Author
|
Topic: Turning video into film... Crazy idea
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maurizio Di Cintio
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 977
From: Ortona, Italy
Registered: Jan 2004
|
posted July 10, 2005 04:31 PM
Hi. I did this a few times. It's a great way to shoot titles with special effects. Also you can have a DOlby or a THX jingle to show prior to your features, which adds a touch of great showmanship. I also shot the opening rolling titles in Empire Strikes Back to splice before the beginning of the digest which, as everybody knows, hasn't got them. And it works really fine, provided your LCD is really bright. It works better by using a faster film stock like the now discontinued VNF 125 (but sharpness becomes a concern) and/or by projecting the image from the computer with an LCD videoprojector (never tried DLP but I suspect there might be problems with them, same for plasma monitors...). Going the extra mile: back projection from an LCD VPR through a fresnel screen and the movie camera on the other side: better saturation and contrast. Belive me, noth so much worth to have a rare film or something never relesed on 8 mm, but certainly worth for the purposes I described. Results are always decent at least, with proper set up and camera (I use a Canon 1014 XLS). Try and enjoy.
-------------------- Maurizio
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jan Bister
Darth 8mm
Posts: 2629
From: Ohio, USA
Registered: Jan 2005
|
posted July 10, 2005 10:21 PM
You know, you bring up a point there I hadn't even considered: printing copyrighted material to film. Another big reason for doing it yourself, as you'd end up with a print you could screen in the privacy of your own home, perhaps to a small audience if not charged admission. Just like any other super-8 film
The way the professionals do it, from what I heard, is like so... expose 35mm film through a tiny, high-resolution display that fits the dimensions of the film frame (a sort of contact printer) - and for each frame, expose the red, yellow and blue separately, then go on to the next frame. That's how they create computer-animated films such as Toy Story...
...And you know what? I just had ANOTHER cool idea - by inverting the colors of your source video material (thus ending up with a negative color display) you could use NEGATIVE film instead of REVERSAL film, and still end up with a projectable positive print!!
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|