Monthly Archive for June, 2008

Nope, not gonna talk about it.

I’m sure many of you are expecting me to gush all over the iPhone 3G. Yes, I love it. I watched the keynote from WWDC. I plan on getting one on July 11. However, I do have a problem.

That problem? AT&T. They don’t have any adjusted plans for the new iPhone. They aren’t selling any as it is. They don’t have any. There is only one iPhone now and it is the iPhone 3G. Get up on it and release those plans. I don’t want to hear rumors anymore. I want facts. I want to see the FamilyTalk iPhone plans. AT&T, get on it.

Second thing I want to mention is that The Daily Show and The Colbert Report are finally on Hulu.  That is the coolest.  Now I get the only two shows I would watch Comedy Central for and don’t have to watch the crappy network.  That is good.

My Passion. The Second Surge.

Ok, so that title is a bit… suggestive.  Get over it.

Last night, I attended another meeting of the Independent Film Makers Coalition, aka IFC.  This is the organization that hosted the One Night Stand 10 Hour Film competition.  There was some drama the competition screening and last night seemed to be “talk shit about people behind their back” night.  I wasn’t impressed with the lack of professionalism of many of the IFC Board members.  The guy resigned, let it go.

Anyway, the big piece of awesome I got to hang out with last night was a RED One.  This is a 4K camera.  That means it has an active resolution of 4520 x 2540 pixels.  Compare that to the highest HD signal you can get on your TV at 1920 x 1080.  I think I just saw some of your eyes glaze over.  Here, look at this:

Screen resolution size comparison.

That 4k there?  That is where the RED One sits compared to 1080p.  Look how much bigger that image is, it is absolutely astounding!  I actually got to stand next to this machine and talk to the guy who owns TWO of them.  He is currently in the process of shooting a feature this is about to become the only two RED shoot in the Midwest.  That is just too cool.  He said that just the body runs $17,500 and when you get all the  lenses, power, and storage accessories, you are looking at a total setup camera of around $40,000.  Now, I understand that is a LOT of money, but look at it another way.  Other cameras that aren’t even capable of what the RED can do, run around $250,000.

Then, at NAB this year, RED introduced the RED Scarlet.  A 3k camera that will run around $3,000.  It will include a lot of stuff that will allow it to come out of the box ready.  The Scarlet doesn’t have as big of a sensor in it, but it does have a damn big one.

The RED One has a sensor in it the same size as a piece of Super 35mm film.  That means you get image characteristics that are extremely similar to film.  This is awesome because you get the same depth of field as you are used to with million dollar film cameras and the image quality is astounding.  The monitor that comes as an accessory for the RED One is a little 8″ LCD that outputs 720p.  At screen sizes that small you cannot tell the difference between 720p and the higher resolutions, so it gives you a damn fine example of what your footage looks like.

The guy, Steve Pruet (sp?), is such an amazing guy.  He is shooting and funding a feature out of his own pocket.  He has dropped over $250,000 on just equipment for the project and that includes two RED Ones.  He showed some of his footage last night and even on a standard definition DVD outputted to a crappy projector, the footage was absolutely gorgeous.  The amount of detail capable of a 4k image will just blow your mind.

Really, the thing that is grabbing me is that 3k Scarlet.  Once you are done getting all the accessories for it, you will be out around $7-8,000.  That is NOT at all bad.  That is a similar price to a Canon or Sony HD prosumer camera by itself and those aren’t capable of a 3k image.  The Scarlet will completely change independent film, I have no doubt of that.

I know that I threw a lot of jargon around and many of you are lost.  A 4k image is huge, but when you output your project, you are most likely going to output to a 2k master.  This means that you are throwing away a lot of pixels, but this also means that you can digitally, on a computer, zoom in and not loose and detail.  Taking a 4k image and mastering to 2k gives you so many options when it comes to editing, that you can do things on computer that wouldn’t be able to do in the field.  That is the real beauty of a large image camera like the RED, aside from the crystal clear image and the jaw-dropping depth of field.

Enough film geek for ya?

My Passion. It’s back!

Over the weekend, most of you know, I was part of a 10 hour film competition.  I was Assistant Director for a friend of mine, Jerry.  The short film was writen, directed, and shot by Jerry himself.  He busted his ass all damn day and through his hard work, we pumped out a damn fine short film called The Plan.  Eventually, when he gets around to it, the film will be put up on the ‘net and I should be getting it on DVD.  Those of you who haven’t seen it yet, you will, I assure you.

Here’s the deal.  The film had to have three characteristics in it.  The first was a fan.  This could be anything from a ceiling fan to a sports fan.  It just needed to be in the film in some fashion.  The second was a director.  A film of a dead director had to be inserted into or as a line of dialogue.  The director chosen was Billy Wilder and we inserted Sunset Blvd. into our film.  The last was a theme.  The theme chosen was “an act of charity.”  This theme turned out to be the only one that we had to work a good bit to get to work.  I won’t tell you because it is kind of the end of the film.

Those three things were given to us the day of.  We showed up at the Wesport Coffe House in KCMO, signed in, were given these, and were set out to make our film.  Let me stress this: our film was shot, edited, and authored to DVD in a little under 10 hours.  Even overcoming bad sound, broken mics, our actress leaving early, shooting out of order, importing video with dropped frames, and re-engineering our squib, we kicked ass.  Jerry led the team extremely well and dealt with everything with a cool head.

Personally, I didn’t really see myself doing a whole lot during the shoot.  I’ve said this a lot, as a few of you can attest.  I swear, I am NOT trying to get sympathy or whatever when I say this.  I was planning on keeping track of our shots, timecodes, all that.  I didn’t, but to be fair, it didn’t end up mattering.  We imported the footage into the machine in large lumps.  Not my editing style, but obviously, it worked for Jerry.

This weekend got to me.  I really enjoyed being a part of this project, but it also made me realize something.  I don’t have access to nearly the resources that Jerry did.  He had access to a Canon GL2, a good camera if used properly.  He had several friends who are actors, which helped a lot and resulted in a good, well performing cast.

My next challenge is to figure out how I am going to schedule work, school, and any future projects.  The weekend showed me that working on a film project like this is an amazing experience.  Now, I need to put together a regular team I can work with.  A group of people that wouldn’t mind working on my projects as long as I help them with any projects they have.

I really need to get my own equipment.  That is a lot of money to spend, though.  A LOT.