Ryan Graham
April 6th, 2005, 11:48 AM
Hey All,
Just wanted to relay something that made me happy. Our short film was screened at the AFI Silver Theater in DC last night. They have a really nice setup there, with a full theater sized screen and a very crisp projector and sound system.
Anyway, we made our short in 48 hours on a GL2 in Frame Mode a few months back for a contest, and won first prize. One of the prizes was a screening at this theater. In preparation for the screening, I trimmed it a bit, did some color correction, and added some more sound fx and music. Some diffusion was also added with DFT Digital Film Lab. We shot in 4:3 with the GL2's 16:9 guides, and then letterboxed to 1.85:1 in post.
Well, to my surprise (and temporary dismay), instead of showing the film in 4:3 ratio and having the black bars on the top and bottom (all the other films they showed before it had been in 4:3), they actually blew it up to fit the entire screen! It was huge, and it fit the screen perfectly (i.e., no unused spots on the top, bottom, right or left).
I kinda freaked for a second, because I hadn't anticipated such a big blow-up. After reading countless posts about quality loss when cropping in post, I was worried.
Then I started watching the film, and realized that it looked awesome! It was very slightly soft, but since there was diffusion added in post, the softness didn't seem noticeable. The one thing I was very impressed with was the lack of any DV artifacting (no blockiness or pixelation). Jaggies were also pretty non-existent. To be honest, to my eyes, the picture quality was better than when I saw "28 Days" in the theater on the same sized screen.
How much of this can be attributed to the projector, or to the quality of the GL2, or to the post stuff I did, I'm not sure. But what I do know is that anyone who says that cropping to 16:9 or even 1.85:1 in post will look like crap is mistaken. Unless you're screening in IMAX, I just simply cannot see any reason not to do it this way. It costs less, it's less hassle during shooting (no stretched picture on your lcd), and it gives you much more leeway in post (because you can move the shots up or down to get rid of booms, light stands, etc). For that last reason alone, I think that even if I had a camera with 16:9 chips (i.e., the XL2), I would still be tempted to shoot in 4:3 and crop in post. Or at least to shoot in 16:9 and crop to 1.85:1.
And just for the record: I am absolutely not saying that cropping in post doesn't cause a loss of quality. It does. My question has always been, "But how bad is it?" Now I know the answer: "Not too bad, and certainly worth the trade-offs!"
Ryan
Just wanted to relay something that made me happy. Our short film was screened at the AFI Silver Theater in DC last night. They have a really nice setup there, with a full theater sized screen and a very crisp projector and sound system.
Anyway, we made our short in 48 hours on a GL2 in Frame Mode a few months back for a contest, and won first prize. One of the prizes was a screening at this theater. In preparation for the screening, I trimmed it a bit, did some color correction, and added some more sound fx and music. Some diffusion was also added with DFT Digital Film Lab. We shot in 4:3 with the GL2's 16:9 guides, and then letterboxed to 1.85:1 in post.
Well, to my surprise (and temporary dismay), instead of showing the film in 4:3 ratio and having the black bars on the top and bottom (all the other films they showed before it had been in 4:3), they actually blew it up to fit the entire screen! It was huge, and it fit the screen perfectly (i.e., no unused spots on the top, bottom, right or left).
I kinda freaked for a second, because I hadn't anticipated such a big blow-up. After reading countless posts about quality loss when cropping in post, I was worried.
Then I started watching the film, and realized that it looked awesome! It was very slightly soft, but since there was diffusion added in post, the softness didn't seem noticeable. The one thing I was very impressed with was the lack of any DV artifacting (no blockiness or pixelation). Jaggies were also pretty non-existent. To be honest, to my eyes, the picture quality was better than when I saw "28 Days" in the theater on the same sized screen.
How much of this can be attributed to the projector, or to the quality of the GL2, or to the post stuff I did, I'm not sure. But what I do know is that anyone who says that cropping to 16:9 or even 1.85:1 in post will look like crap is mistaken. Unless you're screening in IMAX, I just simply cannot see any reason not to do it this way. It costs less, it's less hassle during shooting (no stretched picture on your lcd), and it gives you much more leeway in post (because you can move the shots up or down to get rid of booms, light stands, etc). For that last reason alone, I think that even if I had a camera with 16:9 chips (i.e., the XL2), I would still be tempted to shoot in 4:3 and crop in post. Or at least to shoot in 16:9 and crop to 1.85:1.
And just for the record: I am absolutely not saying that cropping in post doesn't cause a loss of quality. It does. My question has always been, "But how bad is it?" Now I know the answer: "Not too bad, and certainly worth the trade-offs!"
Ryan