View Full Version : Official trailer for ProHD film released


Dan Parkes
June 21st, 2009, 08:36 AM
Hi guys

A 720p HD 'zombie' official trailer for the award winning film Ambleton Delight has been released this week. All footage shot on the JVC 201 camera, edited using Cineform.

Vimeo: Ambleton Delight Trailer on Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/5173187)
YouTube: YouTube - Ambleton Delight Official Trailer HD Version (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMAZJCaS5t0)
IMDB: IMDb Video: Ambleton Delight Trailer (http://www.imdb.com/video/wab/vi2230845977/)
Direct download: Ambleton Delight -Downloads (http://www.ambletondelight.co.uk/downloads.html)

The camera/adapter and film is featured in JVC's latest Highway magazine (Issue 8) in the UK, with a front cover photo and two page spread.

JVC Professional Europe - Highway magazine (http://www.jvcpro.co.uk/jpe/en/video/article.326.html)

We didn't contact them -they contacted us after seeing an earlier post here on the DVinfo! So JVC must keep tabs on this forum...

Regards
Dan

Marc Colemont
June 30th, 2009, 01:16 AM
Hi Dan, the trailer looks great.
The shot with the house turning from day to night looks awesome.
What lenses did you use?

Juan Todoli
June 30th, 2009, 07:54 AM
The shot with the house turning from day to night looks awesome.

Indeed. Really nice.

Dan Parkes
July 3rd, 2009, 06:05 PM
Hi Dan, the trailer looks great.
The shot with the house turning from day to night looks awesome.
What lenses did you use?

Thanks for the comments guys. The film was primarily shot using Minolta primes -28mm, 50mm and 135mm (!). That particular day-night transition shot is actually a visual effect -we filmed the exterior jib shot during the day (overcast) and created a night transition in post using After Effects.

Simon Denny
July 4th, 2009, 08:28 AM
I just looked at the Youtube version and that was really great. Nice exposure throughout.

Couple of techo questions.
What did you edit in? and when you say Cineform, did you capture to this and if so did you capture at the resoultion you shot in.

Great stuff.

Dan Parkes
July 6th, 2009, 11:22 AM
I just looked at the Youtube version and that was really great. Nice exposure throughout.

Couple of techo questions.
What did you edit in? and when you say Cineform, did you capture to this and if so did you capture at the resoultion you shot in.

Great stuff.

Thanks for the feedback Simon. We shot 1280x720 at 25p to a DR-100 firestore harddrive, and the files were then converted into Cineform 1280x720 HD files for the edit. The film was edited in CS3 Premiere Pro, along with the Adobe suite (After Effects and Audition especially). I have to say it has been the smoothest workflow I have ever experienced ( have tried Matrox in the past but found it had issues).

Jack Walker
July 6th, 2009, 12:56 PM
I have to say it has been the smoothest workflow I have ever experienced ( have tried Matrox in the past but found it had issues).How did you monitor for color grading? (What equipment/monitors/output cards did you use on what computer, PC or Mac)?

Thanks!

Dan Parkes
July 9th, 2009, 02:41 PM
How did you monitor for color grading? (What equipment/monitors/output cards did you use on what computer, PC or Mac)?

Thanks!

Hi Jack

As the opening gambit in the trailer indicates, this feature was shot on next-to-nothing, so one principle we introduced was to shoot using a JVC HD monitor and to get the colours right on set, in-camera, as much as possible (the film has gritty black and white flashback sequences contrasted with glossy, heavily satuated village scenes). It meant we could release a teaser during the middle of production that was ungraded, and only a small part of the finished film was graded in post -in the NLE and AE. I did hook up the HD monitor once or twice during post via DVI and the NVIDIA card, but since this was edited on a home PC (Quad core, Vista!) it was nothing flash..... Of course that's not to say that it would definitely improve if graded properly -I am acutely aware of inconsistent skin tones etc. But we cannot afford to splash out on a proper grade, and I suppose it would be contary to the ethics upon which the feature was made to do so! Hope that answers the question...?

Jack Walker
July 9th, 2009, 04:49 PM
Hello, thank you, that answered the question.

Using the HD monitor on set you did get to see the colors you were recording and match within reason.

I am also using a PC and just switched to Premiere and After Effects. I am using Cineform and the new First Light to see how that works out.

Dan Parkes
July 11th, 2009, 04:34 PM
Hello, thank you, that answered the question.

Using the HD monitor on set you did get to see the colors you were recording and match within reason.

I am also using a PC and just switched to Premiere and After Effects. I am using Cineform and the new First Light to see how that works out.

Hi Jack. I am using the now old unsupported Aspect HD -but would love to see how First Light works for grading -it looks like an excellent tool! Hope it works out for you.