I watched Wallander recently featuring Kenneth Branagh as the crumpled swedish detective and noted the distinctive style of camerawork and frequent shallow depth of field (background blurred) scenes. Subsequently I read it was shot entirely on the Red ONE system as are many projects in production or recently released. Red have made some big waves in the motion picture industry by developing and delivering the Red ONE camera. It has made extremely high quality digital capture available to filmakers of all budgets. This means the Red’s purchase price is equivalent to just one month’s rental fee on a traditional 35mm film camera. In my post in January I discussed the latest trend to hit wedding photography, Fusion. A quick reminder – the introduction of a new camera allowing both stills (photos) and moving images to be recorded on one camera had wedding photographers excited at the possiblities of merging moving images and stills together.
On this note, the arrival of the Red Scarlet has been really interesting. I’m still undecided on the industrial styling of the Scarlet but the concept of the convergence of the moving image and the still image has taken a big step forward the with the development of this camera (think iPhone being introduced in 1992).
The main selling point is it’s capability to capture still and moving footage in a high definition capability currently exceeding anything else on the market by mile. If the current chip in my camera is a big as a business card then the Red Scarlet has a chip as big a diner table with resolution to match. It has a modular design, allowing the user to add to or upgrade their system as they need to, bypassing camera obselecence. “Great” you say, “why aren’t you shooting my wedding with one then?” Well, it is not perfect as there no sound recording capability built in. The processing demands it’s files make on the pc and software needed to process the files are very heavy and storage of these huge files is also an issue.
However, I’m excited by the road this camera is leading us down – towards the capability to capture an event in two closely related artforms on one machine with no compromises.
Tags: Tech Category: Technology
Posted on Monday, March 9th, 2009 at 09:31