Bill Davis
June 6th, 2009, 06:08 PM
Gosh, such entrenched thinking an all sides.
On something that's so NOT important.
(I enjoy calling these "pimple behind Cindy Crawford's knee" problems. Yeah, that might exist. But for anyone thinking straight, it so TOTALLY ignores the overarching reality of the subject.
Here's the truth as I see it.
24p doesn't matter. 30p doesn't matter. Period. At all.
Why? Happy to explain.
The cold hard reality is that 99% of any and all movies being made right now - no, not just movies, any non-corporate or business specific moving picture content including doc's, music videos, whatever - DO NOT make their investment back. Yes, we have lovely 24p and 30p and 60i and 1024i tools. And yet nearly ALL the movies made TO ANY AND ALL THOSE STANDARDS will FAIL to make a dime for anyone.
The bottom line is that content is king. If you can create a really interesting script and shoot it really well on ANYTHING - it will only succeed at doing ONE thing. Enhance your reputation to the point where you get to do it AGAIN, - this time with fewer compromises as to format, hardware, software and every other stage of the production.
That's IT. Sorry to be so harsh, but without a reputation NOW - and I mean a current reputation having SOLD movies in the past - your ... and MY! chances of getting a piece of our content into a theater or broadcast ANYWHERE - where the frame rate or need to transcode to celluloid could possibly matter - statistically approach ZERO.
Face it, all non studio sponsored movies are at best, RESUME movies. And as such, the format doen't MATTER.
24p only MATTERS if there's a REALISTIC chance someone will ever give a rats behind about showing your content in a PAL country. And the reality of distribution is that making something 25 frame friendly is likely going to increase your chances of success from .0005 to .0006.
And statistically neither is really going to happen.
What CAN happen is what happens with the exceptions that make it.
A creator's first film is INTERESTING even if not releasable. Second film is MORE interesting if still not releasable. Third film (still NEVER to see celuloid) creates some serious buzz. And then BINGO. That filmmaker who now has DEMONSTRATED CONTENT DELIVERY TALENT is given a REAL budget and a REAL crew and no longer has to give a rats ass about any 24p vs 1080i crap.
I know I sound harsh. But I think a LOT of people would do themselves a world of good if instead of obsessing about the beginning of their career filmmaking chain - which is about crap like formats and frame rates and potential "pie in the sky what if someone wants to buy the European rights?????" crap. And just concentrated on making exceptionally GREAT content.
I know. That's actually WAY more difficult than spending hours debating whether the Canon 5d or the Red whatever is more "distribution friendly." The answer is NEITHER - unless you have something WORTH distributing - which is the whole REAL problem.
The problem that nobody in discussions like this really wants to address.
FWIW
(Rant mode off. And sorry, but I get frustrated with these endless discussions of stuff that hardly matters - to the exclusion of discussions about what DOES matter. I'll go away quietly now.)
On something that's so NOT important.
(I enjoy calling these "pimple behind Cindy Crawford's knee" problems. Yeah, that might exist. But for anyone thinking straight, it so TOTALLY ignores the overarching reality of the subject.
Here's the truth as I see it.
24p doesn't matter. 30p doesn't matter. Period. At all.
Why? Happy to explain.
The cold hard reality is that 99% of any and all movies being made right now - no, not just movies, any non-corporate or business specific moving picture content including doc's, music videos, whatever - DO NOT make their investment back. Yes, we have lovely 24p and 30p and 60i and 1024i tools. And yet nearly ALL the movies made TO ANY AND ALL THOSE STANDARDS will FAIL to make a dime for anyone.
The bottom line is that content is king. If you can create a really interesting script and shoot it really well on ANYTHING - it will only succeed at doing ONE thing. Enhance your reputation to the point where you get to do it AGAIN, - this time with fewer compromises as to format, hardware, software and every other stage of the production.
That's IT. Sorry to be so harsh, but without a reputation NOW - and I mean a current reputation having SOLD movies in the past - your ... and MY! chances of getting a piece of our content into a theater or broadcast ANYWHERE - where the frame rate or need to transcode to celluloid could possibly matter - statistically approach ZERO.
Face it, all non studio sponsored movies are at best, RESUME movies. And as such, the format doen't MATTER.
24p only MATTERS if there's a REALISTIC chance someone will ever give a rats behind about showing your content in a PAL country. And the reality of distribution is that making something 25 frame friendly is likely going to increase your chances of success from .0005 to .0006.
And statistically neither is really going to happen.
What CAN happen is what happens with the exceptions that make it.
A creator's first film is INTERESTING even if not releasable. Second film is MORE interesting if still not releasable. Third film (still NEVER to see celuloid) creates some serious buzz. And then BINGO. That filmmaker who now has DEMONSTRATED CONTENT DELIVERY TALENT is given a REAL budget and a REAL crew and no longer has to give a rats ass about any 24p vs 1080i crap.
I know I sound harsh. But I think a LOT of people would do themselves a world of good if instead of obsessing about the beginning of their career filmmaking chain - which is about crap like formats and frame rates and potential "pie in the sky what if someone wants to buy the European rights?????" crap. And just concentrated on making exceptionally GREAT content.
I know. That's actually WAY more difficult than spending hours debating whether the Canon 5d or the Red whatever is more "distribution friendly." The answer is NEITHER - unless you have something WORTH distributing - which is the whole REAL problem.
The problem that nobody in discussions like this really wants to address.
FWIW
(Rant mode off. And sorry, but I get frustrated with these endless discussions of stuff that hardly matters - to the exclusion of discussions about what DOES matter. I'll go away quietly now.)