View Full Version : 35mm Filmout of HD-100U report


Stephen van Vuuren
June 1st, 2006, 10:22 AM
I was fortunate to see a 35mm filmout of 720p 24fps HD-100U & Z1 (shot 1080/50i, deinterlaced in post, slowed down to 24fps) professionally shot footage - filmout by Duart. This was projected in top quality private theater (NC School of the Arts filmmaking) with several pro DPs in attendance. They HD-100U camera was there (as was a XL H1 but

HD-100U footage was overwhelming winner on all accounts - resolution, color, motion signature, latitude, noise. AFAIK, they took much care on the detinterlacing. However, "winner" does not mean "great".

HD-100U mediocre to poor job on green screen footage despite trying several methods of keying. On the 50 FT tall screen, stairstepping reached out and punched you in the eye. Color fringing also is much more serious at that screen size, so overexposure of highlights is death for filmouts. Stock lens issues on the HD-100U were obvious at times but no SSE in this footage (though they said it occasionally still occurs, but much less than first models).

We also go to see HD-100U footage digitally projected straight from camera tape on the same screen at the same size using a pro digital projector (unsure of model, but a very nice one). The digital footage was better than the 35mm in all regards. Accept that you lose a little rez, a little color, introduce grain (grain + video noise = ugly), a little latitude when going to 35mm film, so project digitally in HD if you can.

One other interesting note is the 720p footage was not stunningly more sharp than my 480p Thin Mode DVX100a 16:9 footage when run through an excellent quality uprez. It's not CineAlta-like rez for sure. Just more like really crisp 480p.

Details were sharper and crisper for sure, but due to focus challenges of shooting with the HD-100U in the field, softness was issue at times due to slight out of focus, so I can't say I was "awed" by the HD-100U footage, despite the large quality projection.

So, bring a HD monitor on set to shoot with these babies and/or mount a true 720p LCD to camera esp. if you are headed to the big screen as focus issues will kill you.

Paolo Ciccone
June 1st, 2006, 12:16 PM
On the 50 FT tall screen, stairstepping reached out and punched you in the eye.

That is similar to my experience. I wonder if anybody had found the reason for this. Once you set the key, the stairstepping is very obvious. Is this a side effect of the HDV compression? Is it mitigated if acquiring the component signal?

Stephan Ahonen
June 1st, 2006, 03:56 PM
It's because HDV stores chroma at a lower resolution than luma, half in each direction. I believe capturing off the component outs would give you the original chroma resolution back. I believe some of the more advanced chroma keyers out there like Ultimatte ($1,500, better bend over) can also compensate for lower chroma resolution.

Paolo Ciccone
June 1st, 2006, 04:31 PM
It's because HDV stores chroma at a lower resolution than luma, half in each direction. I believe capturing off the component outs would give you the original chroma resolution back.
Thank you Stephen. I'm aware of the 4:2:0 system and in fact I was wondering if the stairstepping is caused by approximation of the green been sampled at 2x2 pixels. When looking at the keyed footage the stepping seems much coarser than the resolution of the camera.
I'd like to hear the experience of people who tried chromakeying with the component signal. Anyone, anyone? Bueller?

Brian Luce
June 1st, 2006, 06:50 PM
That is similar to my experience. I wonder if anybody had found the reason for this. Once you set the key, the stairstepping is very obvious. Is this a side effect of the HDV compression? Is it mitigated if acquiring the component signal?

Well that sucks! Is it at least better at keying than mini dv?

Stephan Ahonen
June 1st, 2006, 09:07 PM
Paolo, I've seen a little bit of the stuff you've done with virtual sets and your keys look fantastic. Any particular way you got around the blocking problems?

Daniel Patton
June 1st, 2006, 09:22 PM
Stephen,

Thanks for posting your findings, it's good information to know. I'm sure a lot of people have been wanting to hear more about filmout experiences, I for one have.

But one thing bothers me about this, and more than just a little I might add. First, why would ANYONE go through the trouble of doing a filmout using the HD100's stock lens? It's simply a good cheap lens that at times is barely good enough for HDV recording/playback but I cringe at the thought of shooting something that would be shown at that size with it. I would at least expect that someone use a better lens like the 13X... or something? Otherwise you are blowing up footage from what I believe is a great camera (for the money, even more so) but with a so-so quality lens. So I would expect it to look exactly as you described. In fact, I can see that for myself on a 24" HD monitor if I look close enough.

