Monday, January 10, 2011

Bill Oddie and the Snares

A couple of months ago I went to Scotland and shot this video with Bill Oddie for the charity OneKind.  I finished cutting it yesterday and they uploaded it this afternoon.  Thanks to Nicky Dunne for the grading.  It was shot on an XDCAM EX3 and cut in final cut pro.  Bill is a true gent and a consummate professional.  Fun to do and all for a worthy cause.


Check out OneKind at www.onekind.org

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Nostalgia.. and happy new year.

The last roll of Kodachrome was developed in the last lab on Thursday.  It made me think about my shooting career for the last 25 years, strangely I seem to have shot more film than video.  Maybe I'm lucky, maybe that's the way it was meant to be.  I once thanked a producer for recommending me for a job.  Funnily enough it was 2nd unit on an ITV drama shooting film.  He was very nice about it and said "You are what it says on the tin".  So what am I, 7248, 7240, 7250 with some bright lights, who knows.  I'd love to think that after starting the beginning of my shooting career on so much reversal stock I'd know a little bit about exposure.  But do you know what excites me, the Alexa - a huge dynamic range that beats the pants off the anything else I have seen.  Maybe digital technology has caught up and now I'll stop shooting film and start to shoot digitally.  Last year all I shot was XDCAM and it was lovely, but predictable and needed a bit of work to be interesting.  Don't get me wrong the EX3 is a great camera.  But all this waiting around while you transfer the footage to a hard-drive drives me mad.  And it's all too sharp for me.  Which brings me back to Kodachrome - an arcane process that rendered colour so well.  Has all this new technology caught up, I know that when I look at greens on stills I shot on a 1Ds MKIII you don't get any of the usual problems associated with film which is great.  This brings me to my final point on my trip of nostalgia, I look across the room and see my bolex that I inherited with an Angineux lens attached to it and I wonder, do Kodak still make 100 foot daylight loads?  It was the first camera I used and romantically I'd like it to be the last - who knows what the future will bring, but maybe just maybe it'll bring interesting images, great exposures and use of light that stops you in your tracks.

Happy new year.