Luctantem wrote:Can someone detail the difference between shooting in BMPC4K and in BMCC EF 2.5K for theatrical release?
2K projection is going good in big screens.
As David indicates, you may need to supply your scene with more light using the BMPC4K versus the BMCC. At this point, we don't know the native ISO of the sensor but it way be 400ASA or perhaps 640ASA versus 800ASA on the BMCC.
The global shutter should make your film free of the effects that a rolling shutter can induce and that clearly will be an improvement at times.
There is one stop difference in the dynamic range which may also affect how you shoot and/or light, 12 versus 13.
The BMPC4K will have greater resolution but in a digital film, depending upon the subject, you may want to soften the image when that can be too revealing. Don't know how aliasing and moiré will compare. But downscaling your deliverables from 4K to 2K you should see an improved image resolution versus the BMCC.
The 'crop factor' of the BMPC4K is 1.7x versus the BMCC 2.28x. So your angle of view will be close to a 35mm cinema format. That means it is easier to get a wide angle and your depth of field will be more shallow, without being crazy shallow, when you want that.
The improvements remain to be seen since there is no footage, especially raw footage, released yet for the pixel peepers. Image quality in terms of colour is the big thing we are waiting to see. The BMCC can produce a beautiful image with its colour science (BMD's secret sauce) and the high dynamic range. With the lower dynamic range and a sensor from a different supplier, will BMD pull off a stunning image that can dare to compare with other digital cinema cameras like the ARRI Alexa and Red Epic?
Rick Lang
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