Oliver Daniel Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 I think raw is awesome and that a lot of the negativity towards raw is that feeling of climbing a mountain. As a GH3 owner, I'll be likely hobbying it out with The Pocket Cinema Camera, and I'll probably roll out a few 'money shots' first on some of my projects. The use of the GH3 for now means I can hit my fast turnaround on music videos, which is usually literally days. Image quality matters and I think this development from ML will hopefully bring these features and more into cameras like DSLRs properly very soon. Canon behave strangely! They could totally dominate the market and choose not to. Oh well. Maybe Panasonic will finally release an FS700 competitor with a lovely RAW codec. (what on earth are they doing?) We shall see! HurtinMinorKey 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 Danny Boyle's crew ran around slums of Mumbai with cams tethered to macbooks running Windows XPs wrapped in actual ice packs that had to be constantly changed because they were...melting. Whiners would say that's a retarded and unprofessional workflow. Winners are too busy gunning for their next Oscar. :D This philosophy is much more interesting to me, than the mundane practicalities of workaday filmmaking, where reliability is a priority and the image just has to be 'good enough'. Give me melting image processors any day. JG yeah Red Code is awesome. Very flexible for many people. OzNimbus 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 As a GH3 owner, I'll be likely hobbying it out with The Pocket Cinema Camera, and I'll probably roll out a few 'money shots' first on some of my projects. The use of the GH3 for now means I can hit my fast turnaround on music videos, which is usually literally days. Cool. Sometimes we need a fast turnaround. Sometimes we need raw. It isn't that one is better than the other or visa versa... Aside from the image quality where the situation at the moment between DSLR compressed and DSLR raw is massive. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 And JAFOs equate that to this. All valid points you make Sean. I don't mind what people shoot with raw - cats, dogs, whatever. As long as I have access to it on the 5D Mark III that's all that matters. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruno Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Would a hobbyist/enthusiast be able to access this type of technology. I don't bpmean literally. I've been considering the gh3 but if I could us my MacBook Pro and get raw files easily converted to prores without blowing up my cf card or MacBook I'd go 5d3.. Thoughts? If you just want prores you could do that with any camera that outputs clean hdmi and some external prores recorder like the hyperdeck, but because of the way they've been processing those 'clean' hdmi signals, the quality is not the same as generating a prores file from a raw one. You can't do that at the moment with the 5D3 or any other DSLR I know of, would be great if they could redirect that raw feed to an external hard drive via usb or to a field recorder via hdmi, and seriously, at this point everything might be possible... In the Slumdog Millionaire example, they were using a SI2K camera, which is a small 2k raw camera brain, and it is meant to be used like that, or with any other field recording solution, it wasn't really a hack. Using ice on "burning" batteries under severe weather conditions is also more common than you'd think :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oscar M. Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Not sure what you mean by this. It already is an industry standard for semi to big budget. As far as pro-sumer/hobbyist I think the goal will be to have options and efficiency. No way that compressed video is going away for that market anytime soon. I should clarify. RAW Video support for video should be as common as 1080p video is across most cameras today. The fact that ML has had to painstakingly figure out on their own how to bypass the limitations imposed by Canon tells a lot about the state of RAW video support in most Cameras today. If you're not a Philip Bloom, you cannot afford to shoot RAW. I believe ML changes all that, but not only that, any manufacturer not incorporating some kind of RAW option in their new Camera models might as well throw in the towel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sugartown Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Whiners would say that's a retarded and unprofessional workflow. Winners are too busy gunning for their next Oscar. :D Is it really whiners or winners? If you want to handicap yourself for a cutting edge workflow, go for it. If you need that to do good work, or it's the only tool available, go for it. There will always be that one nut making his life difficult to create their art. Cool. If you want to really shoot, with your mind on the subject, and not some intrussive process, you are doing it wrong. It will be more expensive in the end. It will take you more time to create. ....And more to the point, you can't take a fully edited Sigur Ros video and think "this camera's limitations are ideal for music videos", when they clearly shot in long takes. The results are all that matters. There is no wrong or right here, but for practical spec purposes, capture limits are a dealbreaker for most forms of production, of any budget or style. Especially commisioned work, or collaborative work. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oscar M. Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 I'm still stunned that it's taken so long for people to understand the benefits of raw for video. Especially people who were calling for 4K, before raw. But you are probably right, I think that raw will be standard on the >$3K prosumer models that come out in the years to come. I pretty sure this whole 5d raw hack was green-lighted by Canon. Japanese companies love is survey data, and I'm sure it's been telling them that Black Magic was about to eat their lunch. There's definitely more value in RAW than in 4K. Especially for post processing, I have had dreams about having the same flexibility that a stills photographer have with their workflows. When you think about, film very much afforded the same flexibility and value for both photography and video, but things are very different with digital. Unless Canon comes out and blasts ML for the latest hack, I will be inclined to think that at the very least they were enablers and allowed the firmware to be hackable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JHines Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 I've never seen so much test footage of trees, shrubs and flowers in my life with all of these 5D3 raw clips being uploaded online. I appreciate seeing the quality of the footage but let's try to shoot some landscape wides of a lake, highway, city line, or something besides closeups of the bush in your backyard.... lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sugartown Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Give me melting image processors any day. You're a talented shooter, but this reads like the equivalent of an adrenaline junkie looking for their next fix. It's why you turn up great work, in the context of this blog. The goal is to have control over your shooting, and tools that aid your work, not work that showcases the tools. You mentioned the case of an artist playing a weird insrument in Japan.... Are the musical pieces 49 seconds too? Otherwise you can't cover it properly with this camera shooting RAW (thus far). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 For the impatient ones wanting Spartacus shot in raw on the 5D Mark III whilst the code is still being developed on a nightly basis, and for those wanting Hitchcock Rope style continuous takes. JUST WAIT andy lee, Julian and nahua 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
