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JazzBox

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Posts posted by JazzBox

  1. You know what. It totally depends. Strictly speaking, you would need permission. If it's a well known brand (medicine) and you are showing it in bad light then they could object. Also depends on which country you are in and where you intend to show the short.

    ​Thank you! :)

    It's not real a bad light: it's some scene we need to shoot in order to show the character's life, that is a 40 years old man a little depressed and very rock&roll.... :)
    Of course it is not bad in our intentions but I asked because it's better to change a little the screenplay then paying some lawyers ;)

  2. Ciao! 
    I have an idea for a web series: I read some books ("How to Write a Movie in 21 Days", "Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting" etc...), but all talk about a feature film.

    I'm planning a series of 6 episodes of 5 minutes each: do you think it is better to follow the 3 act structure in each episode? I was thinking also to divide this structure in 6 episodes, but probably it would be boring, because every episode needs a climax and an ending... 

    I have the subject, I wrote all the (few) characters, but I don't know how to make each episode self-sufficient and still to narrate a whole story trhough all 6 episodes.  

    How would you write for a series? 

    Thank you very much!

  3. In Italy you virtually need permits for anythings, but - unless you are too visible with an huge rig, bug crew and 120 actors in historic costumes - none will notice you and you can always say that you are very good with VFX, CGI etc... :)

  4. Some like the Olympus 12mm F2.0 have a mechanical mode, you pull back the focus ring to engage the gears.

    A linear focus travel is something mirrorless manufacturers really need to start giving us, as a menu option.

    And on future high end lenses they should also consider a switch which engages hard stops when in linear focus travel mode.

    The current non-linear fly by wire system that's become so common is total nonsense really. Should never have been designed that way.

    ​I have that lens: it is really amazing (fast, sharp, great image quality, super straight etc...) but in the mechanical mode has an issue that I really don't like: if you pull the focus very slowly you see your image shifting focus in micro steps. It's very annoying :(

    I returned to the shop and try 3 other identical lens and I had the same results. I hope they could resolve it in a future firmware update, because it's a quite expensive lens... and I'd like to use it in the mechanical mode.

    Anyway, I use it in manual focus in the standard (endless) way, because in that way it has not micro steps.

    Apart that it is one of my favorite lens and I use it a lot. Just don't use it with a follow focus or gears, because it's a waste of money. 

  5. It will be funny to see what Panasonic, Sony, Samsung, Blackmagic etc... will offer the day Canon will decide to give to their sub-5000$-users a decent EVF, focus peaking, zebra, a great codec, 50 to 96 1080p, decent battery life, 4K, easy connectivity to tablet/phones etc... 

    For the moment, in my small town, 3 Canon enthusiasts filmmakers (not counting me) switched to MFT, one switched to Blackmagic and one remained with Canon, of course using ML's raw. 
    Of course I'm not saying that if you have a Canon you should throw it away, but people that have to buy a new camera surely have some better options.

    I think Canon should pay lots of dollars to Magic Lantern guys, that seems the only real reason to shoot video with Canon. 

  6. Magic Lantern is the only reason that is keeping me working with the 5d  at the moment, I enjoy fiddling with raw, although is tiring and takes a lot of space, but the results are still worth it.

    I really like the way ML opens up possibilities on Canon, even if it is not very comfortable to work with in situation where you are in hurry: 5D MkIII's RAW is probably one of the best image quality under 5000$, but - apart I prefer a more S35like look - it's too tricky for me to work with ML. 
     

    What I dislike about Canon's philosophy is the way they pretend not to know what ML can do on their cameras. 

    They clearly consider their DSLR just photo camera and want you buy a 10.000$ device for video. 
    It's offending, because they started a revolution and now they act as they did not know it: â€‹it does bother me their way to ignore how 95% of people work today. Just that :)

  7. maybe you should see this clip too, I think it's ok, don't you? I like it.

    I think that in the right hands any camera can be a good weapon.

    Ciao! ;)

    I like it! 
    But I prefer to work with Panasonic G6 over a 5D MkIII 95% of the times. It's a matter of taste, of course there is not a perfect camera that fit all works. 
    Last week I worked with a Canon 60D because the DOP that called me has that and did not want to use my camera. Other times I worked with a 5DMkII and MkIII, I had a T3i and a 70D...
    I admit I like Canon's menu better then Panasonic, but I like Panasonic image better then Canon because it's sharper and 60p in 1080 is something I use often.
    With Panasonic I have a better quality in handheld shots thanks to the smaller body, I can use lot of lenses (FD are superb)... I have the EVF and the focus peaking... it's something I cannot work without.
     

