OT: BlackMagic Camera

Erni wrote on 4/16/2012, 2:47 PM
Blackmagic Cinema Camera

We have been thinking hard about cameras and some of the limitations in quality that video cameras run into. Working with DaVinci color grading has only made these limitations more noticeable.

Some of the reasons why video cameras look like "video" is because they have limited contrast range, are limited to HD resolutions, use heavy compression for file recording, have poor quality lenses and of course they don't integrate into NLE software with metadata management.

We decided to address these problems by developing a camera that provides feature film quality in an extremely compact portable design.

The Blackmagic Cinema Camera includes a super wide 13 stops of dynamic range, large 2.5K sensor, integrated SSD recorder that has the bandwidth to capture CinemaDNG RAW, ProRes and DNxHD files, integrated capacitive touchscreen LCD for direct metadata entry, standard jack audio connectors, refrigerated sensor and it's fully compatible with EF and ZF mount lenses.

The Blackmagic Cinema Camera also includes SDI and Thunderbolt connectors and it comes with a full copy of DaVinci Resolve and UltraScope software. Imagine plugging in your laptop for on set grading and scopes!

The 13 stops of dynamic range is one of the most important reasons why this camera looks like film. Often people focus on more pixels, but that is just a larger video image. The real way to get film quality is to capture a wide contrast range to retain more detail in the black and white levels of the image. Then once you color grade the images, it looks amazing! Combined with amazing EF and ZF lenses, the result is a true film look!

Of course the quality is killed if you compress the images when recording them, so we built in an SSD recorder. That means you get the recording speed you need to record the full 2.5K RAW sensor data into completely uncompressed CinemaDNG files. This means you get all the detail and quality of the sensor.

No files on this camera are custom in any way and this is the first camera that’s designed to make the whole post production process simple. It records into CinemaDNG format for RAW files, and DNxHD or ProRes for HD resolution files compatible with Avid Media Composer and Apple Final Cut Pro.

You can play back all recorded files on the LCD, and there is a built-in microphone and speaker for reviewing audio. Of course you will want to plug in high quality audio into the standard jack connectors and the audio is always recorded uncompressed for highest quality.

The integrated LCD has a touchscreen and when tapped, a window called the "slate" appears where you can type in shot information just like typing on a smartphone. This is then recorded into the file as metadata in the Final Cut Pro X and DaVinci Resolve format. Common data like shot number can auto increment to save time.

You can also change camera settings on this touch LCD, such as frame rate, shutter angle, color temperature, dynamic range, focus assist settings and more. The SDI output also has overlays showing you all the camera data when monitoring on set, and even the same data when playing back recorded files!

The design is machined from a solid block of aluminum and looks amazing. It’s strong, very compact and designed to be easily hand held. I am still amazed we have fitted all this into such a small design, when normally features like RAW recorders and monitoring can be optional extras on cinema cameras.

A cinematographer friend of ours, John Brawley, has been working with the camera for the last few weeks. He's shot some test clips in the process of working out what the camera’s capabilities are and we have posted them online for your to see. Even though some of them are just hand held test shots near John’s house, they are still great to see as examples of what’s creatively possible. Remember to select HD when viewing them!

http://vimeopro.com/johnbrawleytests/blackmagic-cinema-camera

We expect to start shipping in volume in July for $2,995.

http://www.blackmagic-design.com/cinemacamera/

Erni (I don´t work for BlackMagic)

Comments

farss wrote on 4/16/2012, 4:42 PM
Thanks Erni.
Nice to see an Australian company making a camera, that might be a first, I don't even recall us making a film camera.

Something about the design says "Polaroid" to me, strange. Maybe as we've already got a "Bolex" it was deliberate. I was pretty excited by the camera until I realised it has a S16 sized sensor but the lens mounts are for S35 optics. The Digital Bolex people got it right using the old C mount.
I'm certain BMD will sell heaps regardless, the camera is very cheap, the buddled software adds real value and it has a HD-SDI output which is remarkable at the price. That the camera will run from a car battery is another plus.

Bob.
Anthony J C wrote on 4/18/2012, 1:10 PM
Unless someone knows something about his wonderful bit of kit that I don't, why is it on cinema5d.com when it is not a DSLR???

This will certainly make other manufacturers think very very hard. For $3000 what is there to compare it with??

