Analog Film, Meet Thy Doom
Filed under: Gadget news, developments, oddities
This is the Red One, a revolutionary digital motion picture camera that matches the resolution of analog film. It has been developed by Red Digital Cinema, a company owned by Jim Jannard — the same guy who built the multi-billion sunglasses-and-other-sleek-shit manufacturer Oakley from scratch.
[Jannard's] team of engineers and scientists have created the first digital movie camera that matches the detail and richness of analog film. The Red One records motion in a whopping 4,096 lines of horizontal resolution—”4K” in filmmaker lingo—and 2,304 of vertical. For comparison, hi-def digital movies like Sin City and the Star Wars prequels top out at 1,920 by 1,080, just like your HDTV. (There’s also a slightly higher-resolution option called 2K that reaches 2,048 lines by 1,080.) Film doesn’t have pixels, but the industry-standard 35-millimeter stock has a visual resolution roughly equivalent to 4K. And that’s what makes the Red so exciting: It delivers all the dazzle of analog, but it’s easier to use and cheaper—by orders of magnitude—than a film camera. In other words, Jannard’s creation threatens to make 35-mm movie film obsolete.
More or Less Related Posts






Leave a Reply