Art Adams's reply to this question might be of interest to some people here.
> How do the makers of the shows get that pure film look??
A lot of what constitutes the "film look" comes down to several key
elements:
(1) Great lighting. This makes everything "look like film," mostly because film is where you generally see better lighting than in video... although that's no longer true as all the people who used to do great film work are now doing great video work.
(2) Great compositions. See (1).
(3) Subtlety of color. Film colors tend not to be really saturated, and saturated colors are a hallmark of the video look. Lower overall color saturation, and especially reduce saturation in highlights. Film doesn't saturate highlights but video saturates colors right up until they clip.
(4) Lots of contrast. See (1).
(5) Softness. Turn the detail circuit on the camera down or off, retaining enough sharpness that the image looks like it's in focus when it is but not so much that you can see every detail in skin imperfections.
(6) Rolled-off highlights. Part of the video look happens when the signal hard clips, which is unpleasant. You'll want to use a hyper gamma or cinegamma curve to try to roll off the highlights so they retain some detail up until they clip. Hopefully the highlights don't change color when they clip. If the highlights look wrong then work hard to make sure nothing in the frame clips.
Some people say you need noise or grain to complete the look, but I disagree. Still, if you like noise/grain, add some and see what happens.
Mostly the "film look" is beautiful lighting and composition and subtle color. There's so real secret to it, just make pretty yet sophisticated images and you'll be fine. (The "sophisticated" part is the hardest and really has more to do with your eye than anything else.)
--
Art Adams
Director of Photography
San Francisco Bay Area | CA | USA
> How do the makers of the shows get that pure film look??
A lot of what constitutes the "film look" comes down to several key
elements:
(1) Great lighting. This makes everything "look like film," mostly because film is where you generally see better lighting than in video... although that's no longer true as all the people who used to do great film work are now doing great video work.
(2) Great compositions. See (1).
(3) Subtlety of color. Film colors tend not to be really saturated, and saturated colors are a hallmark of the video look. Lower overall color saturation, and especially reduce saturation in highlights. Film doesn't saturate highlights but video saturates colors right up until they clip.
(4) Lots of contrast. See (1).
(5) Softness. Turn the detail circuit on the camera down or off, retaining enough sharpness that the image looks like it's in focus when it is but not so much that you can see every detail in skin imperfections.
(6) Rolled-off highlights. Part of the video look happens when the signal hard clips, which is unpleasant. You'll want to use a hyper gamma or cinegamma curve to try to roll off the highlights so they retain some detail up until they clip. Hopefully the highlights don't change color when they clip. If the highlights look wrong then work hard to make sure nothing in the frame clips.
Some people say you need noise or grain to complete the look, but I disagree. Still, if you like noise/grain, add some and see what happens.
Mostly the "film look" is beautiful lighting and composition and subtle color. There's so real secret to it, just make pretty yet sophisticated images and you'll be fine. (The "sophisticated" part is the hardest and really has more to do with your eye than anything else.)
--
Art Adams
Director of Photography
San Francisco Bay Area | CA | USA