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09/09/2005 04:11:20 PM · #1 |
This is a neat article on the making of Tim Burton's Corpse Bride movie. Apparantly they purchased 24 Canon EOS-1D Mark II mounted with Nikon lenses and stitched the frames together to make the movie.
//www.editorsguild.com/newsletter/JulAug05/julaug05_bride.html
Message edited by author 2005-09-09 16:17:25. |
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09/09/2005 04:14:32 PM · #2 |
links not working
the company i work for supplied a load of eqipment for this film while shooting it in london
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09/09/2005 04:23:54 PM · #3 |
.
Message edited by author 2005-09-09 16:24:56. |
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09/09/2005 04:24:18 PM · #4 |
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09/09/2005 04:24:35 PM · #5 |
Bah!!!...
Originally posted by article:
"We originally selected the Nikon D2H because of the wireless ftp, the chip size, and the fact that we owned $90,000 of Nikon glass [lenses]," notes Watts. However, random noise was visible as pixilation in dark areas when the shots were played back as a movie. This pixilation effect was only visible in stop-motion photography, an application the Nikon hadn’t been designed for." |
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09/09/2005 05:37:07 PM · #6 |
Unbelievable! and I thought it was CGI when viewing the trailers....
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09/09/2005 05:45:12 PM · #7 |
yeah I read about this a number of weeks ago. Really cool that they do it that way isn't it?
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09/09/2005 05:48:44 PM · #8 |
Originally posted by jhonan: Bah!!!...
Originally posted by article:
"We originally selected the Nikon D2H because of the wireless ftp, the chip size, and the fact that we owned $90,000 of Nikon glass [lenses]," notes Watts. However, random noise was visible as pixilation in dark areas when the shots were played back as a movie. This pixilation effect was only visible in stop-motion photography, an application the Nikon hadn’t been designed for." | |
I like how they dissed nikon, but tried to spin it on the way out. LOL!
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09/09/2005 06:08:35 PM · #9 |
Originally posted by jhonan: Bah!!!...
Originally posted by article:
"We originally selected the Nikon D2H because of the wireless ftp, the chip size, and the fact that we owned $90,000 of Nikon glass [lenses]," notes Watts. However, random noise was visible as pixilation in dark areas when the shots were played back as a movie. This pixilation effect was only visible in stop-motion photography, an application the Nikon hadn’t been designed for." | |
Nikons aren't designed for "stop-motion photography"??? so all Nikons are designed for is making movies then??? I'm confused......
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09/09/2005 06:23:21 PM · #10 |
Originally posted by Jewellian: Nikons aren't designed for "stop-motion photography"??? so all Nikons are designed for is making movies then??? I'm confused...... |
I think what that quotation refers to is the pixellation visible when the individual images were played back as a movie. The pixellation is apparently not visible in stills, but when they are sequenced, the problem shows up. Thus the Nikons are apparently suitable for traditional photography, but not stop-motion movies. |
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09/09/2005 06:35:38 PM · #11 |
Tim Burton's work is mournful and beautiful. I can't wait to see Corpse Bride. Very interesting! |
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