Monday, July 28, 2008

HDV indies: - In search of a Midnight Kiss

Having sullied this blog in a recent post with a mention of a Jason [spit] Statham movie, I'll attempt to claw back some indie cred by flagging up a proper low budget HDV independent movie currently doing the rounds - In Search of a Midnight Kiss is currently released in cinemas and is still doing the rounds in the regions. According the the IMDB it was shot on the Sony HVR Z1.

If you can't handle the full ninety minutes of romantic slacker quirkiness (yup it's THAT kind of indie movie) than you can at least have a look at the trailer (up to 1080p!) on the Apple Movie trailers site.

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Sunday, June 15, 2008

Searchers 2.0

Alex Cox's HDV western, mentioned in an earlier post, will be broadcast in the UK on Monday 16th of June on BBC4 at 10pm. The movie was shot with Sony Z1s in 1080i mode and premiered at the 2007 Venice Film Festival.

Alex Cox has apparently recorded a special "Moviedrome" style intro for the film, as well as for some other classic westerns showing this weekend.

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Sunday, May 04, 2008

Feature film making in HDV

ALex cox's latest film Searchers 2.0 is a comedy road movie, with nods and references (as usual with Cox) to Hollywood's past, especially westerns. It was filmed in Monument valley, but most interestingly was made in 50i HDV on a sony Z1.

The budget for the film was a measly $175,000 (less than £100,000) but this was a fully professional production, with veteran DOP Steve Fierberg head of the camera department, in a production that was backed by the BBC and low budget legend Roger Corman, and produced Robocop/Starship Troopers producer Jon Davison.

An interview at DV.com with Fierberg and gets the lowdown on why the Z1 was chosen over other more glamorous cams like the JVCs and Canons, and how the Z1 performed (quite well, apparently to the DP's surprise). One useful tip, to judge exposure, Fierberg set the zebra stripes to 105% and then tried to get everything under that, skies were darkened with a polarising filter and the final show was colour corrected in Avid Nitris. Cox also spills some of the beans on the production in an interview on his own website. He also talks about the production on his blog, though there are no links to the relevant articles, so you have to scroll down articles around mid 2006 and ending about 2007 for the relevant entries. One encouraging quote on the film's 2007 Venice Film Festival showing, "The screen is huge, and our film - shot on my funky Z-1 video camera - is in perfect focus, and the film sounds ten times better in the larger space."

Fierberg has also written about the film in the April 2008 edition of American Cinematographer, though the article is not available online.

The BBC will broadcast the movie this June, as it's a BBC co-production, hopefully it will also be available online via the iPlayer.

Another feature shot on the Z1 in 50i was the Irish low budget (€100,000) hit Once.

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Friday, January 18, 2008

CGI extravaganza on a budget!

This movie has been lighting up the blogosphere! I found it by way of Mike Curtis' excellent HD for Indies blog.



A crew of four recreate the D-Day attack Omaha beach for BBC's Timewatch programme. A cast of three, basic costumes and props, a researcher operating a Z1E camera, a roll of greenscreenmaterial and a single saloon car. Add to the mix some small explosions filmed in a back yard and a ton of photographic references.

Of course the degraded Saving Private Ryan look and the Youtube compression helps cover a multitude of sins, but this is designed for TV broadcast so has to meet the BBC's standards. Mike Curtis says "All desktop doable".

A second segment is here, and a production blog explaining some of the process is here.

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Monday, December 03, 2007

"Lenny's Luck"

I have completed my latest short Film "Lenny's Luck". It's inspired very loosely by a story about the great jazz guitarist and recording technology pioneer Les Paul, though I've jazz up the "facts" so, you should consider all elents of the story as purely fuctional, and any similarities purely coincidental.

The film was shot in 1080i HDV on a Sony Z1E. We used Cineframe 25 mode and recorded the sound on camera. I directed and recorded sound. Karen Savage did lighting and camera, Aysegul Epengin produced and was responsible for art direction.

Anthony Tivey served double duty as Gaffer, and then needed to be drafted in to play "Lenny" when our lead actor failed to turn up. He did a fine job, despite the fact that he never saw the script, and about the only meaningful direction I gave him was "can you do an American accent?" In fact all the cast we great and I'm thoroughly grateful to them all.

