Empire of Dirt - Canadian Society of Cinematographers

Transcription

Empire of Dirt - Canadian Society of Cinematographers
Canadian Society of Cinematographers
$4 Februar y 2014 www.csc.ca
david greene csc
digs into
Empire of Dirt
Carlos Esteves csc
takes on reality
Challenge
FEB 10 (V01 #09)
09
0
56698 94903
9
The Adventures of
a Serial Inventor
CSC Wisdom Lecture Series
A publication of the Canadian Society of Cinematographers
The Canadian Society of Cinematographers
(CSC) was founded in 1957 by a group of
Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa cameramen.
Since then over 800 cinematographers
and persons in associated occupations
have joined the organization.
FEATURES – volume 5, No. 9 February 2014
6
Canada’s Handyman Challenge
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David Greene csc Digs into Empire of Dirt
By Fanen Chiahemen
Carlos Esteves csc Takes On Reality Challenge
12
By Fanen Chiahemen
16
Peter Warren csc
We facilitate the dissemination and
exchange of technical information and
endeavor to advance the knowledge
and status of our members within the
industry. As an organization dedicated
to furthering technical assistance, we
maintain contact with non-partisan
groups in our industry but have no
political or union affiliation.
Courtesy of Mongrel Media
The purpose of the CSC is to promote
the art and craft of cinematography
in Canada and to provide tangible
recognition of the common bonds
that link film and digital professionals,
from the aspiring student and camera
assistant to the news veteran and
senior director of photography.
The Adventures of a Serial Inventor By Peter Warren csc
Columns & Departments
2
3
19
21
23
24
From the President
In the News
The Wisdom of Luc Montprllier csc
Tech Column
Camera Classified
Productions Notes / Calendar
Cover: Still from Empire of Dirt. Photo: Courtesy of Mongrel Media
Canadian Cinematographer
February 2014 Vol. 5, No. 9
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Joan Hutton csc
EDITOR EMERITUS
Donald Angus
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Susan Saranchuk
[email protected]
EDITOR
Fanen Chiahemen
[email protected]
COPY EDITOR
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2 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
From
The
PRESIDENT
Joan Hutton csc
A
s I’ve said in a previous column, “don’t blink or you’ll miss it,” to sum
up the state of homegrown Canadian movies. It’s a tough slog trying
to catch a Canadian movie, after a week at a Cineplex, or a couple of
showings at a film festival, they’re usually gone. Television would be the obvious
next stop for Canadian films, but broadcasters have all but abandoned Canadian
films in favour of more easily programmable television series that attract ongoing viewers. In essence, Canadian films have become the problem child of our
industry.
There was recently a meeting of representatives from broadcasting, movie distribution and content producers in Toronto to tackle the dearth of Canadian films
on Canadian television. From reports, there seemed to be a lot of ball passing,
but no ball carrying in any direction. Content producers were calling for more
regulations from the CRTC to mandate broadcasters into quota systems for
showing Canadian films, while broadcasters plead that more Canadian movies in their schedules would be at the sacrifice of existing programming such
as news and series that would in all likelihood cut into revenues and translate
into job losses. Not a very promising meeting except for one suggestion that
distributors look to over-the-top (OTT) services such as the U.S.-owned Netflix
to extend the reach of Canadian films. This is a very plausible recommendation.
Although there are no available figures, since Netflix does not release its subscriber numbers, it is estimated that nearly 2 million Canadian households have
bought into the Internet service and growing. It’s rumoured that Rogers is ready
to leap into the OTT market and go head to head with a video service called
“Showmi.” Coupled with Statistics Canada’s latest indicator, that 83 per cent of
Canadian households are now plugged into the Internet, a new venue potential
for Canadian films seems to have emerged.
There is much Internet chatter that OTTs are about to explode onto the Canadian market. How or if that will change the Canadian television viewer paradigm is a huge unknown. But with Rogers ready to set up shop in April, the
OTTs are being watched very carefully to see where it all lands.
Unlike broadcasters, OTTs are not regulated. The CRTC has unwisely taken a
hands-off stance regarding the Internet. While it seems reasonable that OTTs
would welcome Canadian films, and in the case of Rogers it would be a patriotic
undertaking, OTTs are not obligated to do so. Perhaps the CRTC should grow
some teeth to ensure that Canadian films have a place on the OTT table.
The next couple of years should be very telling for the broadcast/Internet dynamic. Is this an opportunity for Canadian films? I would say so – let’s hope we
seize it.
In The News
©Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
/ Howard Greenberg & Bryce Wolkowitz, New York.
Canadian Screen Awards
CSC congratulates the members whose projects have been
nominated in cinematography and photography categories for
Canadian Screen Awards:
Achievement in Cinematography: Nicolas Bolduc csc (Enemy);
Pierre Gill csc (Upside Down)
Best Photography in a Comedy Program or Series: Thom Best
csc (Mr. D); David Makin csc (Seed)
Best Photography in a Documentary Program or Series:
Jeremy Benning csc (We Were Children); Stan Barua csc (The
Mystery of Mazo de la Roche)
Best Photography in a Dramatic Program or Series: John
Bartley csc (Vikings); Eric Cayla csc (Bomb Girls); Paul Sarossy
csc, bsc, asc (The Borgias)
Best Photography in a Lifestyle or Reality Competition
Program or Series: Allan Leader csc (Hail Mary)
Winners will be announced at a gala on March 9.
Other Member News
The documentary Watermark, shot by Nicholas de Pencier csc,
won the Toronto Film Critics Association’s 2013 Rogers Best
Canadian Film Award last month. The film was also among the
feature selections for the 13th annual Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival. The 10-day festival ran January 3 to 12 at Toronto’s TIFF
Bell Lightbox.
csc, and Louis Cyr, shot by Nicolas Bolduc csc. Another Bolduclensed feature, Aloft, is up for a Golden Bear Award at the Berlin
Film Fest being held February 6 to 16.
Meanwhile, State of Syn, shot by Brett Van Dyke csc for six
episodes, won for Best Interactive/Social Media Experience at the
2014 International Academy of Web Television Awards in January.
Wanda Confirms Commitment For
80 Additional IMAX Theatres
IMAX Corporation – which honorary CSC member Graeme
Ferguson co-founded – and Wanda Cinema Line Corporation, Asia’s largest cinema owner, in December announced
the confirmation of 80 additional IMAX theatres throughout China. Rollout of the additional theatres is expected to
begin in 2016. In addition, the lease terms for all new and
existing Wanda theatres have been extended to 12 years
from theatre opening from 10. The latest commitment
to the full 120 theatres brings the exhibitor’s total IMAX
commitment in China to 210 theatres.
Also, Stories We Tell, shot by associate CSC member Iris Ng, was
shortlisted for a U.S. Academy Award nomination in the Documentary Features category.
In other news, Bruce MacDonald’s The Husband, which was shot
by Daniel Grant csc and premiered at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival, took the $15,000 Borsos competition prize
VANCOUVER CALGARY
at the Whistler Film Festival in December. Other films compet604-527-7262
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ing for the prize included Cas & Dylan, shot by Gerald Packer
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Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
902-404-3630
3
SIM Offers 3D Camera Services
SIM Digital recently began offering 3D camera services through
its recent partnership with Cinesail 3D Systems. Designed by
3D cinematographers, Cinesail rigs are engineered to deliver production solutions that are mobile, flexible and allow for quick
set-up in demanding production environments. All 3D capture,
monitoring and data stations are housed in self-contained travel
cases which ship easily to any location and set up in minutes.
Cinesail 3D systems have been employed on major studio features like Resident Evil: Retribution and Pompeii, both shot by
Glen MacPherson csc, asc.
William F. White Buys Location
Equipment Supply
William F. White late last year completed a deal to buy Location Equipment Supply. The deal rebrands Paul Potvin’s LES as
Whites Locations Equipment Supply but it will still be located
near the William F. White Centre in west Toronto.
protection rating, dimming, dimensions, weight, power draw, lamp
holder type, mounting, reflector type, lens type, and scrim size.
