STATE OF PLAY. CINEMATOGRAPHY. ACROSS THE POND. BSC


Courtesy British Cinematographer Magazine.  

Across the Pond by Mark London Williams. April 2024


BY: MARK LONDON WILLIAMS 


Some prayer books, the stretch that comes after the celebrations of Easter is referred to as “ordinary time” – a return to more regular days, after the fervency of carnival, and the spring holidays.


In Hollywood, of course, that fervency generally coincides with Oscar season, and all the connected award shows. And then, somewhere around Thanksgiving, or Advent, or Hanukkah, if it’s early, the handicapping for the next crop of nominees starts in earnest and “ordinary time” is already giving way to the anticipation of the carnivale to come.

And while this may indeed be the post-Oscar stretch (astute readers will realise we are back in “Across the Pond” gear with this outing) it’s definitely not “ordinary”.


And we’re not simply referring to the fact that Emmy handicapping is gearing up, or even the various woes and unravellings in the world at large. After all, even in Hollywood (both the literal and the conceptual one), things have yet to return to “normal”, post-pandemic and post-strike, both in terms of steadily reliable numbers of movie-goers, and in terms of how much work there is – or isn’t – for those who make “shows”, or whatever it is we’re calling the “content” on our large and small screens now.

And to be sure, even using a reductive word like “content” is entirely part of the problem the industry is facing in this digital, bifurcated, infinite platformed, AI-approaching, small byte age of ours.


Apple TV+’s illuminating Girls State

Gender Politics


However, when we’re lucky, some of that “content” can still be illuminating. Such is the case with the new documentary on Apple TV+ this week, Girls State, a follow up to their earlier, Emmy-winning Boys State, of a couple years back.


The premise, as the sponsoring American Legion states it, is to gather high school seniors “to learn about the political process by electing officials for all levels of state government and actively running a mock government. The participants are assigned to mock cities and either the ‘Federalist Party’ or ‘Nationalist Party’.” Kind of a US-specific Model UN, then, while also a summer camp – with all the intrigue those usually bring – held on the grounds of a sponsoring campus.


While the Legion’s public service-minded Auxiliary has, to their credit, also run a Girls State programme for decades, the boys and girls tracks are kept distinctly separate. Each US state, except Hawaii, has its own programmes (former President Bill Clinton was one of its alums), and now the filmmakers return, after their original Texas-set story, to follow a girls’ gathering on a college campus in Missouri. Where, for the first time, a Boys State conference is on the same grounds.


The timing also coincided with the run-up to the US Supreme Court’s notorious Dobbs decision, which had at that point already been leaked (and is thus part of the discussion), overturning legal protection for abortion access. So while the young women came from a broad swath of Missouri communities – African-American and Indian-American girls from cities like St. Louis, their more often (though not always) conservative white counterparts from the Red State’s smaller towns – all of them, whether campaigning for the group’s “governorship” – i.e. its presidency – or a seat in the legislature or on its Supreme Court, confront certain lessons that not all politics is created equal. Starting with the fact that none of the girls are allowed anywhere on campus by themselves. Whereas the boys are free to go solo.


Laura Hudock
Cinematographer Laura Hudock


Laura Hudock, whose own credits run to docuseries like Woman with Gloria Steinem, The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth, and episodic drama like American Rust, was one of the DPs, and recounts coming on board when “directors Jesse [Moss] and Amanda [McBaine] brought a team of seven cinematographers together to film Girls State. A few of the DPs had previously shot [Boys State]. When Jesse was looking to add another cinematographer to the team he reached out to friend/director Matthew Heineman who I’ve worked with previously and recommended me for the project. Then I interviewed with Jesse and it seemed to be a great fit! Supporting stories that confront women’s rights and encourage women’s empowerment are important to me and joining a talented, Emmy-winning team was a no-brainer.”


The doc – as all documentaries must – seeks to narrow its rather sprawling canvas into a graspable narrative or two, or six, in this case, as Hudock relates that the directors “interviewed hundreds of girls to narrow it down to a cast of six main subjects. Pairing a cinematographer with the right subject is also, in a way, an important casting decision for a documentary director.  Each DP was assigned a different subject,” who they then followed, and Hudock drew Emily Worthmore, one of the more self-assured candidates for the group’s governorship.


While describing herself as a conservative, Worthmore generally stayed away from specific issue statements, running a more “up with people!” style campaign, attempting to simply bring everyone together through sheer dint of her personality, except of course, doing this in a world where real, ostensibly “grown up” politicians are busily demonising each other.