The film was largely shot in one day in a Studio in Chichester University with a few pick ups filmed at Portsmouth University a week or so later. Post production was done on iMovie and in Garageband, using the great new feature of being able to play music while watching the video. Titles were done in Gimp.

The film was premiered at Portsmouth University's Wiltshire Studio 1 on the 29 October, and was projected in High Definition. The video will be posted online in the new year. In the mean time here is a link to a gallery of behind the scenes stills.

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Sunday, July 23, 2006

HDV Short: Production

well, the short film is finished and here are some points. I'll split this into two posts with this one concentrating on the actual shooting.

The shoot went quite well as both actors were very professional and worked well with the director. While this post will deal with the technical side of the production I should obviously emphasise that without a good story and decent performers, then great technical proficiency is irrelevant. we had a small crew, of four, with Karen and myself swapping between camera and lighting and sound, and a friend Grace acting as continuity supervisor and general PA. Four really this wasn't enough, especially as one crew member at a time was required to baby-sit my daughter (Ayşegül, my wife, was directing, and little Leyla was actually one of the actors, very good she was too)

Lighting. Karen Savage who is co-credited with lighting takes the credit for the success of the lighting in this project. We used 1000w open face lights ("redheads"), which worked well for general overall lighting but were hard to use for lighting close ups or detail. Really even for low budget productions, it seems that some low power Fresnel units would be required. The Z1 is not a particularly light sensitive camera, and in even reasonable light interiors, we found ourselves always on the edge of under exposure. We tended to be around the 1.6 - 2.2 stop area. This is fine as really we wanted an open iris to achieve shallow depth of field.

We tended to bounce the light a lot (direct light with the redheads would have been to harsh in the confined space. This softened the light nicely but made modelling tricky, especially backlighting. One of the advantages of the location was the way from the dining room and living room, and to the kitchen was semi open plan which meant we could get backlights a healthy distance so the backlighting effect was subtle. In my opinion, backlighting is REALLY important in video, it helps alleviate that flat video look, but needs to be subtle.

Gels on the light made a big difference. Even just a little blue made a redhead resemble daylight, while a 1/8 CTO on a key-light would punch up skin tones nicely. Again, it's GOT to be subtle or it looks like bad mixed source lighting.

Focus. Well, this is high definition after all, and what's the point of shooting HD if it's soft? Focus is MUCH more critical in HD. Some sort of monitoring system is essential. We used my ibook, taking a firewire line from the camera, downscaling to DV, and then playing the results live through a programme called BTV pro. It's just about acceptable for judging SD focus but not even close for HD. We have several shots that are just a little bit soft. the Z1 has peaking in the viewfinder( peaking finds sharp edges in the image, and highlights them in the 'finder - as sharp edges must be in focus) and expanded focus (zooms in the middle of the image but only in the 'finder), though CF25 softens the image somewhat so peaking isn't as effective. The expanded focus feature is OK, but still, the little monitor isn't sharp enough for HD focusing. You can try the old zoom in/focus/zoom out method, but then you won't be able to use the cameras rather nifty shot transition feature for pull focusing. What's the point of pull focuses (pull foci?). Also, faces tend not to have sharp edges, so focussing on them isn't as easy. One solution might be a target card of some sort, that could be focused on when setting up shots.

Additionally I have noticed on some of my other footage that there seem to be better areas of the lens. Fully wide open (1.6) or at either the widest or longest ends of the lens, the image loses a bit of sharpness, but the image really pops out as being high definition in the middle range of the lens. Now this is not based on systematic testing, but one looking at rather off the cuff shooting. Maybe some later tests will confirm this, but I need to get my hands on a proper testing chart AND access to a proper HD broadcast monitor.

Highlights: HDV (at least the Z1) does not handle highlights any better than DV. Really, for a truly film like image you need to keep large areas below 100IRE. White walls, windows, skies etc. need to be controlled! (How do you control skies? I'll get to that...). In the past when shooting mixed light I would have recommended gelling lights to match daylight coming through windows, now I could recommend going the other way. To get good results, either invest in plenty of CTO and ND gels, big, 1.5 metre wide sheets of the stuff, on 100 metre rolls! Expose for highlights, and then add fill in order to balance your contrast ratio. Sometimes you might get good results shooting after dark and simulating light coming through windows with a couple of 800w or a 2K light, maybe gelling them with ½ or ¼ CTB to give a subtle mixed light effect. We did that for one scene and it worked well, though you can see if you look in the final shot that we cheated and placed the light indoors.

