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Micro35 Footage!
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Photos from a Micro35 flick!
I just received some photos of the Micro35 being used by my buddies over at lunaticfringepictures.com. This is from a feature called "The Ancient". It is produced by Necroscopic Unlimited (www.spellcaster.addr.com) in association with American Movie Works.
www.micro35.com/oct19/micro35meter1.jpg www.micro35.com/oct19/micro35_tim.jpg Thanks guys!! James |
James, amazing - you should get them to post
The second site has a bit of info on the film but alas, very limited so far and nothing yet about the adaptor - you should get them to post a comment or two either here or as article on your site where they can talk about how it all went down...!
I'm guessing they'd have good things to say! It would be cool to get some direct feedback from filmmakers about how they feel about YOUR solution... and that brings up a very interesting point: A lot of people here have posted their musings on such an adaptor system ranging back to the original posts by Agus, etc. Great work has been done by many like Bob Hart et al. to advance the development here - but correct me if I'm wrong - are you not the first one here to actually have built a working system that OTHERS (ie. indie filmmakers) have been able to take advantage of? Others have built/designed systems for primarily their own use - well, that's terrific to show that it can be done. But James, really, you deserve a bit of special recognition for being so willing to not just help yourself... I still can't believe how cool your philosophy is - the Guide and all... Thank you for that - us filmmaker types applaud you - think of us as the "Kirk" to your "Scotty": "Scotty, I don't care what you need to do to those dilithium crystals - we need shields up! Get us out of here!" Or something like that. Well, James, what can I say? Beam me up! |
Cant see the pics
Edit: Seems to be working now. Looks nice! |
James what lcd monitor do they have that is on top of the DVX?
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Ernest,
That's my rig in the photo. The LCD monitor is made by TV One. It has 2 inputs and a really handy button that allows you to turn the image upside down, which makes it perfect for use with the Micro35. Hope that helps, Larry |
Link, please
Larry, a quick Google search turns up nada on that monitor. Can you direct me to it?
EDIT: Nemmine, I found it. |
Mark, here is a quick rundown of how the shoot went.
Tim Sanders was directing the scene. He whipped out his trusty director's finder and decided a 35mm lens was best for the first setup. I mounted a 35 and we blocked the shot. I set the 35 wide open to F1.4. The coroner's character was roughly 6 feet away from the camera. A victim lay on the examination table just in front of the coroner. A second victim lay on a table another 6 feet behind the coroner. The shallow depth of field of the wide open 35mm lens worked beautifully. You could see there was a victim behind coroner, but you couldn't tell he was made of Styrofoam. On another setup, we used the 35mm lens again. We needed to rack focus from a pair of twitching feet on one actor to the rising head of another actor. They were situated about 10 feet apart. We started with the feet in focus and while the camera floated toward the second mark, we racked to the head which was about 16" from the camera lens. It was another great shot. For another setup, Tim chose an 18mm lens. Again, I set it wide open to F1.4. I was amazed that even a lens as wide as that could offer a depth of field as shallow as it did. Of course, setting a lens to wide open is not the best choice for every shot. But, hey, I was playing and it worked just fine for those shots. The Micro35 appears to offer another bonus that I had not expected. There seems to be an absence of the sharp edge that runs along an object that screams video. In the scenes we shot, the background was kept dark, so that may have masked the video edge. I plan to shoot more tests this week to make sure, but it will be great if that is indeed the case. |
John, I bought mine from Brad at American Media Solutions in Houston. His number is 281.277.4000. It is the model LM-681M 6.8" LCD monitor.
Good luck. |
cool deal...i should have a ton of pix up on the site in the next few dyas...the lens rocked......
Tracy |
www.tvone.com is where I think you can find more info on it.
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Larry et al. - thanks for your replies
Wow, so cool to get some actual user feedback - this is tremendous - Larry, can you comment on the footage? Anyone? This is sounding so cool - wish you guys can offer a short clip sometime!
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Larry - what kind of lenses were you using? Thanks for the info, very helpful to have a real example.
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Mark, here is what the editor at American Movie Works had to say when I sent him the footage, "I thought the clips had a lot of depth to them that I don't see in normal DV. "
He knows there are people wanting to see samples, so hopefully he will get time soon to post a clip or two on the AMW site. As a side note, I made a clone of the footage to show local filmmakers. I took it by to show one of them today. He is usually down on DV. He likes BetaCam SP or better. But, when he saw the footage, he was pumped. It was really fun to see the look on his face as watched the screen. He kept talking about how cinematic it looked. He already has a project he wants me to shoot with the Micro35. |
Brian, I was shooting with Lomo high speed primes. They were made in the former Soviet Union in the same plant where the USSR made the lenses for their spy satellites. They are on a par with Cooke and Zeiss, but nowhere near the cost.
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