Anthony
Highway wrote on 7/28/2012, 12:37 PM
would you consider red cameras a dslr??? i'm hoping to get this camera next year. just waiting on some more footage and maybe a firmware update. would love to see 1080p 60fps included but you have taken me away from getting the 5d markIII. can't beat 2.5k and even with the smaller sensor i can live with that. i would like to see a low light test just to see the details in the shadows. i understand it may not be as great in the dark but thats why this camera gives you ability to become better at lighting. just suck to have to wait till the new year.
mudsmith wrote on 7/28/2012, 5:15 PM
My partner (film background) and I have been taking a serious look at this camera. We hoped to go to the demos in NY a few months back, but had a scheduling problem.

Does anyone know if there are demos available anywhere on the east coast at dealers or other places?
bigrock wrote on 7/29/2012, 11:57 PM
You said "For $3000 what is there to compare it with??"

That $3000 is only the start and yes it looks really compelling but it is going to be many thousands more for a real working camera, unless you already have the eqpt needed.
Steve Mann wrote on 7/31/2012, 8:03 AM
"... files compatible with Avid Media Composer and Apple Final Cut Pro. "

And you post this on the Vegas forum?

Yes, you can add the DNxHD codec from Avid on the PC for use with Vegas, but don't you see the irony of excluding Vegas - a relatively large editing market?
TheRhino wrote on 7/31/2012, 2:23 PM
I don't get the whole thing about Blackmagic excluding Vegas...

We own several Blackmagic Decklink and Intensity cards for importing HD video from tape. For years Blackmagic posted compatibility with Vegas up to version 9. Now every time a new driver is released Blackmagic boasts improvements that boost CS6 performance but the updates still only list Vegas 9 compatibility vs. V10 or V11.

What gives? Anyone know why V10 & V11 support are not listed in the new Blackmagic drivers?

Workstation C with $600 USD of upgrades in April, 2021
--$360 11700K @ 5.0ghz
--$200 ASRock W480 Creator (onboard 10G net, TB3, etc.)
Borrowed from my 9900K until prices drop:
--32GB of G.Skill DDR4 3200 ($100 on Black Friday...)
Reused from same Tower Case that housed the Xeon:
--Used VEGA 56 GPU ($200 on eBay before mining craze...)
--Noctua Cooler, 750W PSU, OS SSD, LSI RAID Controller, SATAs, etc.

Performs VERY close to my overclocked 9900K (below), but at stock settings with no tweaking...

Workstation D with $1,350 USD of upgrades in April, 2019
--$500 9900K @ 5.0ghz
--$140 Corsair H150i liquid cooling with 360mm radiator (3 fans)
--$200 open box Asus Z390 WS (PLX chip manages 4/5 PCIe slots)
--$160 32GB of G.Skill DDR4 3000 (added another 32GB later...)
--$350 refurbished, but like-new Radeon Vega 64 LQ (liquid cooled)

Renders Vegas11 "Red Car Test" (AMD VCE) in 13s when clocked at 4.9 ghz
(note: BOTH onboard Intel & Vega64 show utilization during QSV & VCE renders...)

Source Video1 = 4TB RAID0--(2) 2TB M.2 on motherboard in RAID0
Source Video2 = 4TB RAID0--(2) 2TB M.2 (1) via U.2 adapter & (1) on separate PCIe card
Target Video1 = 32TB RAID0--(4) 8TB SATA hot-swap drives on PCIe RAID card with backups elsewhere

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Copy of Work Files, Source & Output Video, OS Images on QNAP 653b NAS with (6) 14TB WD RED
Blackmagic Decklink PCie card for capturing from tape, etc.
(2) internal BR Burners connected via USB 3.0 to SATA adapters
Old Cooler Master CM Stacker ATX case with (13) 5.25" front drive-bays holds & cools everything.

Workstations A & B are the 2 remaining 6-core 4.0ghz Xeon 5660 or I7 980x on Asus P6T6 motherboards.

$999 Walmart Evoo 17 Laptop with I7-9750H 6-core CPU, RTX 2060, (2) M.2 bays & (1) SSD bay...

Highway wrote on 7/31/2012, 2:44 PM
for $3000 you get the same thing as if your buying an expensive dslr body only. you still have to get a lens and hardrive. big deal. Vegas doesn't support XML if i'm wrong somebody please show me how.