 “Emily and I just clicked,” Hudock says. “Although I may not agree with her politics I appreciated her as a human being and the respect was mutual.


“The key to great vérité cinematography is trust,” she continues (which of course brings up the question of whether that element is needed in decidedly non-vérité circumstances, like shooting a Hitchcock film, or Citizen Kane. But we digress…) “If your subject trusts you enough to let you into their intimate world, that’s when you can capture truthful and beautiful moments.”


Emily
Girls State‘s Emily Worthmore


And Worthmore provides some rather galvanising plot-twist moments of her own towards the end, when (mild spoiler alerts here) her campaign doesn’t go as planned, and coming to her “now what?” moment à la Robert Redford in The Candidate (though granted, he asked that after he’d won), she discovers a crusading journalist within, writing an article for the group’s paper asking salient questions such as why Missouri Governor Mike Parson comes only to congratulate the young men in person,  while completely ignoring the young women.


As the Romans said, Res Ipsa Loquitur.


“Most of the filming wasn’t planned,” Hudock allows. And of course, when it comes to the twists of “real life”, how could it be? “You just have to react and make choices as a scene unfolds in front of you. The larger scenes in the auditorium with all 500 girls were discussed as a team previously in terms of who was covering what,” but she says that “when you’re filming a vérité scene in the moment you have to think fast and basically edit in your head while you shoot.  


This has taught me the essentials of what sequence of frames are required to tell a story in a narrative scene.  My handheld instincts for a narrative are 1000% sharper because I’ve shot docs.  Probably the most important skill gained from documentary filming is the ability to be present and connected to the story unfolding in front of my lens.  I feel as if I am another actor in the scene, taking in and responding to the dialogue, emotional life, and beauty, or ugliness, revealeyd before me.”


Hudock took in, and responded to those moments with a Canon C500, which she says is not only “self-contained  (and) requires little or no accessories to operate (but also) allows for a small build which is important for most vérité documentary situations. Internal NDs, assignable buttons for quick changes, and light weight body are great aspects to have in a documentary camera.”


Canon


In  her work she “usually alternate(s) between Sony, ARRI, and Canon according to the project needs.  Mostly I choose Canon for nonstop vérité situations […] Filming Girls State was a marathon of 14-hour days in the heat where you felt like you may just collapse at the end of the day.”


Of the experience, she says “trying to keep it both steady and sharp while running around with a [Canon CN-E] 50mm prime wide open on a full frame camera was honestly not an easy task but worth it. We were intimately submerged in their world, an intimacy which I hope helps the audience connect more with these brilliant girls.”


The connecting part comes fairly easily, as the doc draws you right in – in part, because the girls are not only connecting with each other in ways they hadn’t anticipated, but eventually, with parts of themselves. Especially as even those with the most faith in the institutions around them come to realize that it’s still easier to negotiate those particular pathways if you’re over in Boys State, a few dorm buildings away.


AMY VINCENT

Amy Vincent ASC receives her ASC President’s Award in March 2024

 (Credit: Danny Moloshok/Moloshok Photography)


Sharing Skills

Also connecting with students, though in this case, teaching them about how to wield cameras of their own, is Amy Vincent ASC. We mentioned last column out that we’d done a longer interview with her around the time of the ASC awards, where she was honoured with the President’s Award, for not only being an active member of the society’s Board of Governors and founding member of the Society’s Vision Committee, but also “an influential pioneer and champion for women in the film industry (who) actively participates in mentorship programmes, while also teaching cinematography at universities, including the American Film Institute, Florida State University, and Loyola Marymount University where she is currently the Distinguished Artist in Residence.”


At Loyola, or LMU, located on the western edge of Los Angeles, where surviving wetlands are holding out against housing developments and tech company hubs, she helps students “as they are about to graduate” into a world both increasingly unpredictable in general, but also in terms of the specific career paths they may have imagined for themselves in  film and TV production, as they strive to “get off the bluff”, in the words of the dean who helped Vincent design the residency so she could “come and go with some freedom” to pursue her own work, which boasts such credits as Eve’s Bayou, Black Snake Moan, and Hustle & Flow.


SHANTOSH

Amy Vincent ASC with A Nice Indian Boy director Roshan Sethi


That work also includes the current A Nice Indian Boy, a kind of reverse Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? with a South Asian twist, as the parents of lead character Naveen, played by Karan Soni, must adjust to the fact their son’s intended is not only white – but another fella.


