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I had to squint very hard to see the review amongst the advertorial at DPReview. Nice firmware updates and nice specs. Pity about the stuff Panasonic can do nothing about... - L-mount is a not such a popular mount compared to Sony E, Canon RF, Nikon Z and Fuji X / GFX, despite having been released 2nd after Sony - The price is wrong, it should be at the Z6 III level - The competition is really fierce and has a very big loyal user base eager for more - A7 V will outsell the S1 II massively and the EOS R6 Mark III specs are really competitive with not a cripple hammer in sight, Nikon with REDcode, Fuji with the best sensors - All the others have moved into Panasonic's video niche in a big way, so now Panasonic must stand apart without their biggest unique selling point (GH4 days are long gone) I don't wish ill to Panasonic but they have majorly fucked things up in the camera market and all those great specs and generous firmware updates won't save them It's all the marketing and planning team's fault, not the engineers. For the loyal ones, enjoy the S1 II and S1R II, they're great cameras even if they won't sell very many.
- Today
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Dpreview released their S1II review today, holding off on a gold rating solely due to the camera's price... Andrew isn't alone in his criticism of Panasonic. I was expecting to see the price come down a bit already. If the firmware truly resolved the overheating issues the camera was having, I think the only issue remaining is the poor H264/H265 output of the camera I've been reading about. And the lack of clarity on when / what the S1HII will be... Still, its becoming a more compelling package.
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Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
Chrad replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Director Lav Diaz has shot films on the GH3, GH5 and GH5s before. Occasionally when he has more funding or is chasing a particular aesthetic he works with 16mm film or a pro digital cinema camera. I had assumed this was one of those times, based on the international star and the generally stunning image. It's a wonderful and thought provoking film with some of the most memorable cinematic imagery of the year. The tech was more than capable in the right hands. -
Ninpo33 reacted to a post in a topic:
Panasonic Lumix S1R Mark II coming soon
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Ninpo33 reacted to a post in a topic:
Panasonic Lumix S1R Mark II coming soon
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Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
newfoundmass replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
I think it CAN be the most important choice for SOME films, but for MOST films, I genuinely think it matters less now than ever before. I'm not going to say that the ARRI Alexis 35 doesn't have a place and that everything can just be shot on a GH7 or FX3, because that's not true at all either. But how many of them could have been shot on something else and not been any worse for the wear? One of my favorite films of the year is "The Long Walk." It's shot on the ARRI Alexa 35 with Panavision anamorphics (just like the much uglier "Terrifier 3" I mentioned in a previous post!) and looks very good. But if you had switched that ARRI Alexa out for something else, I don't think it'd have had any impact on the film because the acting and story was that good and was what stood out the most about the film. That's not a reason to NOT to film with an ARRI, but it's an example of how less important it is today than ever before. "28 Years Later" is one of the highest grossing films of the year and was shot on an iPhone. Can anyone honestly say that it would've been more successful, financially or artistically, if it'd been shot on an ARRI? Probably not. Conversely, you can't really say that "The Conjuring: Last Rites" would have been less successful if it had been shot on something other than an ARRI, say a PYXIS or lower end Sony. -
Repairing mirrorless cameras - the truth about each brand's build quality
Ninpo33 replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Hey Andrew, how about this one? Would be quite the deal if it could be fixed. Camera is about an hour from me so I am tempted to experiment. Otherwise an expensive paperweight. Salt water damage is probably up there with one of the worst things to do dona camera. - Yesterday
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andrgl reacted to a post in a topic:
Nikon Zr is coming
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andrgl reacted to a post in a topic:
Nikon Zr is coming
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andrgl reacted to a post in a topic:
Nikon Zr is coming
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andrgl reacted to a post in a topic:
Nikon Zr is coming
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John Matthews reacted to a post in a topic:
Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
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John Matthews reacted to a post in a topic:
Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
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John Matthews reacted to a post in a topic:
Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
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John Matthews reacted to a post in a topic:
Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
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Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
EduPortas replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
I'd lime to know why the GH7 was used for this particular movie/documentary. Practical reasons regarding size? Cost? Absolute technical image quality? We just don't know. I also think camera choice is the most important reason any creator is going to make, aside from script. If the piece doesn't look right no one will watch it, even if it's Citizen Kane Part Deux. That's why some Hollywood creative trios are almost set in stone: director-writer-photographer. If I go to an IMAX I expect to see something spectacular. If I go to the cinema for an indie doc, my expectation changes. If I turn on my TV and watch channel 6 I pretty much expect soap opera visuals. -
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GH5 GH4 EM10iii OM-1 5Dii XPRO2 XT-5 P1100 DSC-RX10 iPhone15 iPhone12 Xiaomi12 Ultra DJI Mavic Pro GoPro Hero All those different cameras were used to make our latest indy documentary on-and-off over the last 3 years. We finally finished post-production (for real this time) last month. Not to mention all the different ridiculous vintage lenses and modern lenses employed along the way. So that happened. My advice? Yeah, don't use so many cameras...and then try to make all that cohere somehow with no legitimate color grading skills... Surprisingly, I found the EM10iii footage the most pleasant looking color-wise when exposed correctly.
