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From Hand Crank to HD24p

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Title: From Hand Crank to HD24p


1
From Hand Crank to HD24p
  • A brief history of movie cameras

2
  • Cinema has been astonishing audiences for over
    100 years and has provided film artists with an
    outlet to voice their imaginations in unique and
    innovative ways.
  • The medium is a dynamic art form that allows us
    to see, hear, feel, and experience complex
    stories in ways only possible by film's visual
    nature.

3
  • Over the years, the technology to create film has
    changed from Muybridge's array of cameras to
    Silicon Graphics workstations used for the
    digital creations of Lord of the Rings and Matrix
    Reloaded.

4
  • Improvements in technology have allowed
    generations of filmmakers to produce film with
    more complexity and visual impact.
  • Many stories being told today by filmmakers could
    have not been achieved in the yesteryear because
    of limitations in technology.

5
  • Digital effects and non-linear editing have been
    a great tool for film's expanding scope for
    almost 30 years.
  • Yet, the technology for principal photography of
    films has not changed drastically over film's
    history.

6
  • The basic concept of chemical-based film has not
    changed from Muybridge's experimental film system
    used to capture the gallop of a horse to the
    "state-of-the-art" Panavison 35mm film cameras
    used in the production of Hollywood's top
    grossing films.

7
  • Film cameras have gained many helpful
    sophisticated features and the sensitivity of
    film stock has increased drastically, but the
    process of acquiring an image onto a negative is
    basically the same.

8
  • This is how it all started, the Camera Obscura

9
  • The camera obscura was basically a box with a
    hole in one end and a viewing mirror at the
    other.
  • This was used as the basis for the first still
    cameras when photograohic plates were invented in
    the 1840s

10
  • Although we think of photography as a relatively
    modern invention, the principle of the camera
    obscura is however ancient.
  • If a small hole is made in one wall of a dark
    room an upside down image appears on an opposite
    wall. This is described by Plato in the 6th
    century BC.

11
  • The history of optics and the making of lenses is
    similarly ancient, there are examples of Egyptian
    cast glass lenses in the British Museum.
  • The Roman philosophers Ptolemy and Seneca were
    very interested in optics and Nero is reputed to
    have watched the Roman games wearing glasses.

12
  • However, no-one thought about putting these two
    ideas together until 1000 year later when
    Dutchman Hans Lippershey made the first telescope
    in 1550.
  • It took almost another two hundred year before
    the first camera was invented.

13
  • In the 1820s, a Frenchman called Joseph Niepce
    was experimenting with ways of making a permanent
    record of the image seen in a camera obscura
    (what we would now call a pinhole camera).
  • Using a glass place coated in bitumen, he
    eventually succeeded in producing a very faint
    print of the view from a window of his house in
    1827.

14
  • Movie cameras then developed out of the advances
    in still photography.
  • The main difficulty was to get the film emulsion
    through the camera at a fast enough rate and yet
    stop it in front of the lens to allow for the
    exposure of the image.

15
  • After some early experimental designs, most
    cinematograph cameras used a claw mechanism to
    pull down the perforated film.

16
  • Typical camera interior showing film boxes and
    film path. Film capacity was usually 400 feet, or
    just over 6 minutes at 16 frames (pictures) per
    second

17
  • This Gaumont camera of c.1907 has external film
    magazines.
  • The whole thing is made of wood.

18
  • This Pathé Studio camera was popular in the early
    days of Hollywood.

19
  • All these early cameras were incredibly heavy and
    cumbersome. They had to be mounted on huge heavy
    duty tripods that meant movement was virtually
    impossible.

20
  • Also, zoom lenses were not available yet. Lenses
    were fixed and were quite slow by todays
    standards.
  • Coupled with emulsions that were not particularly
    sensitive meant that a lot of light was needed to
    produce a decent image.

21
  • All of these technical problems meant that
    filmmakers were limited in what they could shoot
    and how they could shoot it.

22
  • Things started to change around the time of the
    first world war 1914.
  • Cameras were being made smaller and lighter, and
    were being made out of metal.
  • It meant that filmmakers had more freedom in how
    they could shoot.

23
  • However, one of the most important advances came
    at the Leipzig Trade Fair in 1937.
  • The Arriflex 35 set an historic precedent as the
    world's first reflex motion picture camera.

24
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25
  • Prior to this, all movie cameras had suffered
    parallax errors due to the viewfinder being
    offset to the taking lens.
  • Although the idea of a 45 degree angled mirror
    reflecting light into a viewing prism worked for
    SLR photography, it was not feasible to flip a
    similar mirror up and down inside a motion
    picture camera.

26
  • It took the combined skills of Erich Kastner
    (Chief Arriflex engineer) and August Arnold
    (Co-founder of Arriflex) to design a method,
    whereby this mirror rotated with the revolving
    shutter.
  • Thereafter, the Arriflex 35 was born, a small and
    compact hand-held camera, simple to use and
    popular with both news cinematographers and
    feature film-makers.

