this came up again after a long time in the youtube menu and what a pleasure to watch these guys
@cmedley8 жыл бұрын
This is now my favourite video on KZbin.
@СавенкоДмитро3 жыл бұрын
it's awesome! I've expected to see a guide on setting lights in a scene, with this mature filmmakers showing that all. but, surprisingly, their talk appeared to be much more fascinating! many thanks ♡
@Jim3113663 жыл бұрын
ME too .My Frist station in Springfeild mass had Film cameras left and a video film chain as there were at the time moving over to 3/4 Tape system, That was in the 80s
@thermonuclearcollider4418 Жыл бұрын
2:37 I used 800watts spotlights by Ianiro (the "redheads" - or "mandarines" over here) for ages as a RAI cameraman and freelance DP before the advent of LED and the bulbs never suddenly explode on me (provided you always switched them off every time you moved them, even while figuring out a lighting setup). The 2K blondes, on the other hand, had a 50\50 chance of sending sparks everywhere all the time. I remember the first time it happened to me, we were filming inside a high precision mechanics workshop, where every machine was plugged into industrial sockets and the flying sparks fell very close to one of the power grids. It was scary.
@Chucklesrailarchive Жыл бұрын
Really very interesting thanks guys. I only ever dabbled with video for filming. Still have my set of Red heads in the loft. Always dreamed of being a BBC Cameraman. First came into contact with film when I was a cinema manager for the ABC chain. I then moved on to working in a London advertising agency for few years in the preview studio handling 16 & 35 mm, reel to reel video recorders and very early telecine. The telecine l always remember for 35mm film was a pair off modified cinema projectors with arc lamps for a light source which shone through a prism to the video camera which had a very large number of ND filters stacked in front of the lens. Not quite BBC kit! I did however get a job offer from the BBC later but just at that time l my wife had an outbreak of twin daughters which made it impossible for me to accept the position.
@CamerieriZeppoleMix3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video 🙏 thank you
@KristopherSatchell3 жыл бұрын
This is awesome!
@eyesofisabelofficial6 жыл бұрын
Brian Tufano, my favorite DP.........Mr Wroe's virgins (BBC 1993)
@CamerieriZeppoleMix3 жыл бұрын
Great video thank you 🙏
@Dutch3DMaster5 жыл бұрын
Lol, funny to hear them say "absolutely appaling" while not pointing to the Laniro/Red Head lights but naming basically the exact same problems (except for the color-shift between each lamp). My video teacher was from the old days but was absolutely fed up with them for the problems of not being able to spot them well :P. I have a video of one of the RED Head bulbs that blew while on-site somewhere but fused the glowing wire back together while partially outside the glass housing. A colleague who had been a cameraman for around 25 years (nothing close to the people in the video, but still, to state how rare it was that that happened) was astonished when he saw it, he had never experienced a light blowing out, not knocking out a fuse and also staying lit (allbeit a lot dimmer and with a lot of smoke bellowing out of the fixture after some seconds). I have used the 800W Red Heads mainly for bouncing them against ceilings, that was basically the only thing that they were easily usable for without to much of a hassle trying to sort-of spot them. Interesting video, I liked this a lot. Sometimes I feel regretful not having lived a little bit more in the more analog era of television making (even if it only consisted out of home movies), it feels so incredibly easy just to push a record button right after having switched on the camera (Still then, it was hard to almost impossible to explain to a 14 year old how incredibly easy it is for them to record video of a very decent quality with a telephone, as opposed to the usually really expensive camera's at the end of the 80's and in the 90's that still didn't really came up to the standards of reliability you can expect of a phone these days).
@adamtaylor47855 жыл бұрын
cool lens video I really wna to be a cinematographer when I'm grow up
@dominojordan3d6 жыл бұрын
I'm watching this next to my gear shelves, I'm unwittingly continuing the BBC legacy with my 3 red heads, single blonde and poly...
@craigshelley16636 жыл бұрын
I vaguely recall there being an interview with Fred Dibnah where the film crew ended up paying for a new carpet after they set it on fire
@christopherhulse83852 жыл бұрын
Fred himself told the story, apparently it was an American film crew who came to interview him and their 120v lighting blew up when plugged into our 240v mains!
@nativebullet73337 жыл бұрын
very nice
@erikals8 жыл бұрын
Thank You! :)
@srfurley3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like the ones which were different colours were quartz metal halide, and the Redheads and blonde were tungsten halogen?
@Skanda11114 жыл бұрын
Real Gentlemen! Gaffers are always very serious when it comes to handling their lights. That is the only thing they don't want you to help with.
@ThomasLuca7 жыл бұрын
The British are among the best in film. Especially the studios Elstree, Ealing, Leavesdon, Pinewood, etc.
@MrRandomRain6 жыл бұрын
alfred hitchcock will tell you different
@bigg2838 Жыл бұрын
@@MrRandomRain Kubrick would agree with Tommy
@derryk17 жыл бұрын
Looking at all that old gear(kit) reminds me why I'm glade I'm using modern tech instead of that crude matter, especially with the lights. I have been switching from tungsten to LED putting my Arri, Mole Richardson and Lowe lights into semiretirement. Nostalgia is nice and all but best for museums and not in the modern field. Cheers
@derryk17 жыл бұрын
The results are a quicker easier setup with less hassle. 2 weeks ago I had to shoot an interview in an office with large glass windows low ceilings and not a lot of room to work around. I didn't want to have a masses amounts of cords and wires all about plus I had to quick set up in another part of the office lobby quickly right after the first set up. With battery powered LED lights I had everything up and running within a couple of minutes and before long we were all done and out like nobody's business. No wires to run and people tripping over, no colour gels to deal with the lights are adjustable both colour and intensity. Best of all they don't get hot so in they go immediately back into their case no burnt hands or other things. The look and feel of my work remains the same. The better LED lights the better results because they are true colour no intense purple blue or green colour shift.
@Andresvideo7 жыл бұрын
May I ask you what LED lights do you use? Le technology is definitely the way to go in my opinion
@Andresvideo7 жыл бұрын
Great! Thanks for your answer. I own 2 Aputure 672 (w & s) and can't be happier. Looking forward to getting the 300D to have a killer output, that I need sometimes.
@derryk17 жыл бұрын
Also the LED fresnels that are out now look real interesting as well, the Boltzen 55w and others like it. It is a real exciting time for this industry of film video and photography I just wish it was like this 20 years ago (the dark ages) when I first got started.
@arricammarques19555 жыл бұрын
Arri lighting far superior for color temp., skin tones, etc.
@jumesluke6 жыл бұрын
You should show us a pic! You know, so we can see what it looks like...
@stupossibleify6 жыл бұрын
A shame about the modern camera work - complete failure to document the detail of the equipment with close shots. Style over substance
@AdapttvhistoryOrgUk6 жыл бұрын
The camera operators on this shoot were men. The voice you can hear is that of our producer.
@stupossibleify6 жыл бұрын
@@AdapttvhistoryOrgUk The camera operators you can occassionally see with the held-held digital video cameras in the shoot look like students..it's a shame there were no close up shots of the equipment in this and the other videos on this otherwise excellent KZbin channel
@popmart3272 Жыл бұрын
In the analog world, you had to be a perfectionist. It was a constant struggle with reality. And today..? Well ... Today, everyone, even a total idiot, has a smartphone in their pocket that does everything for them.