Tom Perlmutter Steps Down
as NFB Chair
Tom Perlmutter in December stepped down as National Film
Board chair and government film commissioner in order to devote himself to thinking and writing about the long-term issues
affecting the arts and public cultural organizations. Perlmutter
will stay on at the NFB as a strategic advisor with a focus on the
future of public space, the changing dynamics of creation and
new financial opportunities anchored in the NFB’s mandate and
its commitment to innovation. Perlmutter joined the National
Film Board in December 2001 as director general, English Program, and became head of the organization in 2007. The NFB
confirmed that Claude Joli-Cœur, the current assistant commissioner, has been named the interim commissioner. The process
for appointing the next commissioner should be completed this
year.
ARRI in December launched a Photometrics App for iPhone and
iPad that gives quick access to the properties and luminous outputs for ARRI’s light fixtures. Created for lighting and cinematography professionals, the free application is available in the iTunes
store. Upon downloading the tool, users can begin selecting from
one of five product categories: Daylight, Daylight MAX, Fluorescent, LED and Tungsten. Among the information the app allows
users to assess are: beam diameter; beam angle; flood, middle and
spot photometrics; luminous distribution graph; camera exposure and aperture information; metric and imperial units; bulb
selection; light properties including: colour temperature, cri,
New CSC Members
top left:
Chris Mably csc
top right:
Daniel Grant csc
bottom left:
Chayse Irvin csc
bottom right:
Vince Arvidson csc
4 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
Tom Perlmutter
Courtesy of NFB
ARRI Offers Lighting Resource
with New Photometrics App
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David Greene csc
Digs into
Empire
of Dirt
By Fanen Chiahemen
6 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
Jason Jenkins
David Greene
csc with Empire
of Dirt director
Peter Stebbings
(left).
A
fter making his first feature-length
film, the Woody Harrelson-driven
superhero comedy-drama Defendor,
actor-director Peter Stebbings was craving a complete departure for his second directorial venture.
When producer Jennifer Podemski brought
the script for Empire of Dirt – penned by Cree
screenwriter Shannon Masters – to Stebbings,
the director jumped at the chance. The drama
centres around three generations of Aboriginal
women, including single mother Lena Mahikan
(Cara Gee), struggling to raise her 13-year-old
daughter, Peeka (Shay Eyre), who overdoses in
the streets of Toronto, forcing Lena to return
home to her estranged mother and face her past.
Empire of Dirt was part of the Contemporary
World Cinema programme at the 2013 Toronto
International Film Festival and is opening in theatres nationwide throughout the winter.
“[The film] was coming from left field and it was
an opportunity to try something completely different. It was also an opportunity to work on a
low-budget film with non-star actors. Probably
because of the movies I’m drawn to,” Stebbings
offers, citing films by Britain’s Andrea Arnold
and Mike Leigh. “Their movies really resonated
with me, so I’ve wanted to make a movie in that
vein. Movies that have the feeling of a cinema
verité glimpse into other people’s lives.”
To bring the visuals alive in Empire of Dirt, Stebbings summoned David Greene csc, with whom
the director had forged a relationship on Defendor, and the two of them talked about film
references like Arnolds’ Fish Tank and Jonathan
Demme’s Rachel Getting Married as a starting
point.
“In the beginning I was a little concerned because there was such a small amount of money to
make this movie, and I thought it might expose
everyone to some risk,” Greene, who was recently
nominated for an American Society of Cinematographers award for his work in the TV series
Beauty and the Beast, recalls. “But [Stebbings]
convinced me the movie was important to do
and we could just understand what our limitations were and embrace those limitations.”
Unlike Defendor, where every shot was planned,
Greene and Stebbings wanted a much more freeflowing approach, with Stebbings even borrowing a maxim from the Dogme 95 movement.
“This was an exercise in not going into each
scene with a designated shot list,” Stebbings says.
“It was just seeing the scene in the moment and
choosing your shots accordingly; a low-budget
film lends itself to that.”
The 15-day shoot in Toronto, Innisfil, Keswick
and Sunderland, Ontario, was a much “pared
down production,” Greene recalls. “We had every department’s equipment in one cube van, but
it was really freeing. I really enjoyed how nimble
we were as a group. A lot of productions leave
this huge footprint. We were able to just steal
some exterior locations, just show up and shoot.
It was that size of production where we could
actually do that.”
Stebbings adds that the crew were even able to
shoot in the streets of Kensington Market, “which
you can’t do with a big unit; they just won’t let
you in there. There’s no room for you. But you
can do it with a small crew of six or seven.”
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
7
Photo courtesy of Mongrel Media
Behind the
scenes: Peter
Stebbings
(director) and
Luke Kirby
(Russell) joke
around on the set
of Empire of Dirt.
Greene, who also operated on Empire of Dirt,
shot the entire film handheld with the Panavision Genesis, a camera for which he has had an
affinity for years. “I’ve always been a big Panavision fan because of their Primo lenses, which I
love,” Greene says.
As an operator, shooting handheld allowed him
to let the performances guide the film. “You’re
as much in the moment as an actor is,” Greene
says. “It’s when they’re thriving or are in the zone.
You respond in the moment. The handheld camera allows you to do that. I was there listening to
them and reacting to them.”
It also helped achieve the natural, clean look he
wanted as a DP. “It was kind of like a documentary. And that’s how we tackled it. We didn’t impose a lot on it,” he says.
To that end, Greene employed a simple lighting technique, relying heavily on natural light
and good timing. “Filmmaking is like a magic
trick,” he says. “I would augment available light.
So in interiors I would look at what was available, whether it was through windows or practical sources, and just augment in a minimal way.”
In one scene, Lena and an old flame, played by
Luke Kirby, take Peeka for a picnic by the lake,
which, with the light of the setting sun shimmering off it, provides a romantic frame for the characters. “I didn’t light it at all,” Greene reports. “It
was all backlit sun. When outside it’s extremely
important to plan and know where the sun’s
going to be. And generally you want backlight.
8 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
Sidelight is the middle preference.”
Even to light an exterior night scene in which
the characters sit around a fire, “It was very simple,” according to Greene. “We had a real fire.
And then we just added Kino Flos and put some
warm gel on them. Everything was very simple
from that point of view.”
The pivotal scene in Empire of Dirt involves Lena
coming face to face with a wolf on the side of
the road at sunset, and Greene used a little bit
of trickery to frame it with an attractive backlight. “That scene is shown in two directions, one
towards her pickup truck and one looking away
from her pickup truck. And if you look closely
it’s shot in exactly the same direction, just with
a slightly altered background because we wanted
backlight on both sides,” Greene explains. “All
we did was position the vehicle and the actress for
looking toward her pickup truck at a certain part
of the road, and then we moved everyone down
the road about 100 feet and slightly changed the
angle and shot the exact same way. If you didn’t
know it you wouldn’t spot it, but it was basically
what we call a cheated reverse, where you’re basically looking the same way, but you change it
enough so it’s not recognizable to people. What
we gained was beautiful light in both directions,
and it kind of made that sequence. And it wasn’t
anything other than sunlight. It was magic hour.
You don’t have to do much when it’s magic hour.”
Stebbings and Greene also employed some quirky
visual techniques to add texture to the film, one
being the manipulation of focus to enhance the
Photo courtesy of Mongrel Media
Lena (Cara Gee)
Yet another visual effect involved punctuating
the film with “little sparkles in the foreground,”
Greene explains. “And it was the cheapest effect.
We got some tinsel and hung it from a grip stand
and backlit it with the light and put it in front of
the camera. That was our fancy trick.”
every successive project I keep learning more
from an ally and a friend. It also helps that he has
a beautiful cottage, and we go up there and wax
philosophical about our future projects while
he makes dinner and I draw terrible storyboard
pictures.”