27
  • Alongside these developments in camera and lens
    technology, the film emulsion itself was going
    through some important developments.
  • Kodak pioneered the development of faster and
    more sensitive emulsions for still photography
    and these then became available for
    cinematographers.

28
  • Although we think of all early cinema as being in
    black and white, the colouring of films had been
    around since the late 19th century.
  • The quest to produce motion pictures in realistic
    colors began the instant that that the first hand
    cranked cine camera turned.

29
  • A variety of assorted methods achieved varying
    degrees of technical and commercial success prior
    to the introduction of three strip full colour
    Technicolor in 1934.
  • The earliest films were sometimes coloured by
    hand, frame by frame.

30
  • The example (right) is from a George Méliès film
    of 1904.

31
  • Tinting (which gave an overall colour to a whole
    scene) and toning (chemically changing the tones
    to a colour, but leaving the highlights white)
    could also be used to add colour effects.
  • However, as films got longer, hand tinting became
    too time consuming and expensive.

32
  • 'Natural' colour arrived commercially in 1909
    when Kinemacolor was shown at the Palace Theatre
    of Varieties in London in February, at the Folies
    Bergeres in Paris in April 1909, in Berlin Garden
    in the autumn of 1909, and at Madison Square
    Gardens, New York, in December.

33
  • Financed and promoted by Charles Urban, and
    developed for Urban by George Albert Smith from
    earlier experiments by Lee and Turner, the system
    was ingenious and successful.
  • The camera was fitted with a rotating wheel of
    red and green filters, and alternate frames of
    the black-and-white filmstock were exposed to one
    of the two colours.

34
  • The negative film was processed and printed, and
    the black-and-white positive shown in a projector
    also fitted with a filter wheel.
  • The film was threaded so that the re-exposed
    frame was projected by red light, and the
    green-exposed frame by green light.

35
  • The system operated at 32 frames per second, to
    enable the colours to merge.
  • The system gave a surprisingly wide range of
    colour. Subjects included the Coronation
    procession of George V, and the Royal Durbar in
    Delhi, shown at London's Scala Theatre - the home
    of Kinemacolor for some years - in 1912.

36
  • Becky Sharp (1935), the three-color feature film
    that eroded the widespread commercial viability
    of all other methods of colour photography for
    nearly 20 years.

37
  • The picture was produced by Pioneer Pictures in
    collaboration with Technicolor Corporation in an
    effort to demonstrate, to studios that had tired
    of imperfect and complex systems, that films
    could be photographed in full colour.

38
  • The jolts and shakes of handheld footage work
    well for certain scenes -- an unsettling chase in
    a horror movie, for example, or a bare-bones
    documentary -- but for the most part, filmmakers
    in the past shied away from handheld
    cinematography.

39
  • When a scene called for the camera to move, the
    crew attached it to a dolly, a wheeled platform
    that rides on a track or smooth floor. Dollies
    work great for a wide range of shots, but they
    have certain limitations.
  • You can't use them on stairs, for example, and
    they are hard to navigate around obstacles. It is
    also extremely difficult to set them up on rough
    terrain.

40
  • In the early 1970s, a commercial director and
    producer named Garrett Brown began working on
    alternative stabilizing systems to get around
    these limitations.
  • Brown wanted to build a highly portable device
    that would isolate the camera from the cameraman,
    as well as improve the camera's balance, to
    minimize shakes and shocks.

41
  • In 1973, Brown realized his goals with a
    revolutionary but remarkably simple machine.
    "Brown's Stabilizer," later renamed Steadicam.

42
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43
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44
  • Steadicam operators have helped create some of
    the most memorable shots in film history.
  • In "Rocky" (1976), one of the first feature films
    to use Steadicams, operator Garrett Brown let the
    audience follow Sylvester Stallone as he ran up
    the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum.

45
  • This shot, one of the most memorable in the
    movie, would have been nearly impossible before
    the Steadicam.

46
  • In "The Shining" (1980), director Stanley
    Kubrick used a Steadicam shot to zip down the
    hallways of a haunted hotel, and another to
    follow Jack Nicholson through a snowy hedge maze.

47
  • Steadicams have given filmmakers and movie-goers
    alike a new freedom of movement. With a
    Steadicam, a director can float the camera (and,
    by extension, the audience) into a forest,
    through a crowd of people, or down into a cave.

48
  • In TV shows like "ER," Steadicam shots put the
    audience in the middle of the action, as if they
    were another character in the show.
  • This simple machine has truly changed the world
    of filmmaking forever.

49
  • The next big change is happening right now with
    the rise of digital cinematography.

