Has anyone thought, and this is probably the case, that it's simply Abrams prefers to shoot on film? Many directors prefer the look of a film based image, rather then digital (I believe Spielberg IIRC said he would never shoot a live action film digitally). All of Abrams other films have been shot with anamorphic lenses on film, and it seems to be the style he prefers. This allows to achieve his vision in 2d, and for Paramount to have large amount of time to do a quality post 3d conversion.
Has anyone thought, and this is probably the case, that it's simply Abrams prefers to shoot on film? Many directors prefer the look of a film based image, rather then digital (I believe Spielberg IIRC said he would never shoot a live action film digitally). All of Abrams other films have been shot with anamorphic lenses on film, and it seems to be the style he prefers. This allows to achieve his vision in 2d, and for Paramount to have large amount of time to do a quality post 3d conversion.
Well, I've seen the trailer to The Hobbit, and there's no difference to film. At least in the outcome. I don't know if the production/post production process is different. If you have to learn entirely knew lighting setups because to get the film look you have to do it differently or something.
But The Hobbit looks exactly like The Lord of the Rings, so it's not impossible.
Has anyone thought, and this is probably the case, that it's simply Abrams prefers to shoot on film?
Has anyone thought, and this is probably the case, that it's simply Abrams prefers to shoot on film?
There's an economic downside to it. It will affect budget, and what gets put up on the screen.
Has anyone thought, and this is probably the case, that it's simply Abrams prefers to shoot on film?
There's an economic downside to it. It will affect budget, and what gets put up on the screen.
Shouldn't it be a lot cheaper to do VFX heavy films in 2D? I mean they have to render twice the amount of frames for proper 3D, right? With 2D they are done in half the time --> half the costs.
It comes through all the way down the pipeline. Even TV shows that were shot on 35mm film such as CSI (Las Vegas) switched to digital and now looks different.there is a difference in look to them. There is something about the grain structure that a lot of the directors, including Abrams likes, and even though you can get beautiful, sharp, and highly detailed images digitally, they just don't look quite the same as film.
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