Red Rental and Service Facility Complements New DI Theater Upstairs
“The Clipster 3 is a $130,000 piece of hardware,” Pederson says, referring to the DVS product that, along with the Scratch system from Assimilate, enables Offhollywood’s real-time Red 4K workflow. “In the grand scheme of hardware, it’s not really expensive because it also does a lot of other things. So while other companies are trying to recoup their investment in older technology, we’re just now expanding.” And Pederson thinks the timing is right because DCP is starting to gain new importance in the indie-film market. “Last year’s Venice Film Festival was done completely in DCP, and they went crazy for it,” he said. “You know the amount of logistics it takes for a festival to deal with tapes and films? Now you’re looking at a playlist, like iTunes. It’s a joy.”
That decision depends in part on what the project is. For a project that’s destined to be exhibited on film, using a film LUT will naturally yield the most accurate results when it’s time for prints to be made. But filmmakers can sometimes squeak by with nothing more than an HDCAM master. “We had a film in competition at Sundance this year called Toe to Toe, which was shot on the Red in 2K,” Pederson recalls. “We DI’d it here, and just made them a festival screener – what we call a director’s master, which is progressive output. They sold the movie [to Strand Releasing] for a limited theatrical release and then DVD and television, and they’re literally using our festival screener as the master. It passed broadcast QC. It’s kind of rare, and it’s flukey. But I felt happy for them. As we go through this process, we know what filmmakers are, ultimately, going to need. We explain the advantages and disadvantages [of different deliverables] up front.”
As much as Pederson hopes to get the various options and packages for indie filmmakers down to a science, he acknowledges that lots of things are still in flux, including what he thinks is a largely untapped market for 3D branding and commercial content for cinema exhibition, as well as big changes in dailies workflow – which may soon barely be a workflow at all. “Hardware acceleration with the Red Rocket card will change everything,” he declares. “Dailies, which are a significant revenue point for film labs, are completely going away. Already, producers are saying, ‘Well, how can I process my Red footage on set and walk away with the media?’ They can completely do that if they have the Red Rocket card, and they’re already doing this in Europe in different ways.
“The next-generation cameras are probably going to let you pull the edit media right off the camera, separate from your camera negative. To me, the writing’s on the wall. In my opinion, if you’re basing a significant part of your business on making money on dailies, you’re going to be extinct very soon. We’re telling producers, ‘We don’t want to do your dailies. We want to help you do your dailies on set, and this is how we’re going to do it – by renting you this card, or device, to do that.'”
Sections: Creativity Technology
Topics: Feature
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