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Kahleem Poole

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Everything posted by Kahleem Poole

  1. Bruno Mars is so God like!!!!!

  2. Not sure how he would have a point necessarily. How would shooting on film be beneficial special effects wise? Especially considering the amount of clean up needed from celluloid scanning for proper compositing.
  3. Couldn't agree with Adrian more, pick up some issues of AC magazine. It's an invaluable resource. A few things to take into account though: 1. The technical things you can absorb constantly. From tutorial videos, to getting to assist on larger sets. Learning Cinematography on a technical level can be learned fairly quickly. So research, research, research and make yourself stronger in that way. 2. This is the part where none of us can help you: what is your vision and how do you train your eye ARTISTICALLY? Are you fond of soft light, or hard pools like Alton? Are you more of an empty space photographer or do you enjoy dirtying up the frame to make things interesting in a different way? How do you communicate with a Director who is bossy vs a Director who is very laid back? What about actor's who may be really finicky about their skin against certain types of lighting? It'll take years to find your way creatively, but the more honest you are with yourself and the more risks you take, the more you'll learn as a photographer. And, THAT is when you'll more than likely understand when you are a Cinematographer or not. Unlike #1, this is a never-ending form of self discovery.
  4. I'm surprised that this conversation continues to exist. With respect to Mr Mullen (with whom I am a big fan), we are at a point where we have more tools to work with, more options as a Cinematographer and even more so, the ability to control our image as best we want and can. I even make sure that I'm involved in the post DI to maintain the image's integrity. If you want your image to look akin to "film", you're more than likely speaking on the color, roll off and grain. That's really about it at this point. They both have advantages and disadvantages and it's your duty as an artist and as a technician to not only understand this, but to manipulate it. Not compare by downplaying the tools. What's with this Sega vs Nintendo argument, guys? The brushes continue to be there, whether you like them or not. Either you paint on the canvas or simply move along while another talented, hard worker will instead.
  5. A moment of mushiness but:April Pabon, thank you for giving me the strength to keep pushing on. You are my life, and without you I have no light.

  6. Love this. Just shared it too. Much appreciated for this production and definitely educational for those interested in filmmaking.
  7. BOOM!! HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE!!!!

  8. Now the rematch begins.... #ufc168

  9. This was BOUND to happen. It does happen every day in sparring so a pro bout was inevitable. http://m.bleacherreport.com/articles/1892314-shooto-brazil-promoting-first-male-vs-female-fight-in-mma-history

  10. Yup, it's finally about that time. And, don't look so puzzled either. For those who know me, this was well overdue: Motorsports!!A sneak peek from Charlie's Chop Shop coming soon!

  11. *sigh*and I just bricked my 50D. Mobo got shorted out from a dumb battery connection. Gugh! RIP

  12. Gigantic thanks to Kevin Brannan for coming thru w/ this lens for me. You saved my bacon, man!!!

  13. This has been one of THE most insane weeks. Just shot, cut and delivered an interview for a major network, got referenced to film a talented Jazz band (and now within an extra 3 project slate) and was just commissioned to shoot a major event next week. September is not taking it easy on me at all...and I'm glad :)

  14. That's a great condescending attempt, but it doesn't help. We all shoot what we can, when we can and why we can depending on the artistic POV or for budgetary reasons. Be it digital RAW, video, or celluloid. All of which I do on my own for a variety of reasons, as I'm sure others here have and still do as well.
  15. This is essentially part of my point too; thanks, Dave. The film look that a lot of people chase (including myself) are really about texture, highlight roll off, highlight blooming, color and latitude. However, the texture aspects are cleaned up so much in many modern celluloid productions these days, people tend to forget that "film" doesn't necessarily equate to that aspect all the time. For instance, Transformers was shot on film, but the grain is so cleaned up, it might as well have been shot digitally on the Red for a comparison. I think that if more people were able to define in the most literal manner what makes film look like "film", in the same way they do [with disdain] toward digital, then we'd have a better grasp on things.
  16. For Blue Valentine that was the idea. The flashback sequences on film were meant to be warm and inviting, even by the wider lens choices. The modern scenes: all shot digitally in a clinical way and long lenses to make things claustrophobic. It was the primary intention I believe.
  17. Not a fan of these overly CG infused Kung Fu films as of late. Seems like a great cover up for either bad fight direction or maybe bad performances. Or they're just out of place in general.Not a fan :-/

  18. I didn't ask you to compare every camera on the planet. Only if you were knowledgeable of the ones I mentioned and their comparisons to film. Had you been, then you would've understood WHY I mentioned those specifically: in the near future film won't be the gold standard for reference for very much longer, but more of an aesthetic choice (that is easily emulated, I should mention). If we're talking latitude (14.5 stops), it's been equaled (F65, F5, F55, Alexa, Red Dragon) If we're talking resolution [of 35mm], it's been widely stated that it tops out at around 4-5k before a point of diminishing returns (F65, F55, Red Dragon) If we're talking color space, it's been surpassed (as stated by Claudio Miranda, ASC in regards to the F65) Factually, the last advantage celluloid film brings to the table are the options of medium format (65mm and Imax w/ a proposed resolution of 12k) and archival. Safe to say, most of us in this thread haven't shot with 65mm film beyond the still photography category O_o So to be honest, at this point we're talking straight subjective OPINION, which I get. Me personally, I'm still in love with Super 16mm film and the personality it delivers. I even make it a mission to deliberately go to see every Super 16 film released on premiere week (latest being Fruitevale Station). So that's a unique quality that I can't find in digital 35mm right now (unless you're talking ML DNG Raw on the 60D captured at 720x480, then upscaled to 1920x1080). It's all a purely aesthetic choice for the story. However, to say "better" really is subjective and if you had to break it down beyond technical information, it's really just a taste factor. Don't you think?
  19. Wow, guys, THANK YOU ALL so much for the awesome birthday wishes. Seriously, y'all made my day for an occasion that I usually forget. HAHA

  20. When you make statements like "FAR" superior, can you give specifics as to what that actually means? I mean, an actual technical breakdown of what "FAR" superior is in comparison to digital cinema cameras, such as the F5, F65, Red (MX or Dragon), BMCC and Alexa (ARRIRAW).
  21. So lemme get this straight. Your strongest weapons are leg kicks w/ insane speed. Your opponent's entire style is based on mobile footwork. And, you decide NOT to kick him to destroy his mobility? Who the hell is Jose's coach?!

  22. Guys, we're looking for a boom op/mixer for a comedy pilot soon. Need help w/ this, so please hit me up.

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