P
Ponte506
Guest
I can promise you this isn't a complaint, I'm just thoroughly confused at what people who are looking for a way to make short films/documentaries/etc. have to worry about when it comes to the 5d Mk. III when we already have major production examples of its quality in both Hollywood and Television.
I am as new as they come in regards to DSLR's and pro-sumer cinematography, so perhaps I'm being severely naive, but if we already have proof of the pro quality that the 5DII was able to produce, what's with the "regretting this purchase" air that I'm seeing from so many people?
If any of the doubters have seen the "House M.D." episode "Help Me", it was entirely shot on the 5d MKII with Cannon Primes and a few zooms. Even while watching a sub-par quality rip on the internet of the episode, I could not believe how filmic the episode looked. They weren't using $3k Cine lenses, they weren't using some crazy PL rigged mounts; they were using relatively standard glass. On top of that, for anyone that's seen "Act of Valor" can also see a lot of the amazing footage the 5d2 was able to conjure up, most ALL of the first person helmet cam shots as well as a notable scene in which one of the main villains is observing a warehouse full of bomb-makers.
I think a lot of people don't realize just how much post makes a difference. While I understand that House and Act of Valor were shot using studio lighting equipment (just like any major production), why is there so much flak being shot at the 5d3 when it's predecessor churned out filmic quality pieces that I described? Is that notion being completely ignored for the sake of comparing spreadsheets with sensor sizes, codecs, and other specs? It's almost as bad as the PC Overclocking community, disregarding well established products such as cooling radiators and water blocks just because something else came out that beats it by 1 degree Celsius. I'm relatively certain that everyone here can understand NO DSLR can match a $200k studio grade film camera, but once again, given produced examples there really should be nothing to complain about. Like I said, I'm pretty damn new to the DSLR market, but this is just my two cents.
Any thoughts?
I am as new as they come in regards to DSLR's and pro-sumer cinematography, so perhaps I'm being severely naive, but if we already have proof of the pro quality that the 5DII was able to produce, what's with the "regretting this purchase" air that I'm seeing from so many people?
If any of the doubters have seen the "House M.D." episode "Help Me", it was entirely shot on the 5d MKII with Cannon Primes and a few zooms. Even while watching a sub-par quality rip on the internet of the episode, I could not believe how filmic the episode looked. They weren't using $3k Cine lenses, they weren't using some crazy PL rigged mounts; they were using relatively standard glass. On top of that, for anyone that's seen "Act of Valor" can also see a lot of the amazing footage the 5d2 was able to conjure up, most ALL of the first person helmet cam shots as well as a notable scene in which one of the main villains is observing a warehouse full of bomb-makers.
I think a lot of people don't realize just how much post makes a difference. While I understand that House and Act of Valor were shot using studio lighting equipment (just like any major production), why is there so much flak being shot at the 5d3 when it's predecessor churned out filmic quality pieces that I described? Is that notion being completely ignored for the sake of comparing spreadsheets with sensor sizes, codecs, and other specs? It's almost as bad as the PC Overclocking community, disregarding well established products such as cooling radiators and water blocks just because something else came out that beats it by 1 degree Celsius. I'm relatively certain that everyone here can understand NO DSLR can match a $200k studio grade film camera, but once again, given produced examples there really should be nothing to complain about. Like I said, I'm pretty damn new to the DSLR market, but this is just my two cents.
Any thoughts?