The indie feature was directed by Roshan Sethi, who Vincent met at Disney+ when they “were putting together a kids movie that he was directing”. Ultimately, “they wanted someone with more music video credits,” but she and Sethi “really hit it off in that meeting”, and about a year later, the script for Nice Indian Boy arrived, eventually rekindling what Vincent describes as “the family joy” of a tight knit indie shoot.


And although she describes the director and herself as “a little bit of an odd couple – we have a 32-year age difference,” one of the areas where they align is in having simultaneous multiple careers, something that Vincent considers will become more common in an increasingly complex world. “He’s a doctor, I’m a teacher,” she says.


PRAYING

Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff are the leads in A Nice Indian Boy


An oncology doctor, no less. As for Vincent, though, there’s no reason those “dual careers,” as she describes them, can’t inform each other. Of her campus mentoring. she says she finds an almost “illegal level of passion” in her students, something they can bring with them to a world where Vincent finds that she “really love(s) when people can do more than thing.”


She adds that not only does having “young people around… keep me on my game,” but she’s also been able to “access a lot of memories” from earlier in her own career path. All of which led to the current “confluence of energies”, as she describes it, recently topped off with the ASC honour.

Meanwhile, the energies here across the pond are increasingly heating up, as we head toward summer blooms and box office, along with the aforementioned Emmy forecasting.


We’ll see you back here when June starts busting out all over.

@TricksterInk / acrossthepondBC@gmail.com 



British Cinematographer Magazine

ON THE ROAD TO THE 95TH ACADEMY AWARDS

Oscars 2023, 95th Academy Awards

Everything Everywhere All at Once garnered the most Oscars nominations, leading the pack with 11 nominations, and The Banshees of Inisherin and All Quiet on the Western Front followed with nine a piece.

Peer through the lenses of this year's Oscar-nominated cinematographers— James Friend ('All Quiet on the Western Front), Darius Khondji ('Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths'),  Mandy Walker ('Elvis'), Roger Deakins (Empire of Light), and Florian Hoffmeister (Tár). From the trenches of World War I to the dazzling stage lights at the Rushmore Civic Center, each film takes you on a visually stunning journey, inviting you to immerse yourself in the world of the story.


Everything everywhere all at once. Michelle Yeoh, The Daniels

Find below, a full list of the 95th Academy Award nominations and winners.

Best Picture

All Quiet on the Western Front

Avatar: The Way of Water

The Banshees of Inisherin

Elvis

Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER ⭐

The Fabelmans

Tár

Top Gun: Maverick

Triangle of Sadness

Women Talking

Best Director

Martin McDonagh, The Banshees of Inisherin

Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER ⭐

Steven Spielberg, The Fabelmans

Todd Field, Tár

Ruben Östlund, Triangle of Sadness

Best Actor

Austin Butler, Elvis

Colin Farrell, The Banshees of Inisherin

Brendan Fraser, The Whale WINNER ⭐

Paul Mescal, Aftersun

Bill Nighy, Living


TÁR Cate Blanchett, Todd Fields

Best Actress

Cate Blanchett, Tár

Ana de Armas, Blonde

Andrea Riseborough, To Leslie

Michelle Williams, The Fablemans

Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER ⭐

Best Supporting Actor

Brendan Gleeson, The Banshees of Inisherin

Brian Tyree Henry, Causeway

Judd Hirsch, The Fabelmans

Barry Keoghan, The Banshees of Inisherin

Ke Huy Quan, Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER⭐

Best Supporting Actress

Angela Bassett, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Hong Chau, The Whale

Kerry Condon, The Banshees of Inisherin

Jamie Lee Curtis, Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER⭐

Stephanie Hsu, Everything Everywhere All at Once

Banshees of Isherin, Martin McDonough, Colin Farrell

 Set on a remote island off the west coast of Ireland, THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN follows lifelong friends Pádraic (Colin Farrell) and Colm (Brendan Gleeson), who find themselves at an impasse when Colm unexpectedly puts an end to their friendship. A stunned Pádraic, aided by his sister Siobhán (Kerry Condon) and troubled young islander Dominic (Barry Keoghan), endeavours to repair the relationship, refusing to take no for an answer. But Pádraic's repeated efforts only strengthen his former friend’s resolve and when Colm delivers a desperate ultimatum, events swiftly escalate, with shocking consequences.