Photo courtesy of Mongrel Media
storytelling. In an early scene in which Lena visits
Peeka in the hospital after her overdose, Stebbings
wanted the focus – as well as the defocus – to be
unexpected. “A lot of the action was focused on
the back of Cara Gee’s head,” Stebbings recalls.
“Really just to put us there with her, to almost
see the world as she was seeing it at that time. As
if we were over her shoulder. It was just a way of
trying to get into Cara Gee’s point of view. So
you would see it and feel it from her perspective.”
Lena (Cara
Gee) and Peeka
(Shay Eyre)
In Greene, Stebbings says he has found a real collaborator. “David is very good. I have learned a
lot by working with him. There are lessons I’ve
learned from David by doing this that I will take
to the next project and the next one,” the director maintains. “We’ve done three projects now
together as a DP-director relationship, and with
* Jason Jenkins
That simplicity of the effect serves as a metaphor
for how the production used the budget limitations to its advantage. “Once we wrapped our
heads around it and embraced the scale and the
scope of the film, everything was quite simple
and easy and straightforward. I found it quite liberating and freeing to be so nimble,” Greene says.
“It was one of the most enjoyable experiences I’ve
had. It was a real family we created, and everyone
helped out.”
David Greene
csc (left) with
actress Cara
Gee.
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
9
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10 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
I joined the faculty two years
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Also, field trips to camera suppliers
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Of course, with the march of
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fact, aficionados of analogue film
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Capilano is one of the last film
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But any seasoned
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Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
11
Y
ou have this amazing invention. Maybe it started as a random idea or something you
created out of necessity. But after sleepless nights thinking about it, countless scraps
of paper drawing it, endless prototypes trying to create it, you finally have it, and it works!!
“Eureka!” you say. Well…now what? The long and sometimes arduous journey has just
begun. Remember it took George de Mestral over 10 years to manufacture Velcro after
that fateful day in 1941 when he was picking burrs off his backside after a hunting trip in
the Swiss Alps. – By Peter Warren csc
There are countless gadgets and gizmos out there in our industry
that were created by people just like us: the Steadicam, Chimera,
Cardellini, the warrendolly – sorry for the shameless plug – all
born out of a vision for something to improve the way we do
things. I have actually created three products for film and TV
that have sold internationally — the warrendolly, shooter scooter
and Lowel’s missing link. Unfortunately, I am not writing this
from my yacht in Cannes. The reality is that we are a very small
niche market. Every home does not need a warrendolly, so sales
will never be through the roof. You have to consider this when
you start obsessing with a new idea or invention. It can be a very
expensive process to bring a new product to market, and you may
get sucked into a money pit you won’t get out of.
Okay, doom and gloom out the way, there is nothing more exhilarating than the process of creating something new. There is
no greater satisfaction than the moment you are gazing at this
thing you have spent so much time and energy on, and nothing
more rewarding than knowing people are actually using it on the
other side of the world. It’s really not about the money.
Lowel’s missing link
My first invention was a clamp I designed to hold objects from
a light stand. Now, you guys in film would simply use a C-stand
to hold a flag or piece of foam core in place, but in news these
12 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
were just too heavy to drag around, so if I wanted to do the same
I would simply pony clamp it to my light stand, but I couldn’t
position it exactly where I wanted it. So I went to my local Canadian Tire and bought a garage work light with a clamp. I went
home, took the light off and put a Lowel stand adaptor on, and
“eureka,” I had a clamp that sat on a light stand with an articulating joint. Now I could position something exactly where I
wanted it. I made a few of these, and it would always get the
same comment from the sound guys: “Hey, that’s pretty cool, you
should patent that.” So I did some research, looked in every grip
catalogue I could find, and, unbelievably, this particular clamp
didn’t exist. I started looking at getting a patent.
I spoke to a patent attorney and discovered that it would have
cost about $8,000 to get the U.S. and Canadian patent. Whoa.
How many of these clamps would I have to sell just to pay that
off? I looked for another alternative. Sitting in front of me was
the Lowel catalogue and right there on the back was their toll
free number. With some trepidation I picked up the phone and
started dialling. Are they going to think I’m crazy? Are they going
to steal my idea? Are they going to laugh at me? “Hello, Lowel
Lighting, how may I direct your call?” I started stumbling out
that I am a cameraman up in Ottawa, that I have this clamp and
nobody else seems to have it…and perhaps…well, would you be
interested in looking at it? “One minute, I’ll put you through to
the president.” What? Now I’ve gone from trepidation to cold
sweat and dry mouth. The president, Marvin Selligman, answers
the phone with the heaviest Brooklyn accent I’ve ever
heard: “This is Mahvin. You have a clamp.” Long story
short, Marvin ended up loving the clamp idea, filing
a U.S. patent in my name, and it still sits on page 19
of the Lowel catalogue. It’s called the “missing link.”
Marvin and I worked out an equitable arrangement,
but, more importantly, he became a friend and mentor.
The warrendolly
Okay, who out there hasn’t created a new dolly, you ask?
Well, I tried to make mine more portable and cheap!
It was different to anything out there. I used ½” metal
conduit instead of 1½” PVC and V-groove wheels instead of skateboard wheels. I didn’t need a wooden platform to stand on. I designed it so that you could just
stand on the frame or use it alone like a micro dolly.
I really designed it for shooters like me who generally
work alone and want to add that dynamic dolly shot.
For this one, I decided to venture out on my own. I
was going to manufacture, package and sell it myself.
After all, it was a pretty straightforward design, nothing complicated, should be no problem. Well…lots of
problems. It took a few tries to find a metal fabricator that was even interested. And because I’m ordering
just 10 units not 1,000 I’m very low priority. They told
me it would be a couple of weeks; it ended up taking
months. And then when I finally got my first working
models the dolly was great but half the joints in the
track were not acceptable and (after much convincing)
had to be redone. Arrrgghh.
The wheels went through many variations – too soft,
too hard, not smooth enough – but I finally found a
manufacturer in Toronto that made the perfect wheel.
It was slowly coming together but extremely frustrating
to say the least. There were many times I just wanted
Top: The warrendolly in action. Middle: The shooter scooter on ice. Photos: Peter Warren csc.
Bottom: Lowel’s missing link. Photo: InMotion.
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
13
to throw in the towel, but at this point I’m several thousand dollars in and I really do want to see it through. Then one day, it
all finally comes together. This thing I dreamed up in my head,
scribbled down on paper, stayed up nights frustrating over, is sitting in front of me, all shiny and new. It rolls down the track like
a hot knife through butter. I am elated. It has all been worthwhile. Now what?
Do I patent it? I knew the cost, but maybe this one is worth it.
I call my new friend and mentor Marvin Selligman. I ask him
what he thinks. “Well, Peedah,” he says. “Do you have a couple
hundred thousand in your bank account?” “Huh? Well, no,” I
reply. “Well, that’s what it would cost you to defend a patent
if you decide to go after someone who copies it.” Okay, so not
only do you have to spend a fortune to patent it, but then you
have to have an even larger fortune to defend it. He advised that
if you are first to market with a product, there will be a a huge
advantage, but if it’s successful it will likely be copied. It’s a big
world, and there’s not much you can do about it. Okay, I decide
to throw caution to the wind and not patent it.
Creating your invention and selling it are two distinctly different
challenges. The latter will be much more challenging for most of
us. I picked up the phone and started calling film and TV suppliers in Toronto and got it into a couple of shops. Of course I
thought they were going to sell themselves and I’d just wait for
more orders. This was not to be. What did generate sales was
the NAB tradeshow in Las Vegas. VF Gadgets was selling the
warrendolly at the time; they got a booth in Vegas and invited me
down. Wow, the big time! I had never been to NAB and was like
a kid in a candy store. I could not believe how huge it was, and
here I am showing off my little dolly in a corner of the VF booth.
There are hundreds of potential buyers that stroll by your booth.
I lost my voice on the first day. There is also the introduction to
the international market. But real estate at NAB is expensive, so
again you have to weigh up the cost of being there to what actual
sales are generated.
