Damen Wrote:
Flying Rabbit Wrote:
I'm wanting to go see this because of the digital filmmaking involved. Mann has pretty much started mastering the limitations and advancements of the process. They were using some newish cameras on the project, and being the nerd I am, I want to see how it turned out. I was talking to a guy who was a cameraguy on the project, and he said the dailies looked gorgeous so, I'm banking on some cool visuals.
Plus, its the Vice, mang.
HD is still well behind 35mm. For one you don't get the latitude in darkness you get with film. Mann's obsession with HD is most likely fueled as much by $$$ as actual look. He overshoots like a director that has no clue what he wants & the studio most likely gets sick of funding his overshooting. HD is a hell of a lot cheaper than 35mm. On "The Insider" he shot a 100 to 1 ratio. That's 100 minutes for every 1 minute that ended up in the final cut. Normal in Hollywood is half of that. Normal in Indie & Foreign cinema is even lower. The only other feature film that I know of that was in that 100 to 1 ratio vicinity was "Apocalypse Now" which of course was plagued by major issues including switching the main character part way into filming. And it's 100 to 1 ratio was earned prior to the "Redux" version coming out.
I can't wait for the day when every sporting event is shot exclusively in HD, it's head & shoulders above digital video. But beyond sports or documentary type stuff I can't get excited. I think by the time it catches up & takes over feature films our eyes will be so old we won't know the difference

The thing is, you have to approach it, and light it like film. If you don't, yr screwed. Collateral was shot the way it was partially by the limitations of the format, and partially on purpose. I think its good that filmmakers (whoops) are experiementing with different methods. I'm intrigued by the outlook. The thing is, digital is getting closer and closer to 35 everyday. Look at digifilms like Altman's "The Company", and look at Superman. Big difference. It just makes sense for workflow purposes as well, when you think we're editing digitally, so why not go directly from camera essentially to computer. I shoot still bunches of stuff on film (16 & S8), and I love the look of it, but if you give me the leverage to shoot, I'm going to shoot.