Best Original Screenplay

Todd Field, Tár

Tony Kushner and Steven Spielberg, The Fabelmans

Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER ⭐

Martin McDonagh, The Banshees of Inisherin

Ruben Östlund, Triangle of Sadness

Best Adapted Screenplay

Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer, and Christopher McQuarrie from a story by Peter Craig and Justin Marks, Top Gun: Maverick

Kazuo Ishiguro, Living

Rian Johnson, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

Sarah Polley, Women Talking WINNER ⭐

Edward Berger, Ian Stokell, and Lesley Paterson, All Quiet on the Western Front

 

Elvis, Baz Lurhmann, Mandy Walker

Best Cinematography

All Quiet on the Western Front WINNER ⭐

Bardo

Elvis

Empire of Light

Tár

Best Animated Feature Film

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio WINNER ⭐

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On

Puss In Boots

The Sea Beast

Turning Red

Best Documentary Feature Film

All That Breathes

All The Beauty and the Bloodshed

Fire of Love

A House Made of Splinters

Navalny WINNER ⭐


All Quiet at The Western Front

Best International Feature Film

All Quiet on the Western Front (Germany) WINNER ⭐

Argentina, 1985 (Argentina)

Close (Belgium)

EO (Poland)

The Quiet One (Ireland)

Best Film Editing

The Banshees of Inisherin

Elvis

Everything Everywhere All at Once WINNER ⭐

Tár

Top Gun: Maverick

Best Original Score

All Quiet on the Western Front WINNER ⭐

Babylon

The Banshees of Inisherin

Everything Everywhere All at Once

The Fabelmans

Best Original Song 

"Applause," Tell It Like a Woman

"Hold My Hand," Top Gun, Maverick

"Lift Me Up," Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

"Naatu Naatu," RRR WINNER ⭐

"This Is A Life," Everything Everywhere All at Once

The Fabelmans, Steve Spielberg

Best Production Design

All Quiet on the Western Front WINNER ⭐

Avatar: The Way of Water

Babylon

Elvis

The Fabelmans

Best Costume Design

Babylon

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever WINNER ⭐

Elvis

Everything Everywhere All at Once

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

All Quiet on The Western Front

The Batman

Black Panther

Elvis

The Whale WINNER ⭐

 

The Batman

Best Live Action Short Film

An Irish Goodbye WINNER ⭐

Ivalu

Le Pupille

Night Ride

The Red Suitcase

 Best Documentary Short Film

The Elephant Whisperers WINNER ⭐

Haulout

How Do You Measure a Year

The Martha Mitchell Effect

Stranger at the Gate

Best Animated Short Film

The Boy, The Mole, The Fox and the Horse WINNER ⭐

The Flying Sailor

Ice Merchants

My Year of Dicks

An Ostrich Told Me the World is Fake and I Think I Believe It

Top Gun, Maverick, Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer

After more than thirty years of service as one of the Navy’s top aviators, Pete “Maverick” Mitchell (Tom Cruise) is where he belongs, pushing the envelope as a courageous test pilot and dodging the advancement in rank that would ground him. When he finds himself training a detachment of Top Gun graduates for a specialized mission the likes of which no living pilot has ever seen, Maverick encounters Lt. Bradley Bradshaw (Miles Teller), call sign: “Rooster,” the son of Maverick’s late friend and Radar Intercept Officer Lt. Nick Bradshaw, aka “Goose.” Facing an uncertain future and confronting the ghosts of his past, Maverick is drawn into a confrontation with his own deepest fears, culminating in a mission that demands the ultimate sacrifice from those who will be chosen to fly it.

Best Sound

All Quiet on the Western Front

Avatar: The Way of Water

The Batman

Elvis

Top Gun: Maverick WINNER ⭐

Best Visual Effects

All Quiet on the Western Front

Avatar: The Way of Water WINNER ⭐

The Batman

Black Panther

Top Gun: Maverick

The 95th annual Academy Awards, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will air on March 12, on ABC. It will also stream on ABC.com, Hulu Live TV, and YouTubeTV.

⭐ FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION: ELVIS - IN CONVERSATION WITH DP MANDY WALKER, AM ASC ACS ⭐

JUST A BOY FROM TUPELO: BRINGING ELVIS TO THE BIG SCREEN. 


Elvis. Academy Award Nominated for Best Cinematography, Mandy Walker
Click poster for Mandy Walker
and click text below for Baz Luhrman

CANON NEW EOS R8 & R50 MIRRORLESS CAMERAS

Canon unveiled two new powerful entry cameras aimed to lure casual shooters and content makers away from their smartphones and further embed shooters within its ecosystem with its latest mirrorless offerings, the full-frame EOS R8 and the APS-C EOS R50.

