion. I had another question for you guys. New video from Anthony Mandler you've all seen by now I'm sure with Justin Bieber. This seems obviously shot on anamorphic
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4em3LKQCAQ
my question however is specifically about how are they achieving what appears to be a paradox: super wide angle fisheye look yet shallow DoF?
Check the shots around 4:30 for instance in particular the scenic shot of the couple from behind over looking a horizon/landscape. It seems there's shots like that in the video where the edges are warping slightly which seems to indicate to me a near fisheye level focal length let's say around 14mm give or less, yet the depth of field is still fairly shallow and the background is out of focus.
My question is: does anamorphics DoF appear to be THAT much shallower that even a "fisheye" level lens has a shallow DoF? Is this due to the fact that as David Mullen and others explained, that to get what would traditionally be a 14mm or so field of view, in anamorphics you're choosing/using in actuality a 28mm to achieve that same field of view and thus are getting the equivalent of 28mm DoF which is obviously much shallower wide open than 14mm?
So to restate the question in short: in those shots, am I seeing what looks like 14mm field of view, but is really shot with 20-28mm or so focal length? The only thing that makes that impossible is then why would there be warping at the sides to indicate a super wide/fish eye? Who can explain this...
by the way sidebar: anyone knows what this video was shot on exactly, i.e. camera/stock/lenses? I can only assume film since I thought that's what Mandler prefers to shoot on but I don't know for sure