The one thing I learned from the warrendolly was that your time
has value, and if I were to calculate the amount of time it took
to create, research, design, shop around, manufacture, assemble,
and sell, sell, sell, I think the guy working at the fast food joint
would have made more per hour. But there are spin-offs you don’t
expect, the connections you make, the people you meet, and it
is cool to know that someone on the other side of the world is
using your little dolly.
The shooter scooter
The shooter scooter was something I had in my head from my
early days at CITY TV. I shot a scene for Crime Stoppers, chasing
a robber down a grocery aisle. To get a tracking shot, I hopped in
a grocery cart and had someone race me down the aisle. Maybe
not the safest way to do it; I figured there had to be a better
way. Fast forward 20 years, and I finally decided to do something
about it. I created a cart out of PVC. It had a low platform to
14 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
stand on, handles to grab onto and push from, and it all ran
on 10” pneumatic wheels; everything came from the hardware
store. Now I had something I could stand in and have an assistant push or pull me along to do a tracking shot. On a smooth
surface it was as smooth as a Steadicam. Plus, I could use it to
haul my gear from the van to the location. It actually worked so
well that I thought maybe others would be interested. But this
time I would manufacture it entirely myself. So I set up shop in
my basement and created the first four units. Meanwhile, fall had
turned to winter, and one ridiculously cold day I was hauling my
gear across the street and onto the sidewalk when the entire thing
cracked and split in half. Oops. Turns out PVC does not hold up
well in the freezing weather. Fortunately, I had not sold any of
those early units.
I went back to the drawing board, realizing it would have to be
manufactured. I started by looking for better wheels. I found a
local wheelchair store and I explained what I was building. They
were immediately interested and suggested that not only could
they supply the wheels but they could build the entire shooter
scooter for me. In my head I’m thinking, “Uh-oh, here we go
again.” But I listen, and they suggest a meeting at their head
office in Toronto. I have a voice in one ear saying, “Don’t do it!
Stop now, you have a mortgage to pay,” and another voice saying,
“Cool!” So, of course I listen to the latter and hop in my van.
I meet with the president and a couple of others, and we discuss
the whole project. They talk about machining, auto cads and materials. All the while I’m thinking, “What is it going to cost me
per unit, and can I even afford this?” And then, out of nowhere
they tell me that they will design, manufacture and assemble the
units at their expense. And what would I consider my royalty to
be per unit? Okay, did I fall asleep in the meeting and this is just
a dream? This is the best possible outcome. The arrangement was
that VF Gadgets would sell it, I would pitch it at NAB and the
wheelchair company would do the rest. I went to several NABs
with VF Gadgets, and the shooter scooter did fairly well, especially internationally. But over the years sales slipped, and this
past spring the wheelchair company informed me that they were
going to drop it. Oh, well, it was a good run.
If I had to do it all over again, would I? Absolutely! I think the
thrill of creating and the satisfaction of problem-solving is in all
of us; it’s what we do every day on set. If you have an idea for
something, first of all make sure it’s not already out there. Build
a proof of concept. It can be put together with gaffer tape and
piano wire, you just want to see if it works. Write everything
down in a journal (with pages that can’t be added or taken out),
take pictures, don’t show it to anybody unless they are giving you
professional advice, and possibly have them sign a nondisclosure
agreement. If you think it will be as popular as a C-stand or sandbag then you might want to look into a patent. But you have to
file a patent in every country that you want to protect your idea
from, and that’s very expensive. You can file a patent in Canada,
and if your patent is accepted, it will protect your idea worldwide
for one year, meaning no one else can file the same patent. But
you only have one year to file patents in other countries. If you
get the patent, you can licence your product and let someone else
Photo: InMotion
“I think the thrill of creating and the satisfaction of problem-solving is in all of us; it’s what we do every day on set,” says multi-inventor Peter Warren csc.
do all the work in return for a royalty. Or sell the whole thing
entirely. Or manufacture it, create a website and sell it on your
own. But remember all of these things can be done without a
patent as well. But always weigh up realistically what it’s going
to cost you against what the likely return is. Good luck on your
journey.
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
15
Carlos Esteves csc Takes On Reality
Challenge
By Fanen Chiahemen
Photos courtesy of Carlos Esteves csc
Carlos Esteves csc
I
ngenuity and skill are tested in the popular reality show
Canada’s Handyman Challenge in which amateurs across the
country compete for a cash prize by taking part in various
contests from hanging wallpaper to building expansion bridges
out of thin material. As the challenges get harder, those who don’t
cut it are eliminated. From the Toronto set, in an old soap factory, director of photography Carlos Esteves csc takes Canadian
Cinematographer through the ins and outs of shooting 10 onehour episodes for Season 3 of the series.
Canadian Cinematographer:
What are the challenges of
shooting a show like this?
Carlos Esteves csc: It’s a big show; it has such a large physical footprint. You could have 16 contestants chopping plywood 8
or 10 feet long, so you need a primary working area of 12 by 12.
The camera shoots almost 360 degrees at a time, so it’s always a
compromise when it comes to lighting. We always have to pick
locations with suitable backgrounds. And then for every outdoor
location, we also need an indoor location where we could light if it
16 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
was raining or at night. A show like Canadian Idol has a dedicated
finale area that they light and make look really nice and employ
lots of material and production value to. But in regional areas they
don’t have to deploy as much production value. We’re full board in
every city. So we have to do the same thing in different cities.
CC: How does shooting
360 degrees compromise
the way you light?
CE: At any given point you’re affecting every angle. And then
to light it you don’t get the degrees of shadows and highlights,
light and dark areas. Lighting in reality shows has a tendency to
be flat with not much edge to it. On Canada’s Handyman Challenge multiple cameras, along with a camera crane, are rolling,
and most of the time they’re diametrically opposite to each other,
and this type of blocking challenges the quality of the lighting.
On this show I’ve been able to create as much as possible in terms
of my base light and then try to create edging to add more depth
in the frame. Production has helped me achieve that. To a certain
extent, I have the manpower and the instruments to do it.
CC: So what kind of lighting
system are you using both
outdoors and indoors?
CE: When we’re outdoors we basically just use HMI lighting and
bounce boards. Indoors I created an effective soft box system as
opposed to going with space lights because of the costs. On this
season because of the location’s footprint I have two 1,200 gennies running diesel. So I have to keep the costs down. I have to be
very careful in terms of the amps that I’m pulling.
For our indoor base light, I sat down with my key grip Maciej
Kulpa in the earlier season of the show and devised a system using 4x4 frames, a blonde, which is 2,000 watts, and black foam
core. With the foam core we created a skirt around the frame,
and I have the fixture above, suspending it from the ceiling. To
push the visuals when indoors, we rim bounce lighting from the
corners bouncing 6K HMIs off 4x8 foam cores off lifts and paint
background details with mixed sources, then the art department
blends out the bottom of the lifts. When the judges are in the
middle of the arena they get edges. This show always uses a camera crane so I have to be careful with shadows, so most of my
edge lighting tends to be bounced. My base sources are diffused
with 250 Rosco.
For the individual testimonial interviews, the contestants are lit
very simply. I don’t use a fill light. I use a soft key, a bit of underfill, and only control a very slight backlight to make it as powerful
and cinematic as possible.
1
2
When the judges look over contestants’ work my gaffer Loris
Santarosa and I – whether it’s a reflector, Kino or an HMI – pick
off the judges for eye lights. So we do as much as we can to push
production levels so the show looks as best as possible, despite
being a fast-paced reality show.
CC: How do you create a
distinctive look for a
reality show?
CE: The reality show genre has been given a bad rap because
budgets are low and they tend to rush through it. They’re limited. When I shoot certain scenes I light the walls, I do rimming
and eye lights. Just because we’re doing a reality show, doesn’t
mean we cannot lift it. Luckily, we have the support from the
broadcaster (HGTV) because they budget it in. We have support
from the production company (Firvalley Productions) because
they fight for it, and so does everybody else who works on the
show, from the grip department to the electrical department to
the camera operators. So everybody’s pushing to make the show
look as good as possible.