Canon's new entry level mirroless cameras

The new releases include the EOS R8 and EOS R50 camera bodies in black and the EOS R50 in white, the new RF-S 55-210mm telephoto zoom lens, the ET-60B Lens Hood, the RF 24-50mm wide-to-normal zoom lens for full-frame cameras, an EOS R50 kit featuring an 18-45mm zoom lens in black or white, an EOS R50 kit featuring both the 18-45mm and the 55-210mm zoom lenses, and an EOS R8 kit featuring the RF 24-50mm zoom lens.

Canon has designed the EOS R50 to be the streamer and content creator's first choice for upgrading. Lightweight and compact, the EOS R50 can be used as a web camera, streaming live video in full HD at 30 fps, and can record podcasts and vlogs for longer than 30 minutes at a time.

The camera also renders uncropped 4K video at up to 30 fps oversampled from 6K and full HD video at up to 120 fps, and it features a 24.2MP APS-C CMOS sensor and DIGIC X Image Processor, powering the camera's automatic capabilities. For streamers, the Movie for Close-Up Demos Mode ensures that objects presented close to the lens, such as in unboxing videos or makeup tutorials, are properly in focus.

New EOS R8 Full Frame Mirroless Camera

The Advanced A+ Assist simplifies auto mode in settings with difficult lighting, and the Dual Pixel CMOS Autofocus II system covers the entire sensor area with 651 autofocus zones capable of detecting and tracking people, animals, and vehicles. Pair that with continuous shooting up to 15 fps with the electronic shutter and you'll be hard-pressed to miss the shot.

The EOS R8 is the full-frame upgrade for those already embedded within the Canon mirrorless ecosystem. It also has a 24.2MP full-frame CMOS sensor and DIGIC X Image Processor, capable of achieving high image quality and wide dynamic range in stills, and features the Dual Pixel CMOS Autofocus II system with 1,053 autofocus zones and automatic subject detection and tracking.

The R8 is available as a webcam and for livestreaming and can record uncropped 4K at 60 fps oversampled from 6K and full HD at up to 180 fps. At 29.97 fps, the camera can record video for up to two hours for podcasts, vlogs, or other long-form video content. The five-axis Movie Digital IS image stabilization reduces camera-shake vibrations when using the RF lens with optical image stabilization.

EOS R8

To further entice streamers, both cameras feature a Vertical Movie Mode, which allows videos to be played in vertical orientation when viewing on a smartphone, and an Aspect Markers function, which indicates the various social media aspect ratios for simplified compositions. Additionally, both cameras support wired and wireless connection to your smartphone via its USB-C port and built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth technology.

Canon EOS R50 APS-C

RF LENSES

The RF 24-50mm wide-to-normal zoom lens is a lightweight standard zoom alternative for full-frame cameras featuring an f/4.5-6.3 maximum aperture with optical image stabilization. The lens has two aspheric elements and Canon Super Spectra Coating to minimize ghosting and flare. The stepping motor focus drive provides smooth, quiet autofocus when taking video. On APS-C size image sensors, the lens has an approximate equivalent coverage of 38-80mm.


RF-S 55-210mm telephoto zoom lens for full-frame and APS-C camera

The RF-S 55-210mm telephoto zoom lens for full-frame and APS-C cameras features an f/5-7.1 maximum aperture with optical image stabilization. The lens coverage on APS-C size sensors is roughly 88-336mm. The image quality comes from two ultra-low dispersion glass elements, one aspheric element, and Canon Super Spectra Coating to minimize ghosting and flare. The stepping motor focus drive is well suited for smooth, quiet autofocus when taking video. The lens is also compatible with the optional ET-60B Lens Hood to block sunlight, prevent lens flare, and protect the lens from debris and abrasions.

For more detailed information on these new Canon releases,visit B&H at https://www.bhphotovideo.com

THE BATMAN-GO BEHIND THE SCENES W/ASC NOMINEE, GREIG FRASER

 THE BATMAN. Go Behind the Scenes with ASC Nominee Greig Fraser 

The Batman movie, Greig Fraser, Academy Awards Nominee, Cinematography

NEW FUJIFILM FUJINON HZK25-1000MM PL MOUNT BOX LENS

FUJIFILM North America Corporation  announced the development of its new, ground-breaking FUJINON HZK25-1,000mm F2.8-F5.0 PL Mount Box Lens ("HZK25-1000"). This box lens features a native PL mount and achieves a zoom ratio of 40x with a telephoto focal length of 1,000mm, the highest combination of magnification and telephoto reach1 available to date for large cinema sensors.

