Carl Jakobsson
May 3rd, 2006, 09:21 PM
I've filmed a parody of Miami Vice with my 35mm adapter and a very old and bad 1CCD Sony DV-camera. Even though I get a nice short DOF, the colours didn't look like Miami Vice at all. The footage simply didn't look like Miami Vice.
I tried diferent Magic Bullet Looks. Almost all of them looked funky, but none of them looked like Miami Vice. Some nights I applied a certain look, it looked fine at the moment, but the next day I wasn't satisfied. I kept repeating the same mistake over and over again. I realized that I had to figure out what the MV-look really was. First by looking at the footage, then by doing some research. The colors for example are pastel. I found the homepage of the focus puller that worked on season 1-2. He wrote that Don Johnson demanded diffusion filters on close-ups. Some diffusion filters were used every now and then. At this time I knew more about the MV look, but still didn't know how to achieve it.
The breakthrough came when I decided to look for scenes on a MV dvd that were shot in a similar environment as my own footage. I took stills from those scenes and analyzed them with the video scopes in my NLE. I noticed that the values of the waveform monitor and vectorscope where very similar to each other, even though the scenes were shot in different environments. When compared to my own footage all scopes differed a lot from the MV footage.
Here's a comparison, scope by scope
Waveform monitor/RGB parade:
MV: max 80 white, min 0 white
My footage: max 100 white min 5 white
Vectorscope:
MV: max 40
My footage: max 70
My conclusion was that in MV-footage white was never white. White was at most 80% white (around 195 in 8-bit values (0-255)). Black was always black. Saturation was at most 40. The film-stock has a completely different character than my aged 1CCD dv-camera. Big scoop... :)
So I used procamp on my footage to mimic the characteristics of MV by adjusting gamma, contrast and chroma. At a first look, it didn't look very good. Actually it looked worse. I have to admit though that some of my footage is overexposed. Anyway, film characteristics are more than those values.
At this point, Magic Bullet became useful again. I used one of the more subtile presets to add diffussion and also "spread out" the colours a bit. Then I used procamp to make sure all values where correct. I felt a sweet taste of success...
What I've learnt is that film look can be mimiced, although film is always nicer. Don't overexpose the video! Use UV-filters! Sometimes you can't see what scopes can see.
I also would like to add that the B-footage shot with a 3CCD Panasonic gave better results than the 1CCD Sony, especially in terms of better color distribution.
If you find this little story useful, or if you have any comments or questions - reply! I can post some screen grabs too if you are interested.
I tried diferent Magic Bullet Looks. Almost all of them looked funky, but none of them looked like Miami Vice. Some nights I applied a certain look, it looked fine at the moment, but the next day I wasn't satisfied. I kept repeating the same mistake over and over again. I realized that I had to figure out what the MV-look really was. First by looking at the footage, then by doing some research. The colors for example are pastel. I found the homepage of the focus puller that worked on season 1-2. He wrote that Don Johnson demanded diffusion filters on close-ups. Some diffusion filters were used every now and then. At this time I knew more about the MV look, but still didn't know how to achieve it.
The breakthrough came when I decided to look for scenes on a MV dvd that were shot in a similar environment as my own footage. I took stills from those scenes and analyzed them with the video scopes in my NLE. I noticed that the values of the waveform monitor and vectorscope where very similar to each other, even though the scenes were shot in different environments. When compared to my own footage all scopes differed a lot from the MV footage.
Here's a comparison, scope by scope
Waveform monitor/RGB parade:
MV: max 80 white, min 0 white
My footage: max 100 white min 5 white
Vectorscope:
MV: max 40
My footage: max 70
My conclusion was that in MV-footage white was never white. White was at most 80% white (around 195 in 8-bit values (0-255)). Black was always black. Saturation was at most 40. The film-stock has a completely different character than my aged 1CCD dv-camera. Big scoop... :)
So I used procamp on my footage to mimic the characteristics of MV by adjusting gamma, contrast and chroma. At a first look, it didn't look very good. Actually it looked worse. I have to admit though that some of my footage is overexposed. Anyway, film characteristics are more than those values.
At this point, Magic Bullet became useful again. I used one of the more subtile presets to add diffussion and also "spread out" the colours a bit. Then I used procamp to make sure all values where correct. I felt a sweet taste of success...
What I've learnt is that film look can be mimiced, although film is always nicer. Don't overexpose the video! Use UV-filters! Sometimes you can't see what scopes can see.
I also would like to add that the B-footage shot with a 3CCD Panasonic gave better results than the 1CCD Sony, especially in terms of better color distribution.
If you find this little story useful, or if you have any comments or questions - reply! I can post some screen grabs too if you are interested.