  8. Canon are just good enough for the 'masses' - we are specialist camera nerds on this forum and have found all the better alternatives to Canon and how to squeeze every last drop out of them quality wise.

     

    People still walk into camera stores and online retailers and just buy a Canon because it has the brand reputation and changing ' the masses' to even think Panasonic or Sony let alone Samsung will still take time.

     

    We are all believers - the masses have to still follow us!

     

    There are still alot of Canon users on here who will not touch a mirrorless camera with an evf.

    Exactly Andy! It's just crazy! I'm so happy with my G6, but lot of bands asked me: "Hey, why you don't use a 7D or a 5D?", then I show them some clips I made with Canon and some clips I made with Panasonic... and they instantly know why G6 is better! Not to talk about GH4! ;)

  9. Probably the smallest possible with MFT mount that allows me to use the old lenses I love.
    Maybe a future, super-cheap Panasonic G "6+" that could have internal stabilization, 120 fps in 1080, V-Log profile and internal ProRes recording :) Maybe 2.5k, because for the moment I'm not so much involved in the 4k thing, even if I have (and love) a GH4.

    But G6 is always in my pocket and in my heart ;)
     

  10. I had a T3i and I changed it for a 70D. Same image quality.

    I didn't know EOSHD: then I read an Andrew's article about the G6, I bought it and IMMEDIATELY I knew that it was sooooo better then the Canon! 
    Why? 60p for slow motion, focus peaking, freedom to use old Canon lenses (and all the lenses you want) that you can't use on new Canon cameras. 

    After a week I sold all my Canon stuff, I bought some old Canon FD lenses and I had all the features I expected from my Canon. Funny that with 7DII those feature still miss!

    If you don't want to sell the T3i for a G6 (of for a GH4) just take it and don't "upgrade" to the 70D, because it's not an upgrade.

    p.s.: here Andrew's article: http://www.eoshd.com/2013/07/panasonic-g6-review-the-gh2-redux/

  11. You must have very low confidence in your own ability to come out with this stuff.

    My clients don't come to me because of my secret tools. They come to me because I put much emphasis into the ideas and for my very stylised, visual style. They come to me for MY vision and how I apply that vision. My tool selection is just an ingredient of that vision.

    People who work with me share information, talk to each other, borrow stuff, debate, exchange skills, ask for advice - because we are collaborators who have strengths and weaknesses, and we help each other to make better stuff. This is simple, basic networking - you never know who you will need in future!

    I have no issues writing a blog post telling the whole wide world of amateurs and professionals about my entire music video production structure - from style to logistics. I'll be happy sharing because they will never have the same vision as me, and most importantly they may have something to share too which I can learn from and apply.

    The secret sauce is your very self. Your ideas, your style, your personality, your skill, your results - it is this that clients buy. Have confidence in this and what everyone else is doing doesn't matter.

    If nobody shared, nobody cared ;)

    100% agree with you!

  12. Stab, the same is for music: people buy a 50$ mic, a 200 $ PC, download an unstable, cracked version of a recording software and start to call themselves "mixing engineer", "producer" or "artist".

    But I'm not minimally worried about them: as a long time musician with more then 10 years in recording (first as musician, then as recording engineer) I just think that they have a different "target" from mine. Let them have fun! Let them have some cash for their holidays!

    I mean, come on... I'm not Quincy Jones or Chris Lord Alge (neither Tony Maserati), I have a lot to LEARN FROM other people, but I have some dozens album recorded and mixed for national and international labels, so why would I care about some bedroom warriors? 
    I'm sure that some of them, if persist, in some years will be stellar artists and possibly will produce some great music I will enjoy...

    But they are not stealing my clients, even if I help them with some advice about a compressor that make the same work of an 1176 for 1/3 the price... 

    It's not the gear, it's years and years of experience (and talent!) that make the differences! 
    Trust yourself, work hard, be curious and share your experience with people that love your same things: this is the life, you will be happier! All other things are a waste of time.