1. Carlos Esteves csc (front) during camera blocking for the show’s promo,
with Mike Holmes, Scott McGillivray and Paul Lafrance in the background.
2. Unit shooting a cut ceremony at sunset. 3. Gaffer Loris Santarosa in
Halifax using a Kino for an eye light. 4. Base light (4x4 soft boxes) in the
main covered area of Season 3.
3
4
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
17
CC: What kind of camera
system are you using?
CE: We use the Panasonic HDX 900. We started out with it
because when we went from SD to HD that was the go-to camera at that moment. We still shoot on it due to price points and
because it does what we want it to do. They sweeten the image in
post, and when I shoot I make sure that I build the image within
the lighting ratios that holds the highest possible contrast. We
shoot at REC 709, which is like shooting reversal film; there is
no room for error. If you overexpose you can’t bring those details
back; you’re not shooting RAW. But people on this show are used
to that. Many come from a broadcast background.
We shoot with five cameras in total: four handhelds, and one always on the crane. The handheld that comes in halfway through
the day gets carried on to do the interviews.
CC: What demands does this
show and the way it’s shot
place on your camera crew?
CE: It’s a very demanding show, so the camera operators have to
be excellent. Joseph Blasioli, the executive producer who originated the show, sits in on the edits. He demands a lot from the camera operators, who were Danny Cook, Stefan Randstrom, Dave
Woodside -- who’s an associate member -- and Elad Winkler.. It’s
a blessing to work with someone who wants to do that rather than
compromising and saying, “That’s good enough.” So the operators are asked for dynamic shots and shallow depth of field. He
doesn’t want things from tripods. There is a lot of handheld shooting, which can sometimes be a challenge because sometimes it
could be three hours, saddled or on the shoulders. A lot of people
can’t manage it.
It’s very demanding for the camera people because we ask them to
be storytellers. For example, if a contestant is competing in a challenge, as the person shooting I have to follow a story. When I have
a camera meeting with new operators I tell them it’s like shooting a documentary. If you have a contestant and you can see right
away that he or she is not really sure of themselves, that they’re
nervous, I want to tell that story visually. And then you have to
get dynamic shots. I only need X amount of shots of cutting and
nailing wood. Give me different shots so the editor has five different shots rather than five takes of the same angle. Be creative in all
aspects – depth of field, ambient lights, framing, contrast ratios. If
the person’s nervous I want to see the nervousness. If things are not
going according to plan, if there is drama, if a contestant knows
they’ll be cut tonight, we want all that. So there’s a certain amount
of self-directing we ask from the camera operators. I’ve seen people
come in and be let go five or six hours later. Not because they’re not
good, it’s just they don’t have the set of experiences that this show
calls for. So it’s a hard show, very demanding.
Lighting plot for Season 3.
18 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
The Wisdom of
Luc Montpellier csc
By Guido Kondruss | Photos by Christos Tsirbas
Luc Montpellier csc with moderator Sarah Thomas Moffat.
F
or the 60 people who attended the most recent instalment
of the CSC Wisdom Lecture Series, it was an evening of
shining brilliance. The event was held in the screening theatre at Deluxe Canada’s complex in downtown Toronto, and the
star of the evening was one of Canada’s top cinematographers,
Luc Montpellier csc.
Lauded by film reviewers for his distinctive and seamless cinematic style in giving a film its visual voice and for his use of light
to provoke emotion, Montpellier has garnered much deserved
attention and respect for his work both domestically and internationally. With more than 54 film and television screen credits
as a DP, Montpellier’s long list of collaborations include auteur
directors such as Sarah Polley (Away From Her, Take This Waltz),
Ruba Nadda (Cairo Time, Inescapable), Clement Virgo (Poor Boy’s
Game), and avant-garde filmmakers Guy Maddin (Saddest Music
in the World) and Michael Snow (Preludes). Polley, whose film,
Away from Her, was nominated for an Academy Award, has said
she “would stop making films” if Montpellier ever stopped shooting, and she credits him for teaching and guiding her through
the visual language of film. Ruba Nadda is equally effusive in her
praise of Montpellier, saying that his “eye is spectacular” and that
he is an inspiration, always improving her ideas.
Montpellier is one of the few Canadian DPs that still shoots film
on many of his projects, but he is equally versed with digital
workflows. During his 20-year career Montpellier has been honoured with a trove of nominations and awards, including Canadian Society of Cinematography and Genie Awards, as well as the
Haskell Wexler Award.
The following are edited excerpts from the audience Q&A with
Montpellier following the presentation of his favourite film clips.
On his favourite lenses
LM: I love the Panavision Primos. I like the legacy behind the
glass. Every lens has its own characteristic. I really like the palette
they offer me as I have the tendency to match specific lenses with
specific films. I can get the lenses that Dirty Harry was shot on
if I want!
On filmmaking, scripts and directors
LM: For me, it all starts with a good collaborative attitude and
a director willing to focus on visual storytelling. You can understand the technical makings of a film, that’s a known thing. Storytelling is the hard part. I approach every project like a student
trying to learn what the story needs. A lot of the clips I chose here
[tonight] I liked because it’s storytelling without words. I truly
believe all good films are created with this guiding principle. I’m
here to help execute the director’s vision and hopefully jam along
the way to come up with new possibilities.
On shooting the glider sequence for
The Right Kind of Wrong
LM: We had four camera crews working to capture this sequence,
sometimes independently as we had huge ground to cover. The
sequence only lasts three minutes in the final film, and the ever
changing weather patterns throughout the three-day shoot made
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
19
From left: D. Gregor Hagey csc, Luc Montpellier csc, Sarah Thomas Moffat and Carolyn Wong.
it a challenge to match everything up. The digital intermediate
process was a great tool to help smooth out any varying light
conditions.
ALEXA in 16:9 mode as the 4/3 ALEXAs weren’t readily available. All in all, it was a huge technical feat to try and put it all in
the soup to make it all match.
We also had a visual effect unit shooting concurrently with our
main unit. All the glider elements were shot on massive sound
stages outfitted with 100’x100’ green screens. We used a 50’ Super-Technocrane to create the movement as our glider and actor
hung from the grid. It was a poor man’s motion-control rig!
Inescapable was shot in anamorphic as well, but I opted to use the
original 16:9 ALEXA model instead. We chose this format because we wanted the film to have a slightly 16 mm feel to it based
on a man going back into his past. To achieve this desired look,
I chose to shoot the film using 2x anamorphic lenses on a 16:9
(sensor) ALEXA in the ProRes format. The result is a slightly
softer image due to the reduced sensor area being recorded and
subsequently de-squeezed. This process gave me the desired image softness akin to 16 mm film.
Our main unit also captured images of Leo, our lead character,
taking off from a real cliff on location. Our practical effects crew
rigged this elaborate computerized pulley system of wires between two construction cranes that extended 300 yards. It was all
digitally repeatable so that the glider could go up and down, back
and forth, and be instantly reset when it reached the end. With
the hit of a button, the rig could literally be brought to first position so we could repeat the exact same action. It was a system that
saved a lot of time, as shooting this sequence was very expensive.
There was much to coordinate technically, and I’m very happy
with the results.
On shooting anamorphic
I’m addicted! This (The Right Kind of Wrong) was my very first
ARRIRAW anamorphic film. We shot with Panavision anamorphic lenses and I believe it was the very first 4/3 sensor show in
Canada. I think we were the ones who took it out of the box! We
had two DITs in the truck because it generates so much data. We
also had slow motion requirements on the show. The 4/3 ALEXA
wasn’t able to shoot at the higher frame rates we needed at the
time, so we looked to the Phantom camera for most of our slow
motion needs. Some of our second unit was also shot with the
20 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
On shooting with DSLRs
The new formats coming out today are producing amazing images. I use “prosumer” cameras mixed in with professional camera
systems on almost every film I shoot these days. I test all the new
formats when they come out, as they offer great options. They’re
never quite as crisp as the professional cameras, but the various
formats offer a unique look, unachievable until today. The low
light sensitivity of these cameras has created a poetic realism very
much present in today’s visual media. Numerous sequences in
Take This Waltz were shot using the Canon 5D Mark II. These
cameras enabled us to capture the intimacy between our actors
walking through the streets in available light and set the perfect
stage for them to forget we were shooting a film.