Second, someone did a filmout from keyed footage from the tape transport? Why in God's name would they do that? Why stop there... downsample to DV, run the key, and then last do the filmout. Hehe... believe me I'm laughing while typing this, so please do not take my rantings serious.

This IMHO just sounds like a bad use of a factory camera setup. Please, please someone use a good lens and a drive/file system via component so we can see the HD100 as you might expect when going to film.

Thanks again for the head up Stephen.

Peace

Tim Holtermann
June 1st, 2006, 09:27 PM
The higher the resolution the better the key, period. I spent years compositing footage for a Matte Painting house in Hollywood and have had to pull keys from the best 4K and 2K Cineon frames to horrible DV footage to mix into 35mm scans.

I had to use everything at my disposal to get a good key but it's more than just clicking a key button in some software package. There is an art form to pulling a good matte with the right amount of key choke, blur, etc. Usually I used Ultimatte in After Effects, but also used keying in Flame, Chalice, and Shake. If possible try starting with Ultimatte and experiment, experiment, experiment.

The chroma being 4:2:0 doesn't help but it's not the main reason your getting stair steps. I've seen it on 4:2:2 too. Usually when pixel shifting is involved because of the "inherit" resolution. Also, any time you put something up on a large screen you will see it's limitations, even native 35mm 2K keys are sometimes noticable if you know what you're looking for.

Stephen van Vuuren
June 1st, 2006, 10:19 PM
I believe some of the more advanced chroma keyers out there like Ultimatte ($1,500, better bend over) can also compensate for lower chroma resolution.

One of the shots was done with Ultimatte.

Stephen van Vuuren
June 1st, 2006, 10:32 PM
Stephen,
First, why would ANYONE go through the trouble of doing a filmout using the HD100's stock lens?

The camera was on loan from JVC and they were evaluating for use in the feature. The film out was around 3 minutes long for each camera which we watched 3 times. They agree it was cheap lens but are considering it anyway (i.e. DP does not like it but the producer thougt it was "okay".

Second, someone did a filmout from keyed footage from the tape transport? Why in God's name would they do that?

This was a test, not a final product. They sent in both well exposed, well focused shots and under/over exposed to see how it held up. They wanted to see if/how HDV keyed. They seemed happier than I was with. I thought the film grain made the keying artifacts worse.

I assume they would do component out, but 4:4:4 uncompressed 720p can become a budget/workflow/time issue depending on how much it's used, so many people may key HDV.

But you don't have to convince me. I have not bought any of the 1/3" HD cams due to various compromises each pose. But since my current project is 1080p uncompressed, I have the luxury of not having to buy right now.

Daniel Patton
June 1st, 2006, 10:53 PM
I could see why the DP might not like it, I'm sure I would lean more towards his take on it. ;)

Don't get me wrong, I can get a good key from the HD100 for delivery to HD LCD's etc., and it looks very good. But never would I do this via tape knowing it was intended for filmout, nope.

I could race my Mazda RX8 stock, but having a third rotor, tweaked & tuned suspension, with fat wheels would make the car sick with performance.
I hope they, someone, anyone does a filmout with the HD100 and that they do it right, if you know what I mean.

Peace

Brian Luce
June 1st, 2006, 11:00 PM
The camera was on loan from JVC and they were evaluating for use in the feature. The film out was around 3 minutes long for each camera which we watched 3 times. They agree it was cheap lens but are considering it anyway (i.e. DP does not like it but the producer thougt it was "okay".



.

What other cams did you guys test?

Stephen van Vuuren
June 1st, 2006, 11:29 PM
What other cams did you guys test?

I did not do the test, just invited to see the footage. The also had filmout form the Z1 in 50i mode.

Paolo Ciccone
June 1st, 2006, 11:52 PM
Paolo, I've seen a little bit of the stuff you've done with virtual sets and your keys look fantastic. Any particular way you got around the blocking problems?
Hey Stephen, thank you. Believe it or not, I shot that first Vodcast pretty much improvising and with just "emergency lights". I'm putting together a proper light kit that should help. I'm mentioning this only to underline then fact that the screen was not properly lit, and I had a ton of spill on me.