     

  13. what about this? this was your thread, right? 

    '?do=embed' frameborder='0' data-embedContent>>

    was this videoish too? a bit of respect :D come on!!!! I  own the bloody 5D, I wish I never did now, after all this, I like cinematic look.

    I got it all wrong then! :angry:

    Hang on a minute, but I use anamorphic adapters, that should give me more cinematic look :rolleyes:

    Am i right? I am settled, I don't need to buy another camera, maybe. :huh:

    Yes, of course it is me! I love that movie, exactly because for me it is a great example of cinematography.  Joshua Caldwell made a great movie because he wrote a great story, he choose good actors, he made great compositions, great editing, great colors... and the DOF in his movie is always appropriate, it is never too shallow.

    I'm sorry If I gave an answer a little bit too strong to hmcindie, but  I did not like the way he wrote me: I wrote something about the way MOST of the people (not all, obviously) use the full frame and I think that this way it is not very cinematic, it is simple too shallow for my taste and I can easily spot a 5D video when I see an extreme DOF, just that! 

    It is the same when I see an exaggerate fisheye and I think: "it has to be a GoPro", because it is something very stylized.

    Maybe it is good for something, but when I watch an Hollywood movie I can see the eyes of an actor, and probably also the ears. In a lot of music video made with the 5D I can just see one eye and not the second, because it's out of focus, like the ears.

    But it has not that much to do with Canon 5D, it has to do with the shooter: with full frame you have to stop down the lens a little more then with APS-C. 
    Of course great filmmaker do that and Joshua Caldwell did that, so his movie has a great photography. 

    But a lot of people just don't do that: they know that 5D is a great low light camera, it has the possibility to give a shallow DOF and I think they became lazy about putting a light on the set and stopping down a little... maybe with A7s someone will start to make movies in absolute night without a single light, but it does not depend from the camera, it depends from a lazy choice of the shooter.

    Of course there is not a perfect camera that fit all situations and 5D is nonetheless a great camera: 5D with Magic Lantern is probably one of the best image quality for a budget filmmaker, but a good movie come from a lot of things, not just from a low light monster or from an exaggerate DOF. 

    Ciao :)
     

  14. Hollywood also has loads of budget and crews, are you gonna try to replicate them in everything you do, or do it your own way?

     

    Besides, a 50mm f1.2 isn't even that extreme of DoF or am I just a crazy good focus puller? I get it that with film it's crazy but nowadays we can see so easily what we are shooting and where the focus is with focus assist monitors that it isn't even that difficult or crazy.

     

    I've been doing Brenizer style photoshoots to even get mooore blurry blurs than the 200mm f2.8 gives me with the 5d so you can always have a bigger sensor. Complaints like that always sound to me like someone just saw a shitty homevideo with the 5d (completely ignoring all the shitty homevideos with m4/3 sensors) and then thinking the shittyness is because of the dof.

     

    Are you gonna throw your dolly in the bin if you see a shortfilm with nothing but shitty dollyshots?

    Hey, I'm talking about "look", not certanly difficult of pulling focus.

    I simply don't like the extreme  - unusable for my humble taste, and for the most of Hollywood big boys - look of a razor shallow DOF, because is something that clearly come from a  5D (or from a generic FF camera). 

    Cinema is 99% made with Super 35, so what's your point? I don't like to use words like "shitty", but I can easily spot a "shitty" 5D VIDEO LOOK from 10 miles. 

    And m43 looks more cinematic because the sensor's dimensions are a lot closer to Super 35 than Full Frame. In cinema the supershallow does not exist. 

    I don't try to replicate anything, I just saw a lot of movies and, i.e. "Dallas Buyers Club" is shot handheld (no tripod, no crane, no slider), with just practical lights and a minimal crew in just 25 days. 

    Is it "cinematic" or is it "shitty"? 

    A super shallow DOF it's not automatically "cinema": it is often an alibi to be a lazy cinematographer. 

    I think that "cinema" is a little more than shallow DOF. Just that! :)

  15. I had a very similar setup (G6 and an Olympus 9-18), but it all depends for the "look" you are after. 

    7-14 (and 9-18) gives you a very wide image. You could need a 20 or 25 mm (that becomes 40 - 50mm in m43) for "normal" shots and a 42.5 (or 45 or 50) for close up and portraits. 

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