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OT, but maybe not: Luis speaks the truth to young & old! :)
Luis: I hope it’s OK with you and the COW management if I reproduce your recent post from DVInfo.net here. (A link to the thread would bring up a lot of other stuff that’s nowhere near as relavant.) However, if this is forum no-no, please delete this, and my sincere apologies.)
In these last few days before NAB, when some of our wallets are burning a hole in our back pockets, Luis’ following words are soooooooo dead-on-target. Thanks, Luis!
– Peter
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Luis Caffesse:“Things I wished someone had told me at 18:
If you want to make movies, forget about the cameras and spend your time writing. Learn how to tell a story. Image quality is second to story quality.
Take the time you spend worrying about the image quality now, and worry about performances. If your actors aren’t believable, a great looking image isn’t going to help you.
No one has ever walked out of a movie and thought, “that would have been great if only they had a few more lines of resolution.” Instead people say things like “that was boring” and “what was the point?”
As many people here have already said, at 18 you are blessed enough to have gear equal to what some here use to make a living. You have MORE than what you need to get your story on screen. Festivals don’t care nearly as much about resolution as they do about engaging content.
A friend of mine recently shot a feature on the DVX100 for virtually no money. He didn’t use an anamorphic adapter.
He played Sundance, Berlin, SXSW, and a few others.
He’s picked up a few awards along the way too.
He now has an agent from william morris representing him, and is talking to a few studios about his next project.No one cared that his movie was on DV.
What they cared about was that they saw he had talent.
He delivered a movie that people cared about, with honest performances, and a solid structured script.Don’t think of your feature as the end product. People who see it in festivals aren’t always looking at the movies to buy them, they are looking at the movies to see what you can do. They are interested in what you will make NEXT, not only what you made.
SD is more than good enough, and will be for a while.
The differences between a DVX and an XL2 are not nearly as big as the differences between a good movie and a bad movie.One last thing, which somone already mentioned but I feel is important enough to repeat.
GET A GOOD SOUND PERSON.
When we see a movie, we can get used to just about any level of image quality, but sound always has to be clear and audible.As a friend of mine always reminds me:
“The eyes adjust, but the ears don’t”
Find a good story, get honest performances, get clean audio…and no one will really care what you shot it on”
Damn I wish I could send this thread back in time to myself!!
🙂
Oh yeah, one last thing…in terms of image quality….
Someone said a really smart thing the other day –“If you know how to light, it doesn’t matter what format you shoot on.
And if you don’t know how to light, it doesn’t matter what format you shoot on”__________________
Luis Caffesse
Austin, TexasStudio 3 Productions, Inc.”
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