As for skies, which look rather ugly when blown out to white on video, i think the best bet is either to plan exterior scenes where you can see the sky, or ALWAY shoot with the sun at least 45° behind the camera. I've got some nice blue skies and cloud patterns to expose well when following this, but as soon as I pointed the camera at all towards the sun's direction, even when the sun had dropped below buildings, the sky was an ugly blocked out white. There might be something that can be done with Sky replacement in after effects, but that of course limits your freedom with camera movement, and requires extra time with After Effects or something similar in post.

I would also recommend shooting as much as possible towards the even, or heading as far north (or south if you're in the southern hemisphere) as you can. I remember seeing Richard Attenborough on an BBC show about British film in the 60s waxing lyrical about "that northern quality of light". What that refers to is that at ANY given time of the year, in the north, the sun will be lower in sky (the same is true the further south you go in the southern Hemisphere) and at lower angles you get a better quality of light because the sunlight has to travel through more atmosphere, and is therefore slightly softer. Anyway, long and the short of tit is, try and use the sun as a key light in all exterior scenes, and not as a backlight unless you have a truckload of HMIs for fill/key lighting, or want a specific cameo light effect.

I'm trying to figure out exactly which Picture Profile settings really get the best out of the Z1 - I'm leaning towards sharpness set to 7-8, Black stretch on, Cinematone setting 1, though the added contrast of Cinematone is a little scary (lots of fill required) it does strengthen the blacks, while black stretch also gives you a bit more leeway in the shadow details. We dialled sharpness back to 2 for our film and it really does look soft in general.

One of the areas I think Low budget filmmakers using HDV must think about is using filters (polarisers, grads, NDs, diffusion, etc.) on the cameras to compensate for the formats shortcomings.

Cineframe Initially I was suspicious of this mode, and I still won't recommend it to others wholeheartedly, but I must admit I'm coming around. It does look very film like (especially when transferred to SD) and it does get rid of some of the MPEG compression artefacts. When converting 50i to 25p in post, the de-interlacing seems to leave behind artefacts from both the 4:2:0 colour sampling issues AND the extra detail from the interlace jaggies. Going CF25 seems to avoid this, though it IS noticeably softer. I notice that while CF was poo-pooed initially in many blogs and discussion boards, a few are coming around to it now, particularly David Newman, of Cineform. However I've not used any really highly rated de-interlacers (magic Bullet, Nattress Film effects et al) so I've not really have the chance to see what the best that can be achieve. I've used some free FCP de-interlacers, or the ones in Virtual Dub or MPEG Streamclip, and after all you get what you pay for.

Conclusions With HD, Everything shows up. The odd cables in the background, lights reflected in shiny surfaces, crew reflected in glass, creases and stains in clothes. On Standard Definition, these things could be got away with, but NO MORE. You MUST double check constantly whether crew members' coats, make up kits, cables bits of light stands are in shot or not. you must take much greater care when shooting HDV. It just shows mistakes up much more clearly, even when down-converted to SD. When the image is sharp clean and well exposed, it does sort of pop out at you, and other less precise shots will suffer by comparison. The much ballyhooed compression artefacts aren't really an issue unless you're REALLY going the Saving Private Ryan path, but de-interlacing does throw up the odd hidden things. You really have to pay attention to set design. Us DV filmmakers have been dealing with the deep DOF for a while and to be honest it's not the deal-breaker for me that it is for some. I'll just back away and zoom in, keep the iris open and maybe go for a slightly cleaner set and background than normal. For outdoor shooting think about where you're pointing it in terms of how the background looks. - I can see polarising filters making a big comeback. Should I ever get a Z1 of my own I can see myself wanting to invest in a set of filters (polariser, a variety of NDs, a few grads, some tints) in order to make the image as pretty as possible before it goes to tape.

Next entry I'll deal with Post Production.

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