The keys were pretty good but the stairstepping is defintely visible when you work on the footage. I used Ultra 2 for keying and dialed the "Soften Matte" a bit to remove the edge. Everything else was tweaked eldlessly, paying a lot of attention to color shift, brightness of the subject compared to the background etc. It's my first attempt at something that long all done in green screen so there a lot of room for improvement but at least it's watchable (or so I've been told ;))

Steve Mullen
June 2nd, 2006, 01:20 AM
Details were sharper and crisper for sure, but due to focus challenges of shooting with the HD-100U in the field, softness was issue at times due to slight out of focus, ... .

I'm seeing a many out of focus shots on network episodic HDTV. Looks like when shooting rapidly, even "pros" have a problem with focus when shooting CUs.

I'm now zooming out slightly after I think I've got focus on a CU -- adds just a bit of extra DOF that overcomes any focus error I may have made.

John Jackman
June 2nd, 2006, 10:48 PM
Hi, all --

Since I was the one behind both the footage and the filmout, let me jump in here:

1. There was no deinterlacing of the hd100 footage, it is native 720P. We did "smart" deinterlacing of the Z1u footage which does not lose rez but creates simulated motion blur.

2. Since I have the luxury of doing some of these test on someone else's dime, I thought the test was worth it - and indeed it was interesting. I intentionally included some "perfect" shots and some less than perfect shots in the mix to see how it held up -- and the green screen shots were done in a single pass, as most folks will do. Many times pro compositing must create a multi-layered key, at least core, edge and garbage, to get a truly clean key even with 4:4:4 footage. Having seen a bunch of filmout samples of low-budget video-originated films, the original material is often less than perfect.

The less-than-perfect video shots (underexposed and stretched in post) held up better than the Green screen shots. Just picked up grain/noise in dark areas. The green screen shots looked noticeably worse than on an HD projector.

You can do really pretty nice green/blue screen with HDV, much much better than DV - in fact, pretty near to many 4:2:2 cams. I have been able to pull pretty near perfect keys with Keylight (no uprez of chroma) for some shots or with PriMatte (good chroma uprez, though we turned it OFF for the shot Stephen saw). I recommend PriMatte over UltiMatte at this time for HDV.

3. The "soft focus shot" Stephen refers to was a long shot of a large pond with grass and trees, lots of detail. While it is true that pulling precise focus is tough with the cams (unless you have a true HD monitor along) we're doing some more testing on that, because it appears that the softened focus was the result of higher compression applied due to the amount of detail. Since HDV has a constant data rate, higher detail requires heavier compression. In DV's DCT schema, this results in "mosquito netting," but in MPEG2 it results in softening of the pic. I will be testing a direct-to-disk recorder in the next couple of weeks and we will do the same shot to compare.

In fact, this latter issue appears to me to be more of a critical issue than the lens -- unless you are doing all medium shots and closeups. Panoramic shots with lots of detail seem to be the downfall of the format no matter what the lens.

I have already suggested to the manufacturers that one of them needs to do the same thing Sony and Panny did with DV - come out with an HDV-Pro version that runs the tape faster and uses lower compression.

Stephan Ahonen
June 3rd, 2006, 12:12 AM
I have already suggested to the manufacturers that one of them needs to do the same thing Sony and Panny did with DV - come out with an HDV-Pro version that runs the tape faster and uses lower compression.

If we could get HDV on a DVCPRO cassette and run it at 50 mbps like DVCPRO 50, that would be perfect.

Tim Holtermann
June 3rd, 2006, 09:47 AM
Actually that is thinking backwards. I'm a big fan of tape for ease of storage and price but the future of hiqh quality recording is non-tape systems not running tape faster. That is part of the problem with this industry, we always try to cram new technology and formats into old habbits.

Think about it, right now we can take a stream out of the camera to a Hard Drive (portable and less than portable), why worry about some type of new compression running to faster tape when we can just use something like the Cineform Codec (10 bit even) to hard drive. The only thing missing is the processor to do the math on the fly. It's not hard to do, in fact the Silicone Imaging ("eve") camera is going to Cineform RAW.

I've been testing the CitiDisk HD drive with the HD100 and have been impressed that this HD is taking the firewire stream and saving it to files on a lap top drive and doing a little computing along the way to break up files, wrap them in a file format, etc. With just a bit more logic and computing power added to the box you could easily have this save out in a much better format than anything running to tape.

