“What Happens in Vegas Stays in Vegas”
Photos by: Chris Dowsett
Well, not this time. I attended the 2011 NAB conference in Las Vegas Nevada this past week. Seeing as i never attended a NAB before, my good friends Khalid Mohtaseb and Jon Bregel saw to it that i joined them on this trip. Its great that i did. We got ourselves in to an adventure that could only be described as a digital cinematographers dream. While visiting the Abel Cine Tech booth, our good friend Andy Shipsides was more than happy to point us in the direction of the newest addition to the Abel family of cameras. A Sony F3 with a spectacular improvement; a blue Element Technica top handle replacement…. but that was the least of what made this particular Sony F3 great…..
Now you may be asking yourself, “Why, in that photo above, it sure doesn’t look like the Abel Cine Tech’s booth….?” Well it isn’t; let me tell you why. That camera you see above, is one of only two Sony F3’s in the world with the now infamous S-Log 444 Dual link firmware update. Andy, was so kind as to let Khalid, Jon and I borrow the camera for the night. With less than 12 hours, to plan, coordinate, and shoot, we called in the big guns, our friends Brad Burke, Steve Birne, Tyler Ginter, Jeff Levine, Chris Dowsett and last but not least the amazing Vincent Laforet to help create a proper, effective, and true to real working conditions camera test. This crack team of some of the most talented individuals on this earth, all pooled their collective resources to come up with an attack plan for this once in a long while opportunity to test a new piece of revolutionary equipment. When presented with this fantastic camera out of the blue, the reality hit us that in order to test a camera, you need certain things. The fact is we had a room full of DP’s and not a tripod, lens or matte-box between the three of us….
First, before i finish the story allow me to explain what S-Log is, and why its so darn significant. The Sony F3, a phenomenal 1080p HD camera already, records 8 bit 35mbps XDcam to SXS media cards. This is the standard recording media for all mid range professional Sony cameras working right now. When Sony created the F35 Camera a few years ago, they built a full super 35mm Sized CCD sensor capable of producing some of the best images in the digital cinematography world. This was a camera designed from the ground up to be a full cinema style system that records to the highest quality footage to HDcam SR Tape. ( it also costs about $250,000) The standard XD cam recording format would not cut the mustard with such a high end camera. The problem being that video systems in general are not able to capture the wide latitude of exposure that film can. Sony thought of a clever solution. They created S-Log. Its a way of compressing a wide latitude of visual information into a video signal by flattening the contrast, and recording it all onto the pristine quality of HDcam SR…. What all that means in English its that the final product looks A LOT BETTER in the end… Much more like film, and much more natural to the human eye. This feature was only available in the world of super high end motion picture cameras…. Until now…. For the first time, we the common film maker, have access to the tools Hollywood uses.
Ok, back to the story…
The ideas started flowing, and we settled on a few situations that we wanted to put the camera through, and see how S-Log footage came out the other side. We decided we wanted aerial shots at twilight, night exteriors, different skin tones and sunny skies to really push the camera to its limits. Like the resourceful magicians we all are, we all split up to the different vendors at NAB, and explained to them the unique situation we had before us and asked for their support… These vendors are the real heroes behind this collaboration. Without people like, Eric Kessler of Kessler Crane and Jared Abrams of wideopencamera.com, providing us with monetary support to make the realities of a helicopter shoot happen and the simple necessity of a crew van and driver. In addition to monetary support, we received unwaivering and generous support from brands like Cooke Optics, Angenieux, Carl Zeiss, Miller, Element Technica, O’Connor, ARRI, Tyler Camera Systems, Lite Panel and last but not least Anton Bauer.
Our gear list could only be dreamed about!!!!!
Imagine if you will, a Sony F3 with S-Log, recording dual link 444, into a Cinedeck, mounted to a prototype Element Technica top handle conversion for the F3, sitting on a Element Technica, 19mm Rod setup, supporting a set of O’connor Orgips and Obox, next to a brand new ARRI FF5 follow focus, connected to any number of ARRI Master Primes, Ultra Primes, Cooke Panchros, AND the biggest surprise of all, the one of a kind prototype Angenieux Optimo 45-120…. Yes, thats right, not only are we the first to use the F3 with S-Log, but we are the first DP’s to EVER shoot on an Optimo 45-120!!!!
We had the privilege to use on this project:
Arri Master Prime: 25mm T1.3
Arri Ultra Prime: 8R 8mm T2.8
Cooke Panchro 18mm T2.8
Cooke Panchro 100mm T2.8
Angenieux DP Rouge 16-42 T2.8
Angenieux DP Rouge 30-80 T2.8
Angenieux Optimo 45-120 T2.8
This is a dizzying array of optics. All the major players, all the major glass…..
