well do you mean this will be their [Production House] headache to keep the quality??or its me who will have to sit with them to real work with them?????can you guide me about this process?
Before you shoot you should decide where you will get the 35mm transfer done
and work closely with the lab. Ask them about the best settings for the camera,
the best lighting needed and allow them to guide you through the process. Yes,
you should sit with them and work with them. The lab will be your partner in
doing a 35mm transfer from HD. They will be able to give you all the details including
the editing and what they need to make the best quality 35mm transfer.
someone on other site replied me that it is interlacing or deinterlacing etc when i asked to describe this in detail he just started avoiding me.so tell me it is the headache of that pro house which will be transfering the final movie to35mm????
Click here for an explanation of interlacing. I can imagine that describing the entire process
in detail on a messageboard would take a long time - maybe that's why he avoided you. Since
you will be shooting HD, interlacing won't be an issue. 24p High Def isn't interlaced video.
Work closely with the lab and they will assist you in all the details.
second question ''The process to keep hte quality up will start soon after shooting?or this process is needed when transfering from Digital to 35mm?because i will be editing it on my PC ''
If you are editing in full 1k HD then you won't do to do much. But the
chances are you will "down convert" to SD for editing and then conform
the edit to the original HD footage before you do the transfer.
I'm not avoiding you, but the details would take me hours to write out.
Read the book clive mentions and speak to the people at your lab for all
the details.
last question '' As you mentioned if i lit it well....well ok can you explain me in few words that do you mean to lit it more then normal???or it should be a normal lit??suppose i am shooting a room scene and i think the light is well.and some more light willl start creating problem for the viewers.so that is the end point?or should i increase a little more light''
The light in the room isn't good enough. Yes, you can see in the room, and
yes you can get a picture in the camera viewfinder, but no, it isn't lit well for
HD. You will need "normal" movie lighting, not normal room light.
Are you shooting this yourself or will you be using a director of photography?