Ok, so I know the most important part of the puzzle. The cameras need to spit out raw data from the firewire port and not just to the component out otherwise we can only take the mp2 stream and convert it.

Paolo Ciccone
June 3rd, 2006, 09:52 AM
Ok, so I know the most important part of the puzzle. The cameras need to spit out raw data from the firewire port and not just to the component out otherwise we can only take the mp2 stream and convert it.
I'd like to see that but is FireWire 400 enough? FireWire 800 has been around for a while. It's commonly found on the Powerbook 17". Is *that* enough to output a stream of uncompressed images. I didn't do the math, can anybody, just for thee heck of it, verify the feasibility of this?

John Jackman
June 3rd, 2006, 12:46 PM
Actually that is thinking backwards.

While I agree that direct-to-disk is the future for quality work, this isn't thinking backwards, it's thinking realistically in the existing business model. This is a fix they manufacturers can accomplish without retooling or any new tech, in a single production cycle if they wish.

In the meantime, in a couple of weeks I will be testing the Wafian recorder to do just what you suggest -- although it ain't gonna work for run-n-gun docs, it would be fine for movie production work wher you are already toting lots of gear. But the proof is in the pudding, and a comparison of the exact same shot from HDV tape and Cineform 4:2:2 will tell the story.

Stephan Ahonen
June 3rd, 2006, 11:31 PM
There is an excellent reason I would rather keep recording to tapes. Hard drives and P2 are great when you're working on something in-house with the infrastructure to handle it, but hell when you're working with a new client every day as a freelancer, especially in the field. I can record something on a tape, give it to the client and all that's left is to collect my paycheck. Tapes are cheap, practically disposable. You buy a ton and put the ones you use on your invoice. The problem with P2 and hard drives in this sort of environment is that they need to stay with you, but the data contained on them needs to go with your client. It literally goes against the entire point of having a portable storage medium. You can talk about bringing a ton of firestores along or having the client provide their own P2 or hard drives (hoping they're compatible with your camera), but I just think that a tape is less hassle in the end.

Tim Holtermann
June 4th, 2006, 12:08 AM
With clients where you give away a tape at the end of day you really can't compare - I agree.

However, tape is just a medium, soon other forms of media will be just as easy to "give away" and this is what we want to work towards. Not only for their quick access (instant access) ability but the fact that we can stream high quality footage to these "new" mediums by just changing compression schemes. In other words once a piece of hardware has the ability to spit out data it's just a matter of changing software to get various formats, compression ratios, etc. Trying to do this the current DVCPRO or HDCAM way would mean changing the entire tape drive system, tape formula, construction, etc.

Just for fun I looked up an average price of DVCPRO Tape: $15.00 average for 60 min and HDCAM runs an average of $35.00 for 40min and $50.00 for 60min (large format tape). Assuming I was going to shoot 7 hours of footage It would cost me $105.00 for DVCPRO or $385 for HDCAM (11 40 min loads). Well that is about the number of hours of high quality "compressed" HD you can fit on a 80gig drive. Depending on what make or model, these can be had for $80-$150.

One of the things I love about the HD100 is that I can go to tape and Hard Drive at the same time. This gives me instand backup. In time though, I'll be ok with tapeless formats.

Stephan Ahonen
June 4th, 2006, 01:58 AM
Trying to do this the current DVCPRO or HDCAM way would mean changing the entire tape drive system, tape formula, construction, etc.


Tape is just magnetic media just like a hard drive, it's not limited to certain patterns of bits. Heck, just look at HDV, it uses a Mini-DV tape to record a bitstream that is completely unrelated to the DV format the tape was intended for.


Just for fun I looked up an average price of DVCPRO Tape: $15.00 average for 60 min and HDCAM runs an average of $35.00 for 40min and $50.00 for 60min (large format tape). Assuming I was going to shoot 7 hours of footage It would cost me $105.00 for DVCPRO or $385 for HDCAM (11 40 min loads). Well that is about the number of hours of high quality "compressed" HD you can fit on a 80gig drive. Depending on what make or model, these can be had for $80-$150.