Luc Montpellier csc is currently working with writer/director Emmanuel Shirinian in developing Shirinian’s second feature, My
Foolish Heart, a comedy about a grandfather and a grandson who
chase after the same woman.
Lightens Up
Feature film DPs are often renowned for their attention
to detail: if they didn’t place something in the frame, it
doesn’t belong. In television news, on the other hand,
virtually nothing is under that level of control, from the
shot, to what the subject might say, to the light and even
the camera itself, let alone location.
They call it ENG, Electronic News Gathering – though the electronic part is an entrenched given these days – and it continues to
evolve with technology advances. Back in the 1980s those early
Betacams cost a whopping $120,000, and though the price of a
newscam these days is in the $20,000 to $30,000 range, it’s still
expensive compared to the way technology prices generally have
dropped, according to Carl Swanston, director of CBC News
Production Services, who oversees the technology for about 60
shooters in both French and English across the network.
“And they haven’t gotten much smaller really,” he sighs. Part of
the cost is the durability. Newscams get dropped and banged into
and the glass, that big zoom, is still a weighty component. Adam
Dabrowski, a Global TV camera operator nominated for two
CSC spot news awards last year, agrees, noting the technology
continues to drive the prime goal of news crews which is to “collect, collate and present news content to viewers.
“Cameras haven’t changed physically that much, though the
Sony PMW350 is a bit lighter than the older cameras,” Dabrowski says, but there are other plusses. For example, the digital
extender feature allows the operator to zoom all the way into the
pixels to get really tight, which in ENG is critical, even with some
loss of quality. “Instead of x32, we’re going x40 to x55 which is
much more of an option,” he says.
The shift to a 24-hour news cycle locally has only served to increase demand for news to the point where technology is no longer the barrier but access is the issue, either in terms of risk or
from authorities like the police preventing video journalists from
doing their jobs. Lights too have evolved. Gone are the scorching
lamps that ate batteries in minutes, replaced by cooler LEDs that
run for hours, relieving the camera operator from humping that
heavy bandolier or belt of batteries.
What has really changed, says Swanston, is the way those images
are transmitted after or even during capture. Back in the day it
was a race back to the lab, later the satellite truck, those huge
tandem-axle behemoths with a C-dish mounted on top and full
tape editing suites inside. You could tell how big the story was by
counting the network trucks. These days LTE and 4G cards and
Wi-Fi can accommodate most everyday news uploading needs,
he says, though satellite is still useful because it’s bulletproof.
“We use a Dejero system (from a company based in Kitchener, Ontario), which allows us to dial into the newsroom and
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
21
Tech Column
TV News Capture
Back in the 1980s those early Betacams cost a whopping $120,000
stream,” Swanston says. The file either spools onto the server or
can go directly on air. “We can literally be on air as soon as they’re
ready for it.”
In the field, almost every shooter has a MacBook or Laptop PC
with editing software along with the Dejero package, making
quick field edits easy and providing a stable console for upload.
While humping the classic “clamshell” tape editor suitcase isn’t
necessary anymore, there’s still a benefit to a live truck with its
editing space and transmission capabilities because cellular can
be problematic given traffic and location. It also provides power,
which is a real plus, Dabrowksi says.
In addition to Dejero, Dabrowski says, many U.S. stations are
also using Live U, a backpack mounted, video-over-cellular
technology; and Streambox, a mobile, multi-point video sharing technology. “At the Boston Marathon bombing some stations hired young women to put on the Live U backpacks with
a camera and just go from point A to point B to point C to get
footage,” he says.
It also helps that HDTV is merely 720p, meaning the compressed files are more manageable. Quality isn’t always everything in news; sometimes just getting the picture is more important. “I think the audience realizes that we’re sometimes going
to have footage from smart phones and they’ll accept that,”
Swanston says.
Indeed, CBC-TV crews have iPhones for when all else fails or
when they’re getting that “hidden camera shot,” and they’ll also
use GoPro HERO3s, even DSLRs such as the Canon 5D Mark
II and III, or the Nikon D800, and even some Canon C300s,
he says.
“The DSLRs are great because they have interchangeable lenses
and you can either use them for cutaways in interviews and replace the two-camera shoot set up or you can look like a tourist and not attract any attention,” he says, adding that the Sony
PMW-200 is another mini-cam that is less obtrusive, fairly affordable and “disposable” in high risk zones where crews may
have to just drop their burden and run for their lives.
Can’t imagine too many feature film DPs having to worry about
that, unless of course they’re over budget and the executive
producer is looking for them to explain that last invoice.
Ian Harvey is a veteran Toronto-based journalist who writes
for a variety of publications and covers the technology sector.
He welcomes feedback and eagerly solicits subject matter ideas
at [email protected].
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22 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
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Equipment for Sale
Cooke Speed Panchro 18mm 1.7/T2. “C” Mount, Nice condition
From United Kingdom #572079, asking $1,800.00 Barry Casson
csc Office: 250-721-2113 [email protected] Canon Wide
angle Lens J11A X 4.5 B4 IRSD and Canon Servo Zoom Control ZSD-300 Value 27 000$ Asking only 3 500$ Sony Camera
Handycam HDR-HC7, 2 Sony Batteries NP-FH100, Sony Wireless
Mic ECM-HW1, Tiffen Filter 37mm UV, Century-Precision ,55 WA
ADAPTER 55WA37, KATA Rain Cover KARC18 Value 2100$ Asking
only 350$, Elmo Suv-Cam SD ELSC5C and accessories New Value 1 200$ Asking only 200$, Anton Bauer UltraLight & Ul Soft
Box Asking only 150$, Frezzi HMI Sun Gun & Frezzi Soft Box Value
1 700$ Asking only 400$, Porta Brace Rain Slicker for Pro Camcorder RS-55 like New Asking only 150$, Script Boy Wireless T.C.