50
  • Steven Soderbergh,Academy Award-winning
    director of "Traffic," and other box office hits
    including "Erin Brockovich" and "Oceans Eleven,"
    shot the feature "Full Frontal
  • on the Canon XL1s

51
  • Digital cinematography arose out of the
    development of the video tape recording and the
    video camera.
  • In the 1950s, Television was booming and there
    was soon an urgent need to find some way of
    recording television programs - particularly in
    the United States, where the country spanned
    several time-zones, and the evening news in New
    York would be received in the mid-afternoon in
    California.

52
  • The first solution was TeleCine, pointing a film
    camera at a TV monitor and filming the picture
    directly.
  • But this was slow (since the film had to be
    developed) poor quality, and prone to distortion.

53
  • Magnetic tape recording was an obvious solution -
    it was actually invented in the 19th century, and
    had been widely used for recording sound since
    the war.

54
  • However, the equipment presently used in video
    camera production has a relatively short history.
    In the early 1960s a method of editing video was
    developed.
  • The first attempts used the bulky and complex
    black and white image Orthicon cameras and two
    inch video tape equipment.

55
  • By 1969, amateur videotaping become possible with
    the invention of a Sony black and white Vidicon
    hand held camera, combined with a an open reel, ½
    inch videotape recorder.
  • All these early video cameras used a tube similar
    to that in televisions to convert light to an
    electronic signal.

56
  • Even though these tubes became smaller and
    lighter, they had significant problems.
  • The critical problem was their low light level
    sensitivity compared to film. The average three
    colour tube camera had an equivalent ASA or light
    sensitivity of about 1/100 of the fastest film
    stocks.

57
  • Also, tubes were susceptible to burn.
  • When a tube camera was pointed at a high contrast
    light source, such as the sun or a spotlight on
    set, the surface of the tube became damaged and
    would then not respond properly to normal light.

58
  • Also because the cameras used three tubes to
    produce the picture, these tubes had to be
    precisely aligned, or registered in order to
    produce a clear picture.
  • Any bumping or jarring of the camera tended to
    knock at least one tube out of registration.

59
  • To produce a viable alternative to film therefore
    the tube system had to go. It took until 1984 to
    develop a better system. The first camera was
    produced with a CCD, an electronic Charge Coupled
    Device.

60
  • CCDs are flat pieces of selenium and other light
    sensitive metal crystal pixels. Instead of using
    a beam of electrons to scan the chip, the new
    technology used a chip that is electronically
    reads as light falling across its surface changes
    voltages.
  • These changes become the electronic equivalent of
    the picture at the same frame and line rate as
    the picture tube.

61
  • This development made video cameras a much more
    viable proposition not only for film and
    television crews, but also opened up the
    possibility of delivering a usable and cheap home
    video camera for the mass market.

62
  • Sony did in fact launch the worlds first
    camcorder, the BetaMovie BMC-100 which went on
    sale in 1983.

63
  • However, it was JVC who produced the best known
    and most successful of the early camcorders.

64
  • The GR-C1 probably qualifies as a design classic,
    perhaps even an icon of the 1980s

65
  • This revolutionised the way news was originated
    with electronic news gathering (ENG) the effect
    on film news gathering was significant.
    Cameramen could be mobile and react fast, as well
    as keeping good quality.

66
  • Since 1956 all video tape recording systems had
    used the FM analogue method of recordings but in
    1988 Sony and BTS introduced the first Digital
    Video Tape Recorder, the D1. This system recorded
    onto a small particle Cobalt Magnetic Tape

67
  • Since then we have seen significant advances in
    the consumer video with 8mm, S-VHS and Hi-8
    development, enabling low cost acquisition on a
    small cassette system.
  • More widespread use of digital recording began in
    1992 with the emergence of digital Betacam and
    its backwards compatibility with analogue
    Betacam.

68
  • The last 5 years has seen a huge jump in the
    technology of motion picture cameras, with George
    Lucas leading the development in conjunction with
    Sony and Panavision.
  • His move to a purely digital production process
    has galvanised the industry into accepting
    digital cinematography.

69
  • Lucas started the process when he asked producer
    Rick McCallum to explore the possibility of
    getting a digital camera built in time for
    shooting Episode II in Australia, in late June of
    2000.

70
  • In 1998, a technical working group was formed,
    made up of many engineers from Sony, Panavision
    and Lucasfilm.
  • For the next three years this group met, on
    average, every two months thrashing out
    hundreds of system details which shaped all of
    the products and software that Lucas needed
    developed.

71
  • In late November of 1999, as promised, both Sony
    and Panavision delivered the first 24 frame
    prototype camera and lenses.

72
  • HDW-F900 fitted with the Panavision Primo lenses.
  • This is the High Def 24p camera.

73
  • These cameras are being refined to shoot at
    higher and higher quality at lower compression
    rates.
  • Lucas is shooting Episode 3 on the new Sony
    HDW-F950's with full-bandwidth uncompressed
    digital outputs recording the 444 output.

74
  • This is at the cutting edge of film production
    technology and shows just how far weve come in
    100 or so years.
  • Who knows where we go from here..
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