In the '90s a lot of indie cinema used a particular grain of film stock which separated them from mainstream Hollywood films. I have no idea the technical terms nor reasons. Perhaps this is what you are referring to?
I guess indie to me is like a "No name Production" non famous? low budget? im not really sure how to explain what im thinking
brettzdam, is it possible that maybe the quality of the trailer is shaping how you make the distinction between "indie" and "hollywood"?
As in, you see a quality trailer, looks great, sounds great, looks like a good movie, so you automatically classify that as "hollywood", even if it might actually be an independent production?
The reason that one looks like digital is because it's digital.These are just ones i found on youtube when looking for a good indie flick to buy If any ov these belong to any one on hear im not trying to offend.
Im not talking about how the trailor is put together im talking about the actual footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67581wuhi1g&feature=related
Thats just one of the ones i could remember ill look on youtube if i can find any other examples
These are just ones i found on youtube when looking for a good indie flick to buy If any ov these belong to any one on hear im not trying to offend.
Im not talking about how the trailor is put together im talking about the actual footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67581wuhi1g&feature=related
Thats just one of the ones i could remember ill look on youtube if i can find any other examples
These are just ones i found on youtube when looking for a good indie flick to buy If any ov these belong to any one on hear im not trying to offend.
Im not talking about how the trailor is put together im talking about the actual footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67581wuhi1g&feature=related
Thats just one of the ones i could remember ill look on youtube if i can find any other examples
Love Like Blood was released in 2004, probably filmed in 2002\3, man thats 8 years ago!
Does my teaser look like video?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvhWXq5M0GU
Or how bout my buddies film from 2010 (shot on RED admittedly quite upscale budget has some of the actors from my 48 hour film last year, and the same director!)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FJ5tq_uJMY
I wondered the same thing. If “Hollywood” films are shot in 24fps and we shoot in 24fps on our DSLRs, our footage still comes out looking different. I KNOW you need to color grade, correct, so on and on. I know everything in the film has its purpose down to the actors clothe colors (for color correction and to create contrast and so on)
But even then, take away everything. Footage we shoot on DSLRs at 24fps or 23.xxxfps is still way too different than footage shot on film cameras at the same frame rate. Ours comes out looking……faster? Not sure how to explain it really, but you can always tell a film camera footage from dslr. Hollywood films tend to be a bit more grainy and more raw (maybe this is just done in post) vs DSLR shots which are more clearer and sharper.
So once more, how come our shots come out looking faster, video like, vs say a film camera. Take away pricing, talking strictly frame rate! Or perhaps shutter also has a lot to do with it?
If anyone has any links to footage that looks like film that was shot on DSLR, please do share.
Thanks,
Roman