Jump to content

Valerio Sacchetto

Basic Member
  • Posts

    93
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Valerio Sacchetto

  1. If you don't have anything informative to say then DON'T POST. It's a waste of your time and mine.

     

    This is supposed to be a forum of professionals.

     

    That's exactly my point. you said nothing yet you had to write about other's attitude and as you can see that leaded to a (sort of) argument. Complaining is not the answer. If you have something useful to say (and i'm quite sure you have after months of practice) just do it, i want to hear your infos not your rants about the forum and that's what i think others want too. Allen Achterberg did a good job just some days ago without any comment about the state of the forum. That's all.

  2. Well, everywhere i read that the color temperature for indoor is 3200 k and at outdoors its 5600 k around. What i want to know is how this color temperature affect on setting lighting mood, and how can we measure the temperature. whats the light meter for? Does it tell the temperature and calculates the appropriate settings for aperture or etc.

    You're quite confused about light properties.

    Color temperature is measured with a color meter and it has nothing to do with your aperture, it's a quality of light. The quantity of light is measured with a light meter and that's what is important to determine your aperture.

    It's important to know the color of light because while our brain adapts easily to different color temperatures film can't do so, it comes in two types: tungsten and daylight. That means that it's balanced for either one. If you're shooting under tungsten lights you'd use tungsten stock which gives you an accurate rendition of the colors of objects that are lighted by light that has a 3200K color temperature.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_temperature

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightmeter

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_stock#Color_temperature

    Suppose i am at student level, i got four 1000 watt open face tungston lights for an assignment, how can i use those 4 lights and get the 3200 k temperature.

    color temperature is not tied to the number of units you use, you have 4 tungsten lights that will give you, no matter how you arrange them, ~3200k

    A different story is for quantity, you can add them up to get a proper exposure for the stock you're using keeping in mind the mood you want to get.

     

    These are very basic questions and i suggest you to buy or borrow from your local library a book about photography it will tell you those essential things. Good luck!

  3. I've taken up a lot of space on this thread about this because I'm concerned that our senior contributors are getting frustrated. (I'm sure that they can fend for themselves but I wanted to say what I did.)

     

    I'm a long time lurker on this board and i started posting only recently (you know...when all your questions have already an answer it's hard to say something) so i "know" the (regular) members of this forum and i have your same feeling.

    That's why i decided to chime in and, maybe looking as an ass kisser, wanted to show my support to all the people who made this forum great and that keep trying hard to maintain it so.

    I'm the admin of a students' forum (not related to cinematography or movies) and i know how frustrating it can be to do your best and being bashed out of nothing, how tiring is to see people not even bother with some basic rules again and again, people that take what they need and give nothing in return (not even a thanks). I know how refreshing is the occasional "thank you, you're doing a great job" and since i hadn't many chances to say so (and many others too) I just want to let you know my appreciation for this board and the admiration for the people who share their knowledge. Thank you all.

  4. I don't want to get into a debate about it and am no expert, but i've read that it's not a simple carbon in carbon out equation once you take into account the energy required to grow, harvest and fertilise, not to mention they're cutting down Indonesian rainforest to create more land to grow biodiesel crops.

     

    jb

     

    You're absolutely right, mine was a voluntarily simplistic answer (for your same reason). The truth is much more complicated.

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiesel#Environmental_effects

  5. The theory is that from biodiesel you put in the atmosphere the same carbon the plant soaked from the air itself. Hence the result is 0. Using regulr fossil fuels you put in the atmosphere carbon that wasn't in the air before.

  6. Depending on the way you're shooting, aside from something above, i'd put a kino tube (i.e. out of the plastic case) in one or two of the unseen corners of the elevator, carefully balanced they should give you a nice overall light and if caught in some reflection they'd look like some high style, modern design elevator lights (if that's desirable!).

     

    But that's just a thought, i've never done that. Any opinion about this?

  7. This was a great movie. To say that one feels sorry for the crew who worked on this movie makes no sense. They did a incredible job.

    Well...obviously these are personal opinions, i have mine you have yours and that's just right. And here we're speaking of tastes. Plus my comment was actually quite lighthearted, I mean it's just a movie!

