Tue Feb 27, 2024 1:33 am
The so-called Cinematic Mode is just a fake, based on LiDAR data. It works surprisingly well for stills, but not that much for video, where you often get a kind of halo, in particular around hair. It also collides with regular motion blur (like 180 degrees shutter), which is an integral part of a true cinematic look.
Apple used it in the ads for one of the older models, and you could easily spot that distracting effect. I doubt any of the recent iPhone 15 videos, the good looking ones, has used it. Study youtu.be/j0X8sOdv3bg for example, where most of the shots have very deep focus. Some extreme close-ups have true background separation, even with those tiny sensors. I don't see any shots with the fake Cinematic Look there, it's all about lighting and excellent editing.
If you insist on using it, use the Apple app and Final Cut Pro X.
My disaster protection: export a .drp file to a physically separated storage regularly.
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