Not a fair comparison at all. HDCAM is 144 Mbits/s, if you were recording HDCAM to your hard drive you would only get about 74 minutes of record time, and would need 6 drives totalling $480 to get the same capacity. DVCPRO HD at 100 Mbit/s would fit about 106 minutes in 80 GB, requiring 4 drives totalling $320. HDV at 25 Mbits/s does allow you to fit the full 7 hours on one 80 GB drive, but 11 Mini-DV tapes to record 7 hours of HDV runs you less than half the $80 you're spending on the hard drive.

To be fair, once you get the drives back to the studio you can archive them on 3.5" drives which are much cheaper per GB (about half the cost) than the laptop hard drives you see in these portable recorders.

Tim Holtermann
June 4th, 2006, 10:43 AM
If you want to be right, then be right. You are missing my point or just not seeing it in order to support your tape based opinion so I'll drop this silly argument (difference of opinion).

1. Tape can store anything, but if part of the storing process means having to change the tape speed, tape size, or tape forumlation then it's not just like a hard drive. Remember earlier in this thread it was suggested that we just slap a DVCPRO Tape in the HD100 and run it faster. That is not the solution to our HD100's or any other low cost camera to provide the quality recording we need.

2. I never suggested that we record DVCPRO HD or HDCAM to Hard Drive. There are plenty of compressed formats that will give you better than HDCAM quality and the 7 hours I was talking about. Take CineForm RAW for example: 10 Bit vs HDCAM 8 bit. Full image saved to 4:2:2 vs HDCAM 3:1:1. (To be fair I believe at 1920x1080P Cineform RAW will give you 4 hours on 160gb but lessen the rate a bit and you could easily fit more time plus keep quality high).

If you want to see Cineform RAW in action: http://indiefilmlive.blogspot.com/2006/05/and-some-more.html

Why should Sony push for you to record on to a simple Hard Drive when they can sell you HDCAM equipment, expensive HDCAM tape, entire HDCAM workflows, including 50K decks? It's time for a change, the major players are holding on to anchient worflows because they have huge roots here and they know it's a big businees for them. Why doesn't RED, SI, Arri D20, etc. record to tape?

And my simple point that seems to be lost is that you can give away a hard drive just as well as tape stock to your client at not much more cost. Here is what I would tell my clients "Here ya go, just plug this dirve in and start editing". Client "You mean, I don't have to take this over to Post House X and have them ingest it for me on that 50K deck which cost me X numbers per hour?" or "You mean I don't need that deck that I bough for 50K anymore? Well that's good because my heads were just about due for replacement".

Anyway, I hope you see my tongue and cheek humor here.

Charles Papert
June 4th, 2006, 01:55 PM
I'm seeing a many out of focus shots on network episodic HDTV. Looks like when shooting rapidly, even "pros" have a problem with focus when shooting CUs.

Absolutely, no question, especially with an HD camera that has a 35mm size sensor. I cannot begin to imagine how much soft material is going to be generated by the indie community when they get their hands on cameras such as RED etc. It will be a throwback to the music video look of 15 years ago or so when "hunting" for focus was all the rage--except this time it won't be a stylistic choice!

Case in point: I'm currently working with the Genesis and our first AC is a 30 year veteran focus puller who has a full arsenal of tools working--Panatape with remote readout, remote lens controls so he can sit to the side and triangulate the distance, 12" Astro monitor with magnification mode and peaking turned way up so he can see critical focus--and yet he is regular fed focus notes ("come just a pinch closer" "you're just a tad deep" etc) from the DP who is watching from the big CRT back at video village. And we are generally shooting between 2.8 and 4...!

The AC's contention is that for whatever reason, depth of field is just a bit less than expected vs 35mm, somewhere between spherical and anamorphic. We theorize that it may have something to do with the depth of the film emulsion vs the truly flat plane of the image sensor, i.e. the circle of confusion is "cheated" a bit more on film, but who knows for sure.

One reason that I can theorize that you are seeing more out-of-focus closeups on TV in general is that with the current HD cameras (except for the Dalsa and the D-20, neither of which is yet being used for any network shows as far as I know) the operator is not able to give much focus feedback to the 1st due to the electronic viewfinder vs the optical viewfinder that we are accustomed to. In a multiple camera situation, the DP may not be able to properly monitor both cameras and give them focus notes, so it's a bit of a crap shoot.