Dylan Pank
May 9th, 2008, 08:47 AM
Hi everyone. I did a quick search for this on the forums here and couldn't find this snippet.
Alex Cox (Repo Man, Sid and Nancy, El Patrullero) has recently directed a $200,000 movie for the BBC and Roger Corman, called Searchers 2.0. The movie was shot by DoP Steve Fierberg (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0276407/) on a Sony Z1 (actually on three, one A camera, one occasionally used B camera operated by Cox, and one spare(one apparently did break down).
There's an interview with Cox on his website about it here:http://www.alexcox.com/dir_searchers.htm
He also talks about on his blog (no direct link, scroll down to mid 2006-mid 2007)
http://www.alexcox.com/blog.htm
Steve Fierberg is interviewed at DV.com, http://www.dv.com/features/features_item.php?articleId=196603880
and there is an article by him in April 2008's American Cinematographer (not available online unfortunately).
They shot in 1080 50i (the BBC wanted a 50i HD master) and the film has since played at a number of festivals including last year's Venice film festival.
Two quotes:
From Steve Fierberg's DV.com interview, on setting exposure: "I did not do the 70-percent zebra, which most people use for skin tone. I had the zebra set at 105 percent, and I would make it as light as I could before burning out."
FRom Alex Cox's blog, on the Venice screening: "The screen is huge, and our film - shot on my funky Z-1 video camera - is in perfect focus, and the film sounds ten times better in the larger space."
That's the second notable indie film I've heard about shot on the Z1, after the Oscar winning* Once.
The BBC will apparently be showing the movie (not in HD) in June.
* for best song :-)
Alex Cox (Repo Man, Sid and Nancy, El Patrullero) has recently directed a $200,000 movie for the BBC and Roger Corman, called Searchers 2.0. The movie was shot by DoP Steve Fierberg (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0276407/) on a Sony Z1 (actually on three, one A camera, one occasionally used B camera operated by Cox, and one spare(one apparently did break down).
There's an interview with Cox on his website about it here:http://www.alexcox.com/dir_searchers.htm
He also talks about on his blog (no direct link, scroll down to mid 2006-mid 2007)
http://www.alexcox.com/blog.htm
Steve Fierberg is interviewed at DV.com, http://www.dv.com/features/features_item.php?articleId=196603880
and there is an article by him in April 2008's American Cinematographer (not available online unfortunately).
They shot in 1080 50i (the BBC wanted a 50i HD master) and the film has since played at a number of festivals including last year's Venice film festival.
Two quotes:
From Steve Fierberg's DV.com interview, on setting exposure: "I did not do the 70-percent zebra, which most people use for skin tone. I had the zebra set at 105 percent, and I would make it as light as I could before burning out."
FRom Alex Cox's blog, on the Venice screening: "The screen is huge, and our film - shot on my funky Z-1 video camera - is in perfect focus, and the film sounds ten times better in the larger space."
That's the second notable indie film I've heard about shot on the Z1, after the Oscar winning* Once.
The BBC will apparently be showing the movie (not in HD) in June.
* for best song :-)