System needs minor repair Asking only 200$, Shure Mixer FP33 &
Porta Brace audio mixer case Asking only 450$, Minolta Lightmetre + Adap.5° 4F Asking only 250$ , Beachteck passive dual XLR
adaptor DXA-5Da like new Value 369$ Asking only 150$, Sony
Monitor SD PVM-14N1U new Asking only 75$, 2 Camera Canon
Dig Rebel 10Mp XTi, Sigma 70-300 F4-5.6 Super C-AF, 4 Canon
Batteries and accessories Asking only 800$, Porta Brace monitor
Case for Panasonic BT-LH910 like new Asking only 100$ [email protected] or call 514 831-8437 Panasonic AJ-HDX900P 290
drum hours, $7500.00 Canon KJ16ex7.7B IRSE lens, $5000.00
CanonJ11ex4.5B4 WRSD lens, $4500.00 Call Ian 416-725-5349 or
[email protected]
Canon Wide angle Lens J11A X 4.5 B4 IRSD and Canon Servo
Zoom Control ZSD-300 Value 27 000$ Asking only 3 500$ Sony
Camera XDCAM EX1, 2 Sony Battery BP-U60, 1 Sony Battery BPU30, 1 Sony Wide Conversion Lens X 0,8 VCL-EX0877, Sony AC
Adaptor / Charger BC-U1, 2 Sony SxS 8Gb, 4 E-Film MxR, Porta
Brace Camera Case PB2700IC All in very good condition Value
10 700$ Asking only 3 200$ Porta Brace Rain Slicker RSEX1,
Like new: 125$, Porta Brace Lens Cover LC-M, Chroziel Matt
Boxe S1001, Chroziel Sunshade S1001FF, Chroziel Adaptator S1001158SR, Chroziel Step-down Ring 80mm S100180, Tiffen
Filtre 3X3, FX#1, FX#2, Polariser, Grad ND9 Value 1 545$ Asking
only 400$, Sony Camera Handycam HDR-HC7, 2 Sony Batteries NP-FH100, Sony Wireless Mic ECM-HW1, Tiffen Filter 37mm
UV, Century-Precision ,55 WA ADAPTER 55WA37, KATA Rain
Cover KARC18 Value 2100$ Asking only 350$, Elmo SuvCam SD ELSC5C and accessories New Value 1 200$ Asking
only 200$, Anton Bauer UltraLight & Ul Soft Box Asking only
150$, Frezzi HMI Sun Gun & Frezzi Soft Box Value 1 700$ Asking only 400$, Gitzo Tripod carbon finer legs GI 1380/38/7kit Value
1 200$ Asking only 500$, Porta Brace Rain Slicker for Pro Camcorder RS-55 like New Asking only 150$, Script Boy Wireless
T.C. System needs minor repair Asking only 200$, 3 x ETC Par
Source Four Light with GP TVMP Light Stand Adaptor Asking only
175$, Eartec TD-904 Pro intercom EATD904 Value 1 050$ Asking
only 300$, Shure Mixer FP33 & Porta Brace audio mixer case Asking only 450$, Minolta Lightmetre + Adap.5° 4F Asking only 250$
, Beachteck passive dual XLR adaptor DXA-5Da like new Value
369$ Asking only 150$, Sony Monitor SD PVM-14N1U new Asking only 75$, 2 Camera Canon Dig Rebel 10Mp XTi, Sigma 70-300
F4-5.6 Super C-AF, 4 Canon Batteries and accessories Asking
only 850$, Porta Brace monitor Case for Panasonic BT-LH910 like
new Asking only 100$ [email protected] or call 514 831-8347
Asahi Pentax spotmeter (just serviced) 425.00 Minolta Colormeter
III F 750.00 Spectra Professional IV 250.00 Spectra Professional IV
A 300.00 Minolta Spotmeter F(need repair) 100.00 Bernard Couture:
[email protected]; 514-486-2749 Professional U/W housing from
renowned world leader Amphibico. 2006 Sony HVR-A1U camera
with 0.7x wide adapter and all accesories. 2006 Amphibico EVO-Pro
housing with .55x wide conversion and flat port. Rare model built
in small quantity. Most camera functions accessible. About 60-70
dives. Complete overhaul and pressure tested by factory in 2010.
3.5’’ LCD Monitor, rebuilt in 2010. 2 compact Discovery 10W HID
lamps by Amphibico with batteries and chargers. Spare o-ring for
all. Soft and hard carry cases. All in good condition. E-mail or call for
photos and more information. 514-941-2555, [email protected]
BL IV Camera Kit $8,950 Or Best Offer
Arriflex Bl4 Body With Pl Mount, 4 Perf Movement, Variable Shutter,
Full 35Mm Gate, Arriglow Module And Arriglow Groundglass In Red,
Cei Color 4 Video Tap Camera And Elbow, Cei Electronic Reticle Generator, Bl4 Viewfinder Extension, Wideangle Eypiece With Heated
Eyecup, Powercable For Heated Eyepiece, Arriflex 4 X 5 Swingaway
Mattebox, Arri Ff2 Follow Focus With Extension, Whip And 2 Gears,
15Mm Arri Sliding Baseplate Set With 2 X 18” And 2 X 12” Stainless Steel 15Mm Rods, 5 X Arri 1000’ Bl Magazines, 2 X Arri 400’ Bl
Magazines, 3 X Double Power 12 Volt Batteries, 2 X 12 Volt Charges,
Power Cable, Cases For Camera, Mags, Mattebox, Etc.,Film Test Has
Been Shot. [email protected], 604.566.2235 (Residence),
604.889.9515 (Mobile)
FOR SALE 4X4 Petroff Mattebox, barely used. Can be used with
15mm rod support or clip-on. INCLUDES: Single stage (option to add
two more stages); 1X 4X4 tray + 1X 4X5.65 tray; Petroff Eyebrow;
Zacuto lens donut; 15 mm rod support bracket; 85 mm ring adapter.
Bought originally for $650 CDN asking $450 (firm). GREG BISKUP p.
647 405-8644. Email: [email protected] 2 Arrilite 2k’s like new
very little use with 4 way barn doors, 5 scrims, 4 2k bulbs, 3 1k
bulbs and Arri case in very good condition $1100 Call 416 712-1125
or [email protected] Duncan MacFarlane 2- Transvideo Titan HD
Transmitter and Receiver kits. $3000ea. 2 for $5500. Similar in style
and operation to the Boxx Meridian. 1- Angenieux 25-250 T3.9 Arri
PL mount, std film gears on focus, zoom, and iris (32 pitch-mod 0.8),
lens support and collar, shipping case included $2900 1- Tamron
300mm F2.8 Arri bayonet mount with PL adapter, std film gear on
focus (32 pitch-mod 0.8), 42mm filters: clear, 2 x 85, shipping case
included $900 1- O’Conner 50 fluid head with Mitchell, Mini-Mitchell, 150mm ball bases and tie-downs, 2 quick release plates extra
hardware (pan module needs fluid) $400Contact: stephen.reizes@
gmail.com
JVC GY-DV300 Broadcast Quality camcorder. 4x3 or 9x16
switchable 750 horizontal lines with several extra batteries and carrying case. Plus and external Shure VP88 stereo microphone with
Rycote bracket and wind screen with high wind cover and extra mic
cables. Asking $ 1200.00. Contact Robert Bocking csc 416 636-9587
or [email protected] for more information.
1) Panasonic 3D Professional Full HD Video Camera (AG3DA1) The AG-3DA1 is the world’s first professional, fully-integrated
Full HD 3D camcorder that records to SD card media. The AG-3DA1
will democratize 3D production by giving professional videographers
a more affordable, flexible, reliable and easier-to-use tool for capturing immersive content as well as providing a training tool for educators. At less than 6.6 pounds, the AG-3DA1 is equipped with dual
lenses and two full 1920 x 1080 2.07 megapixel 3-MOS imagers to
record 1080/60i, 50i, 30p, 25p and 24p (native) and 720/60p and 50p
in AVCHD. Camera is very new. Includes Kata Carrying case, 4 batteries. To view photos/questions email [email protected] or
call 416-916-9010. Asking price: $17,500 (includes tax). Will ship
out of province.
2) Proline 17 inch Teleprompter Included is both PC AND Mac
versions for our industry leading Flip-Q teleprompter software. FlipQ automatically “Flips” the secondary output on your laptop so both
the operator and talent will see perfect reading left-right text. The
ProLine 17 standard LCD panels are the lightest weight, lowest
profile designs in their class. In addition, they offer both VGA and
composite video inputs adaptable with any computer output or application. They also offer flexible power options including 100-240V
AC or external 12v DC input. Price includes Tripod attachments and
Pelican carrying case. Complete tool-less set-up. To view photos/
questions email [email protected] or call 416-916-9010.
Asking Price: $2,000 (includes tax).
Sony PMW-F3 with S-Log firmware. Excellent condition low
hours. Kaiser top handle. Screen Protector. 32GB SxS “A
series” high speed card $7900.00 Photos available Gemini
4:4:4 solid state recorder (uncompressed) with eSata and
ThunderBolt, accessories, cables, drive readers and case.
Includes 512GB and 3x 256GB solid state drives. Excellent
condition $ Photos available $4400.00. Contact John Banovich
604-726-5646 or [email protected]
Nikkor AF-S VR 500mm F 4 IS ED Lens. Super rare and very hard
to find!!! Serial # 204153 Perfect condition. Not a scratch on it!!!
