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Chris Lee

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Posts posted by Chris Lee

  1. Try a fog filter, combined with a bright sky surrounded by dark borders / shapes (trees in this case) in order to see the halation intrude into the dark areas. A bright window in a dark room would be another version of that look.

     

    Thank you, David.

     

    Following along with the image and movies: Magnum and Long Goodbye, I'm wondering if Fuji Eterna 250D is ok to shoot with a polarizer in a West Coast setting? Would I be better off using 160t? I am worried about overexposure...

  2. http://www.drivehard.net/pirates/etc/pi/GE/location_image_hq/7.22_6.04_2.jpg

     

    Yes, it's Magnum PI. What are the camera setups going on here? It reminds me of the beach scenes from The Long Goodbye, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, and the farm scenes from Superman.

     

    Diffusion/low-con filters? How does one replicate (in 16mm) that soft, slightly obscuring blur? Is it from too strong a sun?

     

    What would be a recommended film stock? Exposure?

  3. http://www.drivehard...7.22_6.04_2.jpg

     

    Yes, it's Magnum PI. What are the camera setups going on here? It reminds me of the beach scenes from The Long Goodbye, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, and the farm scenes from Superman.

     

    Diffusion/low-con filters? How does one replicate (in 16mm) that soft, slightly obscuring blur? Is it from too strong a sun?

     

    What would be a recommended film stock? Exposure?

  4. Looks like the Arri brace that came with 35mm 2c's and probably 16mm Arri S's.

     

    Not sure what the official name for it would be. It's a very simple piece of gear. It sat on your upper thigh.

     

    With all the DSLR rigs out there, you can probably create a rig that will give you ENG type shoulder mount even for a Scoopic although it will be trick to get it low enough to look through the view finder. Check out Zacuto, they could design something that will work. Will be more expensive than your camera but it would work great.

     

     

    Thanks, Will. DSLR rig sounds handy as I could probably switch it out with any other camcorder.

  5. Got a Canon Scoopic that's more of a handheld - too small for it to be placed on a shoulder for steady support.

     

    Found some examples of a "body mount" in Full Metal Jacket. What exactly are these called?

    http://imgur.com/a/L9gLG

     

    Will these allow a handheld camera to function like a shoulder-support camera: Walking around will have the walking movement, but steady from handshaking.

  6. Thanks for the suggestions, John. The project will be a mix of exterior, interiors, and mostly shaded areas. I'm doing the cheap budget thing where I've decided to just purchase tungsten so I don't have to worry too much about switching stocks from scene to scene. I also just came across Alonzo's Farewell My Lovely which is sort of an in-between Chinatown and The Long Goodbye.

  7. I'm considering using the 400t stock from Fuji for a short 16mm project, going for a 'Long Goodbye / Chinatown' 50s pastel, California coast sort of look.

     

    I'll be using an 85 filter + ND 4x for sunny, blue sky scenes, which would get me at 64asa.

     

    I've read through archives and it seems to be a stock most are satisfied with, however, I did note that the previous version (around 2004) resulted in a grainier image for 16mm.

     

    Just wanted to know if there's any recent usage of the stock for 16mm. How does it do outdoors/indoors? Night exterior?

  8. In Full Metal Jacket, the 'Vietnam: The Movie' sequence, the cameraman has a small rig attached to his camera he uses that presses against his shoulder and his waist:

     

    http://postimage.org/image/pp0sd2pw/

    http://postimage.org/image/pp921t6s/

    http://postimage.org/image/ponk2aro/

    http://postimage.org/image/ppe0nuo4/

     

    What's this called?

     

    I've got a Scoopic so it can't rest against the shoulder.

     

    Is this device used like a tripod just to stabilize the camera in stationary shots, or can it be used like a cheap and crude Steadicam?

  9. For that soft fog, daydream into the past look - Chinatown or Picnic at Hanging Rock.

     

    I have a fixed lens (Scoopic M) so besides in post, how could that feel be achieved?

     

    For Picnic at Hanging Rock, Russell Boyd did this: "The dreamlike, hazy effect that gives the film its distinctive look was reportedly achieved by placing a piece of bridal veil over the camera lens."

     

    In Wings of Desire, wiki notes that "During filming Alekan used a very old and fragile silk stocking that had belonged to his grandmother as a filter for the monochromatic sequences."

     

    Would this really work? Any other tricks?

  10. http://www.colorlab.com/filmskool/16mmtoHD.html:

     

    There are many ways to save money on your budget, but raw stock is NOT the place to do it. It is the most important part of your finished product – the look of your film. If you insist on using older films, however, you can have them clip tested at the lab to check for age fog. Depending on the number of rolls, we will usually perform clip tests for free

     

    How much is the quality disparity between several years old refrigerated vs brand new purchased stock from Kodak or Fuji?

     

    I'm shooting a short that we plan on entering to festivals; However, it's similar along the lines to Five Easy Pieces or Chinatown, where the image has a distinct faded 70s look - so maybe spankin new stock isn't all that necessary?

  11. Can DSLRs be adjusted to shoot scenes similar to the flat look from movies of the 70s - like Shampoo, The Passenger, Chinatown, Five Easy Pieces, Bonnie and Clyde?

     

    Any examples?

     

    DSLRs tend to give a plasticy and enhanced image. I'd like to shoot a short in the style of those 70s movie: flat, pastel, and faded.

  12. Which cameras have a 400' magazine capacity that are affordable (under 1k)?

     

    I have a 100' only camera. I may be able to get 400' rolls for a considerable discount, so I'm looking if there are any 400' mag cameras that could possibly save me the exorbitant cost of film stock.

     

    Thanks!

  13. I was given some unexposed 16mm negative Kodak Vision 250D film and took some footage with them to test a camera. The most recent date on the box I can find is 2002.

     

    After exposing, they were misplaced and have not been in a fridge for over two months.

     

    Should I even bother getting them developed? I shot the footage to see if a camera I've gotten works properly, so I don't need a high quality transfer - just good enough to know that the lighting and stabilization inside the camera is fine.

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