NAB
The giant screen spectacular of 2001: A Space Odyssey,
Lawrence of Arabia, Dunkirk or The Hateful Eight are visually epic
in ways that many filmmakers can only dream. The sheer cost of using exotic
equipment like Hasselblad lenses and IMAX cameras put it beyond the reach of
wannabe David Leans or Chris Nolans.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/the-future-is-medium-format/
Until now. New kit from cameras and lenses to adapters is
paving the way for so called medium format cinematography to be produced on a
budget.
The argument is put forward by Yaroslav Altunin at CineD.
Originally, medium format film was used on Mamiya,
Hasselblad, and Rolleiflex cameras (to name a few) delivering frame sizes of 60mm
by 70mm.
“These larger frame sizes dwarf the image circle of every
35mm photography and Super35 cinema lens on the market, which is why
Christopher Nolan used rehoused Hasselblad lenses for Dunkirk and Tenet, as
well as several custom lenses from Panavision. Medium format lenses are larger
and create a bigger image circle that covers these gigantic frame sizes.”
This says Altunin has a unique effect on your recorded
image. “Depending on your framing, your subject is separated not only from your
background but also foreground. It creates a larger-than-life aesthetic that is
costly to achieve. Imagine getting the intimacy of an 80mm lens, with the width
of a 35mm lens.”
While Leica, Pentax, and Hasselblad released several medium
format cameras a few years back their quality left something to be desired,
according to Altunin. However, he feels that the new Fujifilm GFX 100s ($5999) is
the real deal, especially paired with the Atomos Ninj V recorder ($600) which
will output RAW. However, the frame size is still 43.9mm x 32.9mm and nowhere
near the size of 65mm or IMAX.
Altunin’s answer is to add a focal reducer (or speedbooster).
By pairing a Fujifilm GFX 100s with a Metabones 0.71x Hasselblad V to Fuji G
Speedbooster ($800), “we are able to get a gorgeous medium format frame
comparable to an 80mm image circle,” he declares.
If Hasselblad V system lenses are too expensive (they can
cost up to $5000 a unit) then Kipon makes a 0.7x Mamiya 645 to Fuji GFX for
Mamiya lenses and if the GFX 100s is out of the range there are other speed
boosters that can achieve a larger frame even when using full-frame
cameras.
“By taking cameras such as the Sigma fp L, Canon R5 or
Sony FX3 and combining them with Kipon Speedboosters we can adapt Mamiya 645
lenses to E-mount, R-Mount, or L-Mount. This set-up would provide a comparable image
to a 56mm diagonal frame, or roughly 46mm by 31mm. Think of this as the Super35
of Medium Format Cinematography.”
While all of these options may not have the ergonomics or
workflow of an ARRI Alexa 65 or a Panaflex 65, they are amazing options for
filmmakers to achieve an unattainable look.
“It is incredible to see that these tools are finally within
reach,” Altunin says. “What the DSRL revolution did for budget-conscious
filmmakers, this new medium format evolution will once again change how we
create our imagery.”
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