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Hi guys I got good deal on this Isco pre 36 I have few prime lenses I can use my questions is hand be the best way to mount this lens to taking lens do I need clamp I hear I can use step up rings what would be best option Thansk
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Alt Shoo started following Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
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Amazing feature-film Magellan is shot on the Panasonic GH7
Alt Shoo replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
I think people are mistaking pretty with good cinematography. Thereās good cinematography and thereās bad cinematography, and then thereās cinematography thatās right for the movie. In this case it looks right for the movie. -
And when he also did a test of standard Vlog vs Arri log, the standard Vlog looked a lot better to me. Someone else and I forget who now (but it was someone UK) also did a side by side between the S1II and S1RII and all though he made a case that the S1II was better, about 90% of the comments including myself, disagreed. I was playing with building a new custom non-log profile based on a download from LUMIX Lab, but heavy rain has stopped play š Agree as it stays on and there is less risk of touching the glass and getting fingerprints on it or having to put it somewhere safe every time. I also had mine flip down rather than up as it looked less crap. I might go back to it now I back to primarily shooting one video designated unit as I could make a VND work better with that, but as above, was working on a non-log profile with an ISO of just 80 which in most scenarios, would remove any need for ND. But ground to a halt thanks to the crap UK weather...
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This is Z6iii, but maybe Sony cameras have similar IC for boot.
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I have the flip VND. Very happy with it. For years I used magnetic VNDs but the flip is miles better. If Iām indoors and using flash I just take it off. I had loads more photos that were keepers! I feel so much more confident in the AF, especially with flash, as the camera is just quicker. I sometimes found Iād be a split second behind with the S5ii which meant I had more shots out of focus or with the subject pulling a funny face. Very happy so far. Letās see how today goes.
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When S1RII came out I played also with the files Connor Maccaskill provided and they did look nice and cleaner compared to S5II footage I had captured during previous year or two. Still, as I already had my foot firmly in the Nikon Raw camp, did not want to pay the difference to change back to Panasonic.
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Something else I forgot to say was the difference between the S5II/S9 video and the S1RII is how clean/nicer the latter is. Working with all 3 on the same timeline, especially with lower light stuff, itās very clear which is which because the S5II/S9 footage whilst not muddy, seems muddy when compared with that coming from the S1RII. This is partly why I have moved the S9 into a very limited secondary role where along with the S5II, they will be responsible for pretty much just 3 scenarios resulting in 3 pieces of footage, albeit in the case of the S5II, that means full length wedding ceremony and full length speeches. Anyone using these cameras together will probably confirm the same difference.