Fujinon HZK 25-1000 Box Lens

"In actively observing and gathering feedback from professionals in the emerging world of cinema-sized imagers in live production, we identified a very clear customer desire for a long cinema lens to facilitate capture quality of a live show," said Stosh Durbacz, national sales manager, Optical Devices Division, FUJIFILM North America Corporation. "With a pedigree that hails from the highly respected FUJINON Premier Series, HZK25-1000 provides production with unmatched flexibility and reach while maximizing the highly sought-after cinema look to live audiences."

HZK25-1000 deploys a dual-format system that supports two single sensor sizes: a camera with a sensor equivalent to the large format size3 and a traditional super 35mm sensor. The use of the newly developed 1.5x expander shifts the focal length of the telephoto side, enabling super telephoto image capture of 1500mm (1000x1.5)4. Additionally, when paired with a large format sensor, operators can shoot with a field of view equivalent to that of a super 35mm sensor while maintaining maximum optical performance, providing a true dual format lens. HZK25-1000 enables shooting with the same field of view in both large format and super 35mm formats, and produces rich image expression by taking advantage of the camera's cinematic look.

Fujinon HZK 25-1000 Box Lens

Digital cinema cameras with image sensors larger than existing B4-mount cameras have been increasingly used in sports and live event broadcasting. The use of large-sensor cameras enables the expression of immersive images by offering smooth bokeh and high dynamic range for live broadcasting. While traditional lenses for single sensor cameras may be optimal for filming movies and commercials, the zoom ratio is considerably lower than that of a B4 mount lens, and lens characteristics when zooming and focusing are different from those applicable to lenses used in live broadcasting.

To address this, HZK25-1000 utilizes optical design technology to achieve a maximum aperture of F2.8 and 40x zoom ratio. This ultra-high zoom ratio lens is compatible with the large sensors of digital cinema cameras yet provides a brightness of F2.8 at the wide-angle. Not only does it enable filming in low-light environments such as indoor concerts or nighttime events, but the shallow depth of field also provides the advantage of beautiful bokeh, bringing a cinematic look to live event production.

Fujinon HZK 25-1000 PL Mount Box Lens

Fujifilm’s proprietary optical technology suppresses aberrations by using a large-aperture aspherical lens and a fluorite lens5 that have been precisely polished. By eliminating unnecessary ghosting, flare, and color fringe, the lens delivers high optical performance and natural image expression.

The out-of-focus bokeh is controlled through repeated simulations using Fujifilm’s proprietary optical design application, "FOCUS" (Fujifilm Optical Class Library and Utilities System), which determines optimal glass materials from the infinite combination of possibilities. The texture of each layer in the out-of-focus area is verified to achieve a bokeh that softens and naturally melts the background. Furthermore, camera operators can operate the lens in a setup specialized for live broadcasting, since existing FUJINON box lens accessories can be used in support of multi-camera operation. Wireless controllers from Preston Cinema and ARRI are compatible with HZK25-1000 and can also be connected.

Fujinon HZK 25-1000 Box Lens PL Mount

The lens is the first commercially available box-type zoom lens compatible with large sensors equipped with optical image stabilization, enabling stable shooting while precisely compensating for vibrations in the venue. The latest anti-vibration mechanism and firmware utilizes Fujifilm's unique ceramic ball roller system. This mechanism provides a high level of anti-vibration performance against shaking caused by unstable platforms.

In addition to stabilization, HZK25-1000 features all of the latest technological advancements that are now standard in most of Fujifilm's FUJINON broadcast lenses:

Automatic Restoration of Illumination Attenuation (ARIA)

•Remote Back-Focus

•Automatic Chromatic Aberration Correction

KEY FEATURES

Native PL Mount

Fast F2.8 (F5.0 at 1000mm)

Wide 25mm (9.9mm 2/3” equivalent)

Long 1000mm (1500mm with Expander)

Dual Format Expander Maintains Image Quality in S35 and Large Format

Beautiful Bokeh Brings a Cinematic Look to Live Production

Compatible with Preston Wireless FIZ and Microforce Zoom Controller

Stabilization

Automatic Restoration of Illumination Attenuation (ARIA)

Remote Back Focus (RBF)

Automatic Chromatic Aberration Correction (ALAC)

SPECS

Length: 669mm / 26.3"

Weight: 28.8kg / 63.5 lbs

Close Focus: MOD: 3.5m / 11'5"

⭐FUJINON HZK25-1000 Cine Box PL is a totally new class of lens, be among the first to see and demo it live on a Sony Venice 2 in both Super 35 & Large Format. Shown Dec. 12 @ SVG Summit (NYC) - Jan. 19 @ Fujifilm Day at ASC Clubhouse (LA) - Feb 20-22 HPA Tech Retreat (Palm Springs) - April 16-19 NAB (Las Vegas)⭐

Pricing and Availability: FUJINON HZK25-1000mm F2.8-F5.0 is expected to be available in Spring 2023. For more information, visit www.fujinon.com.   