     

    I'm not arguing that they didn't do a good job, although i also don't know if they did, what i'm saying is that their work led to awful results. Sometimes (many times actually) you can do all your best but the result is not good, I accept the thing like an experiment gone wrong. You tried, you failed, you learnt something (i.e. don't do that again). Or do it again and make a lot of money :P

    The writing my not be a strong point, but visually the movie is great and could not have been filmed any other way. To quote Darius Khondji from SE7EN commentary " I find that movies are often to beautifully lit and shot, and do not serve in the overall feeling of the story" this is fitting because Michael Bonvillain clearly understands this point and it shows in Cloverfield.

    The fact that it's good visually (again, not for me) doesn't make it a good movie. in fact i bothered very little about the "look" of it, it's a pointless movie made to bring as many people as posible to leave their money to the box office.

    I'm not so naive to think that movies are made for the sake of art but there is an implicit pact between producers and moviegoers, the deal is that i WANT to spend my money to go see a movie that i may like and the producer know that if he gives me something he'll get the money. He's interested in making decent movies.

    Cloverfield, for me, is all bells and whistles without any real product to sell.

     

    Now for the "i feel sorry" part is simply because if i make something i hope it to turn out good and loved by the people even if i do it just for the money. What if you make all your best to, let's say, draw a human figure and all you come up with is a lousy stick figure (that's me btw)? someone may feel sorry for you, for all your efforts that turned out not so well. Of course i don't "really" feel sorry for them, it's a figure of speech!

     

    In the end these are just my opinions and should be taken for what they are, i don't have the truth in me. ;)

  8. A friend of mine tricked me to go see that "thing". To experience the illness you must be very very sensible, i didn't see a single person feeling bad (except for the movie itself).

    The movie is just bad for too many things and i don't really want to go into details, i feel sorry for the crew because they must have done their work at their best but this doesn't show up in the final product. Even the people who usually are victims of this kind of movies (marketing, special effects and more marketing) were disappointed.

  9. Sorry i didn't read the arcticle troughly but i noticed it expresses values in FC (illumination) and i glimpsed a "shooting by moonlight". That's different from shooting THE moon.

    What's been said before is just right, you can shoot THE moon at 24fps 180°.

  10. I have an l-398 too. it's wonderful. I suffer a bit for the inability to accurately read really low light levels but sometimes it makes me more brave. never regretted.

    What phil says about the learning value is just too true :P . Mine agreed perfectly with an l-558c and a spectra p251 just a couple of days ago.

    When i first thought about buying it (it's still my first meter) i was a bit nervous because of the newer, fancier meters but now i'm used to it. you have to realize that once you have some very basic functions (asa, exp. time, aperture) you have everything you need. the other tools are really useful of course but they're not essentials.

    Since it's all a matter of relationships you can even use all the wrong settings and still infer the right stop (knowing the situation but you don't have to do this).

    Beside, the l-398 reads directly in FC. Oh i do so like that! ok i'm going OT, what's important is that any (calibrated) light meter will say you something useful, maybe try it first with some stills just to get acquainted.

  11. You can achieve the effect by dressing your room upside down.

    I.E. putting armchairs on the ceiling and chandeliers on the floor. Not easy nor cheap.

    The effect in 2001 was achieved by linking the camera to the room, the place where the astronaut walk is esentially a treadmill which runs at the same speed as the room is revolving. The room and the camera turns while the actor remains on the (real) ground (at least that's what i remember). again Not easy nor cheap.

  12. Spot on John.

    I wrote a bit in a hurry so i apologize for the simplistic answer.

    I also implied that if your meter doesn't read in FC you can't balance your lighting which is wrong. With FC you have an absolute value independent of your meter settings (ASA, FPS, Shutter angle...). Very useful IMHO.

  13. ok cg is used to enhance and to do things which can not be short live... but nowadays y more stuff are done in cg than cinematography? and if it is not cg then it will be composite work which is vfx.. so feel like everything has changed.. so do we need to learn anything else along with cinematography to survive and compete wit todays film making style and technology?

     

     

     

    nowadays there are no mobile phones without camera.. camera is now there in everyones hands.. anyone can shoot today... some consumer level dv cameras are giving a decent output and today it seems like any one can learn photography or cinematography since all are holding the camera in their hands most of the time in some ways .. and one more added advantage is 'digital'.. u can see it simultaneously and u can experiment like anything.. no need to worry about money... and one day we can become a expert in handling camera.. so cameraman's job may dont have that much value in the future..

     

     

    these are just my thoughts.. u can comment on this.. and make this discussion more interesting and useful..

     

     

    Everyone can drive a car. Not everyone is a professional race driver.

×
×
  • Create New...