Only one year old. Included Hard Shell Case, Lens Hood, Lens Strap,
Case strap. Come with Manfrotto Carbon Fiber tripod, Jobu head and
Jobu Mounting Bracket. Asking price $9000.00 gandalf-merlyn@
shaw.ca, 604.566.2235 (Residence), 604.889.9515 (Mobile)
Equipment for sale!! All equipment in excellent shape!!
Panasonic AJHDX900P High Definition Camera, Panasonic Stereo
Microphone, Canon Zoom Lens 8x160 (J20a x 8B4 IRS), Dionic 90
Anton Bauer Batteries & charger, Anton Bauer mini fill light 12 V,
Marshall 7” HD-SDI LCD Monitor & accessories, 2 x Porta Brace
camera bags, Sony Digital Betacam (DVW700) and accessories,
Sachtler fluid head VIDEO 20 III & Sachtler tripod legs fibre & fibre
case. Call 613-255-3200, Total $ 25,000.Panasonic BT-S950P 16:9 / 4:3 SD Field Monitor for Sale (Excellent Condition) - $100. Portabrace included Please contact Christian
at (416) 459-4895 or email [email protected]
VIDEO & AUDIO GEAR FOR SALE: (2) HVX-200 Panasonic P2 Camcorders $1,500 each; (1) DSR-1500 Sony DVCAM recorder, $1,500;
(1) Sony DSR-1 DVCAM dockable recorder $1,000; (3) Sony PVV-3
Betacam recorders $500 each; (3) Mitsubishi XL25U video projectors $500 each; (1) Mackie 1604VLZ audio mixer $500; (1) Glidecam
PRO2000 camera stabilizer $200; (1) Glidecam DVPRO RIG camera
stabilizer $300; (1) Yamaha P2075 amplifier 75W stereo/150W mono
$500; (3) HVR-Z1U Sony HDV camcorders $1,000 each; (1) Sony
DSR-300 DVCAM camcorder $1,500; (1) For-A VPS-400D 8 input SDI
switcher $2,700; (2) Sony WRT822/WRR861 wireless transmitter/
receiver – no mic - $750 each; (2) Sony BRC-300 remote control P/T/Z
cameras $1,990 each. Call Ted Mitchener at ZTV Broadcast Services
905-290-4430 or email [email protected].
Services
Flicker-Free HMI & Hi-Speed Cameras available with
operator/gaffer (Toronto)
Includes a new ARRI M18 1800W lensless HMI with Arri 1000Hz
Flicker-Free Ballast, stand, and lots of head cable. It’s as bright
(or brighter) than a T5 but runs on household AC 120V and draws
less than 20Amps. We also have the Sony FS700 Super-35 CMOS
sensor high-speed camcorders with PL, Nikon, Canon, or Pentax
mounts. Great for overcranked product shots on a budget. 60fps,
120fps or 240fps @ 1080p and 480fps @ 720p. Other camera/grip/
electric & 3D support gear available as well. Contact Tim at 1-888580-3274 ext.700 or [email protected]
Need your reel updated? Looking for an editor? I am a CSC
associate member who is also an editor with my own FCP suite. I
am willing to trade my edit suite time in exchange for rental of your
gear, or shooting advice, or both. Please send email to miurabucho@
gmail.com.
Do you travel between Toronto and Hamilton for production every
day? Need a place to: screen dailies, host your production office
that’s close to both? Hill’s Production Services www.hillsvideo.com.
We are a full Service Production Company with cameras and edit
bays for making EPKs. Some grip gear, if you find yourself in the field,
short of one or two items. Hill’s also has office space and a mobile
screening room. Located just off the QEW in Burlington, check us out
905-335-1146 Ask for Rob Hill.
BL III Camera Kit $3750 Or Best Offer gandalf-merlyn@shaw.
ca, 604.566.2235 (Residence), 604.889.9515 (Mobile) ARRIFLEX BL3
BODY WITH PL MOUNT, 4 PERF MOVEMENT, VARIABLE SHUTTER,
FULL 35MM GATE, VIDEO TAP ELBOW, 2 X ARRI 400’ BL MAGAZINES, 2 X POWER CABLE, CASES FOR CAMERA, MAGS.
Camera Classified is a free service provided for CSC members. For all others, there is a one-time $25 (plus GST) insertion fee. Your ad will appear here
and on the CSC’s website, www.csc.ca. If you have items you would like to buy, sell or rent, please email your information to [email protected].
Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014 •
23
Camera Classifieds
Equipment Wanted
CSC Member Production Notes
30 Vies IV (series); DOP Marc Gadoury csc; to April 4, Montreal
Arrow II (series); DOP Glen Winter csc & Gordon Verheul csc (alternating episodes); to April 17,
Vancouver
Beauty and the Beast II (series); DOP David Makin csc (alternating episodes); to April 22, Toronto
Continuum III (series); DOP Blk 2 Gregory Middleton csc; Operator/Steadicam Greg Fox;
B Cam Operator Brenton Spencer csc; to April 11, North Vancouver
The Divide (series); Data Management Technician Marc Forand; to April 10, Toronto
Hannibal II (series); Camera Operator Peter Sweeney; to April 4, Mississauga
Hemlock Grove II (series) B Operator/Steadicam Keith Murphy; to February 25, Mississauga
The Intruders (feature); DOP Brendan Steacy csc; to February 7, Sudbury
Once Upon a Time in Wonderland (series); DOP Attila Szalay csc, hsc; to February 21, Burnaby
Reign (series); DOP Paul Sarossy csc, bsc, asc; B Operator/Steadicam Andris Matiss; to April 10, Toronto
Rookie Blue V (series); DOP David Perrault csc; to June 11, Toronto
The Strain (series); B Camera Operator J.P. Locherer csc; to April 30, Toronto
The Tomorrow People (series); DOP David Moxness csc (alternating episodes); to April 7,
North Vancouver
Supernatural IX (series); DOP Serge Ladouceur csc; Camera Operator Brad Creasser; to April 20, Burnaby
Wayward Pines (series); DOP Gregory Middleton csc; to March 25, Burnaby
When Calls the Heart (series); DOP Michael Balfry csc; to February 23, Burnaby
You and Me (series); DOP/Operator Christopher Ball csc; First Assistant Eddy McInnis;
to March 21, Dartmouth
Calendar of Events
20-30, International Film Festival on Art, Montreal,
artfifa.com
3, CSC Annual General Meeting, Toronto, csc.ca
7-16, Victoria Film Festival, Victoria BC,
victoriafilmfestival.com
MAR
28-6, Cinéfranco, Toronto, cinefranco.com
20-1, Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois, Montreal, rvcq.com
FEB
22-23, Professional Lighting for Faces Workshop, Toronto,
csc.ca
25-March 3, CSC Digital Camera Assistants Course,
Toronto, csc.ca
27-March 2, Kingston Canadian Film Festival, Kingston,
ON, kingcanfilmfest.com
22, CSC Awards, Westin Harbour Castle Conference
Centre, Toronto, csc.ca
5-6, Professional Lighting Workshop, Toronto, csc.ca
APR
24-May 4, Hot Docs, Toronto, hotdocs.ca
One-year subscriptions are available in Canada for $40.00 for individuals and $80.00 for institutions, including HST. In U.S. rates are $45.00
and $90.00 for institutions in U.S. funds. International subscriptions
are $50.00 for individuals and $100.00 for institutions.
Subscribe online at www.csc.ca
24 • Canadian Cinematographer - February 2014
CUT. SHAPE. FOCUS. TUNE.
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www.arri.com/l-series
DEFY unrEmarkablE
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It’s a new way of moving a camera. And it’s a movement that’s quickly catching on with filmmakers
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DEFY handheld camera stabilization devices allow you to implement cinematic shots you’ve only ever
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Defy conventional setups. The DEFY G2 and G5 deliver incredibly stable footage in a mobile, affordable,
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Direct: 416-644-8010 • Fax: 416-644-8031 • Toll-Free Direct: 1-866-661-5257 • [email protected]
Photo | Video | digital | SaleS | RentalS | SeRVice
The Visual Technology People
www.vistek.ca