KELVIN EPOS 300 LAUNCHED ON EUROCINE EXPO 2022

Award-winning LED technology pioneer Rift Labs announced the launch of the new cinema lighting brand Kelvin, and the very first product in the line-up, the Kelvin Epos 300.

Kelvin Epos 300 1. EuroCine Expo 2022

A new line of products is pushing the boundaries of cinema lighting. With full RGB, best-in-class LUX output per watt, seamless and intuitive control of the light via their app and a bold promise with a 3 year Keep Rolling Warranty™, the handmade Epos 300 from Scandinavia is challenging the industry.

Available for pre-orders now at www.kelvinlight.com with deliveries starting in September 2022. Selected media and ambassadors will have access to the product before September.

Encased in 6mm thick aluminum plates, the Kelvin Epos 300 is a full color spectrum 300W LED COB studio light, engineered and handmade in Norway, Scandinavia. Utilizing Kelvin’s sophisticated 6-channel RGBACL light engine Cantastoria, the Epos300 enables extreme precision lighting across the full spectrum of colors within the 2.000 - 20.000 K CCT range.

Kelvin Epos 300. EuroCine Expo 2022

Compatible with a Bowens mount, the light is built to last with its 6mm aluminum housing and can be controlled via the Kelvin Narrator Bluetooth app, DMX or Lumen Radio Skynode (included in the box). The Epos 300 is powered by 2 x V Mount Batteries or AC power supply.

The selling price for Kelvin Epos 300 is $2499 USD. Every light comes in a waterproof and durable rolling hard case.

What comes in the box:

Kelvin Epos 300 control unit with V-Mount battery plate.

Connectivity: Bluetooth, USB-C, USB-A, DMX 5-Pin XLR, wireless DMX lumen radio Skynode.

Quick Release Lighting Super Clamp Kelvin Reflector.

5-Pin Male-to-Female XLR head cable

3M Rolling, water and dust proof hard case.

100% Satisfaction Guarantee - Try Risk Free For 180 Days – No Questions Asked 3 Years Keep Rolling Warranty™ Lifetime Customer Support.

Kelvin Epos 300 w/ stand. EuroCine Expo 2022

Kelvin is a premium light brand developed by LED technology company Rift Labs from Scandinavia with a proud history of manufacturing award-winning cinema lighting fixtures and lighting software for the global market in video and photo since 2010 with over 50 000 products sold. We are on a mission to explore the spectrum of light to create amazing products loved by people. The headquarter of Kelvin is located in Oslo, Norway with offices in Berlin and soon-to-open New York.

To learn more about Kelvin please visit www.kelvinlight.com

TOP GUN: MAVERICK BTS WITH DOP CLAUDIO MIRANDA, ASC AND FUJINON LENSES

Claudio Miranda ASC, the award winning director of photography behind Top Gun: Maverick, shares behind the scenes footage, stories from the set, and all the ins and outs of selecting and working with the gear used to create this history-making film.
 
GEAR LIST USED TO SHOOT TOP GUN: MAVERICK.     
Camera: Sony Venice      
FUJINON Lenses:      
Premista 28-100mm T2.9      
Premier 14.5-45mm T2.0      
Premier 18-85mm T2.0     
Premier 24-180mm T2.6      
Premier 75-400mm T2.8-3.8      
Cabrio 19-90mm T2.9      
Cabrio 20-120mm T3.5      
Cabrio 85-300mm T2.9-4.0 
Cabrio 25-300mm T3.5-3.85


Claudio Miranda ASC, Top Gun: Maverick ©georgeleon/filmcastlive
Claudio Miranda, ASC


Fujinon 28-100mm Premista Cine Lens ©georgeleon/filmcastlive
Fujinon Premista T 2.9 28-100mm