The 8R is simple a marvel of engineering. It literally sees almost 180 degrees with as little distortion as you can have on a lens with a focal length like that. What was really interesting, was seeing all the different glass being used at the same time. Its SO rare to have Zeiss, next to Angenieux, next to Cooke…. What I did find, was that there is a marked difference in the performance of the lenses. However, it wasn’t a matter, oh this lens is better… its more like, “Wow, thats beautiful…..” ( change lens) “Wow… Thats beautiful” but this time, for a completely different reason. There is no denying the sterile slick sharp perfection of the Master Primes, but the warm, golden Cookes just bring the image to life, while the Angenieux’s bring out a nostalgic, cinematic look that beckons to a different time.
Once we actually got down to it, the night was a mad dash of helicopter shots as the sun was setting, shooting with our wonderful model Mallory Sherrill on a hotel balcony, and in the streets of Vegas, rigging a makeshift carmount for the 8R time laspe shots, Going to a wedding…. Seriously…. and then finally as the sun was rising we shot our other wonderful model, Linda Carriel at the uber-modern Cosmopolitan Hotel. Our producers and Production coordinators Brad Burke, Steve Birne and Tyler Ginter put their talents into overdrive to keep this production running smoothly, and without any major hiccups. I must stress, productions would not happen without producers, PA’s, AC’s and production coordinators. These individuals are equally important to the shoot as the camera is.
All of this work led up to this. The final product from all our collective labor.
http://vimeo.com/22540499
http://vimeo.com/22576231
I intended to go to NAB to have some fun and maybe oogle some lenses. Never did i think i would be part of something this much fun and ground breaking.
I wish to extend my thanks to my good friends at Next Level Pictures, Khalid Mohtaseb and Jon Bregel for joining forces with Tstop Cinema and creating something that will help grow the film making community. I wish to especially thank Eric Kessler and Jared Abrams for giving us the boost to get off the ground, and make this whole thing happen. Thanks to Vincent Laforet for lending us his talent and expertise in aerial photography, and helping us secure the necessary equipment for the shoot. Finally, and with every bit of importance as the names that have gone before, i wish to thank the tireless efforts of Brad Burke, Stephen Birne, Tyler Ginter for producing the living hell out of this production, and to the Crew of FreshDV, Matt Jeppsen and Kendal Miller, and last but not least, the phenomenal Chis Dowsett who took all of the beautiful photos you see above.
Thank You for reading, and please feel free to comment, and ask any questions. I will answer to the best of my ability.
-Timur Civan
www.timurcivan.com
Timurcivan @twitter
Tstopcinema @twitter
It was a blast T! v
🙂
Thanks vincent. Its an honor having you visit my blog.
I’ll wait until I get to work and get a faster connection to look at the product, but the story is amazing. What fun!
Dr. Phil
Spectacular advancements are afoot! Thanks for the in-depth coverage!
Amazing post Timur. Can’t wait to shoot more together in NYC. Keep killin it. Looking forward to the launch of Tstop Cinema.
Wow, really impressive stuff man
If this S-Log thing uses 8-bit coding, than it cannot fit wider latitude than any other 8-bit format. Not possible without banding. Is this just yet another gamma profile? If it uses 10- or 12-bit coding, that it will surely be better than XDCAM because XDCAM is only 8-bit format. As for the “phenomenal” F3, if Sony were not so stingy, it would enable recording in HD422 @ 50 Mbit/s, and this format would look much better than regular XDCAM. Canon offers 4:2:2 @ 50 Mbit/s on its new tapeless camcorders, including the XF100, which costs $3K. Why Sony cannot… Read more »
The Slog was recorded out the 10bit SDI in 10bit 444 Cineform. It was true 10bit. The “thinking” is this: keep the camera body as cheap as possible with full functionality, meaning: Dual link, 10bit sdi, genlock, 3D connectivity, the sensor, the PL mount, standard power 4pin xlr port, the list goes on…. They could have put in 50mbps XDcam 422 but it would have then been an 8bit, 422 camera, that costs *$16,300 street price instead of $13,300. The whole point of the $3500 slog upgrade being that a user can choose to have all the connectivity, functionality, and… Read more »
I saw the Behind the Scenes on Staff Picks on Vimeo and had no clue what S-Log was. Thanks for clearing that up!
I love this story, sounds like a wonderful experience! Some day…