- Last week
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That ability to flip between stills and video is greatā¦as long as you either: A. Donāt mind using an ND for stills. Personally I do mind. B. Or donāt mind cranking the shutter for video. Personally I donāt mind and last 3 weddings I shot with zero ND and did not notice any difference to the quality of the video other than the image quality was better than the previous 3 jobs shot with a VND. C. Or use a flip up or magnetic filter and I have tried both and didnāt care for either. I think one of the beauties of shooting video with the S1RII is base 200 ISO in log (and 160 with ARRI log C but personally think Vlog looks better most of the time bit could make a better base if also baking in a LUT) meaning less requirement for using ND anyway. I have however decided to go back to having separate bodies for stills and video because it just works better for me, with less kit, more range, near zero lens swaps. On that basis, I currently have one of my S1RIIās dedicated to stills with the 28-70 with hybrid zoom (28-105 and still achieving 18mp stills at the long end) enabled for outdoor use, with the 35mm f1.8 as my low-light indoor option. The second S1RII I bought used came with the Arri Log preinstalled and I have this one paired with the 17-40 crop lens (and with EIS enabled itās giving me a FF equivalent range of approx 28-66) as my dedicated run & gun video unit, with 18mm f1.8 as my wide angle FF option, especially for indoor low light, tighter scenarios. S9 has had a stay of execution and I have welded the 85mm f1.8 to it and mounted it on a lightweight tripod as my sniper video unit, plus is serves as a back up to any or all of my 3 main cams. The 3rd main cam being the same S5II workhorse with the 70-200 f4 on heavy tripod for all my static and long form capture stuff. I also have the 50mm f1.8 in reserve for it for tighter, lower light, indoor scenarios, so all bases as covered as they can be. But going back to the video/stills settings, being able to have I think 9 dedicated stills settings and 9 video at the turn of a single dial is fantastic. I only have 4 settings set up and these are; outdoor landscape, outdoor people, indoor lower light and indoor/outdoor extreme low light as in after dark, each with appropriate ISO ranges and WB etc. Itās crazy really how good this kit now is and the S1RII might not be my favourite camera of all time, but it is easily the most capable and zero complaints other than yes, I would have preferred the more rangefinderesque body style (and hope Panny makes one or at least a Leica Q3 43 rival) and average at best battery life. And obviously, the 4ā screen a la ZR would be very welcome, but Iād personally want it with the S1RII style mech and not flipped out to the side. Iād prefer just tilt even to flip out to the side! Best video quality I have had out of a camera and itās pretty robust with equal image quality to the best I have ever had which was Sony A7RV. As a pure stills camera, I think the A7RV does still have the edge being honest, but itās a narrow margin and as a hybrid, the LUMIX comfortably tops it. Not updated the firmware yet but that was very welcome. I hope your shoot goes as well tomorrow.
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The mysteriously failing Sony mirrorless cameras
Andrew Reid replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Must not be true then! -
And your prediction is correct! A huge difference in responsiveness in general and so much easier to use when switching between video and photo. I felt it worked a lot better with my Godox flash as well (Iām still pretty new to flash). I feel I have way more ākeepersā. The screen and evf are great. I had it on for 5 hours pretty much non stop with no problem although it was probably only about 20 degrees in the venue. Tomorrow I have another similar event (video and photo) and on Saturday anther event with photos only. I think they are going to be a lot easier to manage than they would have been with the S5ii. I would probably have had 2 S5iis, 1for doing photo and 1 for video. Now I can do the same with one camera!
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Pretty sure pre-recording does not cover a minute or two longer periods and it probably needs someone to press the shutter or record button before action starts. Nikon has this auto capture, that would be a better solution if it works reliably and starts when subject enters the frame as configured in the settings and stops too. Still, in certain sports you need to start the camera well before execution, and not worry what it is doing, if you want to be able to perform.
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The screen is the gateway drug. I am much weaker than @BTM_Pix and after handling one briefly for 15 minutes ordered it 3 days later. It's coming tomorrow. I'm not bothered by the "lackluster" DR results or anything. I also bought it in hopes the firmware updates will add even more value, which is a big no-no but I heard ProRes LT is confirmed coming.
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Or you have pre-recording š
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Maybe, but if you happen to shoot a lot outside during nice sunset light and with a beautiful view behind where the action happens why on earth would you shoot only h.265, especially with the ZR, if you can shoot R3D NE or Nraw and be happy about the small IQ and ease of color grading improvements. This shooting being just a hobby to me that I can combine with other hobbies even small IQ improvements are worth it, if it makes you spend more time with the hobbies and be happier what you manage to capture. With Panaās over sharpened h.265 it became more like set the camera and forget, and I had not that much interest chenking the captured footage nor edit it. But you do what suits you the best.
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A compressed format seems a lot more appropriate for that use case than raw.