The Premista 28-100mm, the first of the series to be released, is a standard zoom lens covering a 28-100mm focal length. This is the equivalent of 6 prime lenses, which saves both time and cost caused by changing lenses frequently. Thanks to the adoption of a large-diameter aspherical lens and a new focus/zoom system, the Premista achieves stunning optical quality from the center to the corners, allowing the cinematographer to capture the feeling and texture of the subjects. The lens design contributes to the wide dynamic range by suppressing unwanted flare and ghosts thanks to Fujifilm’s original optical calculation software. Standard 6 lens cine prime set of “29mm, 35mm, 40mm, 65mm, 85mm, 100mm”

For more information, visit Fujinon Cine Lenses

ANGENIEUX OPTIMO PRIMES WITH INTERNAL OPTICAL PALETTE (IOP) EFFECTS

Angenieux’s Optimo Prime full format, single focal-length lenses address the modern DP’s need for high resolution, contrast, and uniform colorimetry but with flexible customization to support the quest for a certain “character,” which may be appropriate for different projects or sequences.


Watch Angenieux's intro reel to see the remarkable looks that can be achieved, thanks in part to their new Integrated Optical Palette (or IOP), and then read about the unique design philosophy and specifications of the Optimo Primes.

The Optimo Prime series, available in PL mount, consists of twelve focal lengths: 18mm, 21mm, 24mm, 28mm, 32mm, 40mm, 50mm, 60mm, 75mm, 100mm, 135mm, and 200mm. Most have fast maximum apertures of T1.8, with the widest and longest lenses featuring a T2.0 maximum aperture. All (except the 200mm) have 95mm front outer diameters, use standard 0.8 pitch-geared, non-linear focus and iris rings, and 320° of rotation for focusing. Interestingly, the Optimo Primes actually focus from a bit beyond both the minimum object distance as well as infinity. All feature 46.31mm image circles, covering even the largest of today’s 8K sensors. The Optimo Primes are color-matched to the Optimo Zooms and, when unmodified, show perfectly round out-of-focus highlights across the image plane thanks to their standard nine-bladed iris.

While providing modern mechanics and reliability, Angenieux’s unique approach to customization allows for, essentially, in-lens filtration at the rear, as well as in a central “slot” immediately before the iris. The irises can also be changed from the standard nine-bladed version to others, including a three-bladed design (for triangular “bokeh,” recalling some vintage lenses), or an oval shape for classic elliptical out-of-focus highlights as seen with many anamorphic designs. In addition, front elements are available coated or uncoated.

This unique design approach—internal and rear filter options, uncoated elements, and alternative iris designs—allow for an incredible number of different in-camera effects, as well as the ability to push and pull image aspects, such as contrast, resolution, flare behavior, bokeh character, and effects such as streaking. Angenieux refers to this customization as Integrated Optical Palette (or IOP).

At the rear of each lens are two threaded filter stages, one for when imaging to Super35-format sensors (40.5mm) and the other (46mm) for use with full-frame sensors. These rings can accommodate a special vintage-style filter that can help re-create looks from the golden age of cinema.

The central IOP stage can accommodate a wider range of filter types including streak filters (in colors like blue or orange), a “cracked” filter for elegant aesthetic distortions, and an uncoated element to provoke flares and reduce contrast. A “clear” filter is also available, which can be modified in any number of ways (think hairspray or Vaseline).

Another unique aspect of the Optimo Primes’ customization options is that modifications are relatively quick and easy for a qualified optics tech to perform or return to “stock.” The rear filter stage can be quickly and easily changed in the field, while the central stage, immediately before the iris, and the iris itself, can be modified in about 15 minutes at the bench.

Courtesy and available at AbelCine 

For more information about Angenieux lenses

CINE GEAR EXPO 2022 INDUSTRY AWARDS & KARL KRESSER TRIBUTE

Cine Gear Expo 2022 VIP Industry Awards & Karl Kresser Tribute

Cine Gear Expo 2022,  Steven Poster ASC, Lifetime Achievement Award
Legacy Lifetime Achievement Award: Steven Poster, ASC


Cine Gear Expo 2022, Lawrence Sher ASC, Visionary Award
Visionary Achievement Award in Cinematography: Lawrence Sher, ASC


Cine Gear Expo 2022, Autumn Durald Arkapaw, Emerging Star Award
Emerging Star Award: Autumn Durald Arkapaw


Cine Gear Expo 2022, Sony Electronics, Technical Award
Technical Lifetime Achievement Award, SONY Electronics, SONY Venice



In Memoriam, Karl Kresser Tribute