christoph van der bij Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Just became a member because I have a stupid question: Where do I download the darn ML software? Just spend a fortune on transcend cards and I'm ready to roll! And another question: why is everyone so insecure about the difference between a bmcc and a canon? Did you ever try working in Davinci? Just toss your canon or whatbrand recordings in any editor and enjoy the fun of creating footage. Compressed, uncompressed, who cares? Go out and create. (Or film leaves blowing in the wind) Interesting, or sure. Thanks for letting me know the download option or this ML stuff. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Julian Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Nice 5D3 raw video: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oliver Daniel Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Cool. Sometimes we need a fast turnaround. Sometimes we need raw. It isn't that one is better than the other or visa versa... Aside from the image quality where the situation at the moment between DSLR compressed and DSLR raw is massive. The benefits of raw are obvious. As long as there is time/money to take on raw for a project I would definitely do it, such as a short film script I'm really passionate about. It would have to be done in the best possible quality I can get my hands on. Due to the pacing/workload of my environment I dont stand a chance right now. Thats why I wait eagerly for better options in the actual cameras we shoot with. In the meantime, I'll keep on shooting and spend the time posting on this forum on the Pocket Cam. See what happens. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markm Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 I said earlier the image was soft. My stupid mistake I didn't have HD on. The picture in the above video is very very nice. Julian 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oscar M. Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Is there any chance to see 30fps footage test? At any res... You'll probably have to wait for CF speeds to increase. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oscar M. Posted May 16, 2013 Share Posted May 16, 2013 Totally agree. Let's get one thing straight though, this is huge, this is amazing and the difference in quality is just unbelievable, and the way it's been going, I wouldn't be surprised if they sort out the 40 seconds limitation within the hour, but yeah, 40 seconds is a MASSIVE limitation for any kind of narrative, fiction or documentary, and anyone who claims otherwise can't know what they're talking about. You can find a million films without a single 40 second long shot, but probably none of those shots comes from takes shorter than a few minutes. Tell an actor they have 40 seconds to get it right and good luck getting a good performance out of them... I'm very excited at the possibilities this hack currently presents, I wouldn't be excited about using it as it stands. Some things haven't been answered yet either, I keep hearing that the camera is also doing less work since the raw feed is always happening anyway, but CF recording alone is enough to heat up the camera, and some people did say the camera heats up much more than usual when recording raw video, would anyone care to compare? Also, what about compressing that raw video to h264 in camera with decent h264 transcoding? Transcoding those raw files to h264 gives us much better results than the camera's own h264, so maybe they could override that and give us higher quality smaller files and longer recording times? Obviously Prores would be awesome, but that would probably not be possible, whereas with h264, perhaps the camera already has some sort of hardware optimization. Most of the footage I've seen also appears to stutter every now and then. Are we getting a steady 24fps or is it not accurate yet? For the Music video shooters it might be just enough. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 You can do 30p at 1920x720 currently, on 1000x cards. Within the max data rate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted May 16, 2013 Author Administrators Share Posted May 16, 2013 For the Music video shooters it might be just enough. I don't really think there's any use in trying to pigeon hole shooters into the 40 sec clip length genre, though I see what you're saying and it makes sense in a way. I asked A1ex about this today. He says file spanning is doable to overcome this, but it isn't yet top of their list of priorities. It is coming please just be patient. nahua 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JHines Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 "the obsession of this whole 5dmk3 raw hack is just nuts. Please just calm down and go and shoot something instead please! ;)" - Philip Bloom The Canon video-dslr community has been starved for better image-quality through almost 3 generations of Canon bodies. This ML raw has pushed the progress of the image far beyond what the incremental 5D3 generation of crippled cameras by Canon has brought to the market. It's nothing short of astounding. Not sure why he's so surprised as he's been quoted - "If you have never shot raw, you don’t know just how much of a giant leap it makes compared to compressed codecs." - Philip Bloom - It's amazing how bad the 5D3 footage looks with its stock H.264 footage compared to the raw. I honestly can't believe Canon didn't cripple the video image-quality to keep a bigger distinction between the dslr range and its cinema line. When Canon announced their $20,000 C300, I knew shit had hit the fan. Will Canon step up? Probably not. The BMC4k is a step in the right direction, so I hope more companies will take a chance on pushing progress and join them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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