1990´s cinematography was amazing. I already wanted to be a photographer at 17, when I watched Delicatessen in 1991, and that particular film made me want to be a cinematographer. Khondji is one of the most innovative and influential cinematographers of that decade.
Thanks Justin, In fact I loved the film from the first moment I saw Se7en. So much that I decided to recreate the box scene one day - which I finally did last year. 😊
We are fools when we paddle against the stream. L.A. is what it is, so use it to get what you need and not be invested in trying to change it to be more substantial? Anyway, If I wasn't already subscribed - I would have f'kn subscribed after this masterful review! Great job Justin!
sir I am asking that in cameras we have rolling shutter as frame does not captured at same time but different moment of time and speed at which frame become in rolling shutter is called read out speed which is normally 20ms . so I am asking if we have shutter speed 1/16sec or 60ms .then frame has information bw 0 to 20ms or 0 to 60ms
@@desistars7089 Difficult question to answer but easy to visualize. You just need to know the practical implications of the different cameras´ sensor readouts, including the crops on the sensor (reduces the readout time), and that, slower shutter speeds translates into more noticeable motion blur if the subjects or camera are in motion. So, 1/16s results into more noticeable rolling shutter that with 1/48s as the blur may "widen".There are thorought explanations with just a Google search. Quoting kowalski71 in Reedit: "The shutter speed is the amount of time that any individual pixel gets exposed to light. The readout time is the amount of time it will take for the camera to get through reading the entire sensor. This is an issue with electronic shutters where the camera is arbitrarily just capturing 1/50s (or whatever the shutter speed is) of the sensor readout but it goes through the entire sensor line by line sequentially. So if the camera can't read the entire shutter super quickly, then the subject may have moved by the time it gets to the end of the sensor readout. If you're shooting a subject that's traveling side to side in your shot then it's moving as you shoot and you get the rolling shutter effect where everything is slanted."
1990´s cinematography was amazing. I already wanted to be a photographer at 17, when I watched Delicatessen in 1991, and that particular film made me want to be a cinematographer. Khondji is one of the most innovative and influential cinematographers of that decade.
This is my favorite video of the many I’ve seen on your channel. Excellent job. Seven / Fincher has had the same impact on me. Thanks for making this.
Thank you!
Thank you for this amazing video. I got to watch this movie. 5 stars.
THE GAME, and SOCIAL NETWORK are my favourite Fincher films. I do like the look of SEVEN, it’s fantastic, and it is extremely atmospheric.
An amazing video essay Justin!
Thank you!
Thanks Justin,
In fact I loved the film from the first moment I saw Se7en.
So much that I decided to recreate the box scene one day - which I finally did last year. 😊
Awesome!
Seven, was one of my favorites as well. Total Genius!
7even was my favourite movie that has suspence and creativity.
I’ll have to watch Seven to see what you are talking about.
Yes
Great commentary about an amazing film but the best part was your little ditty at the end.
😅 thank you
We are fools when we paddle against the stream. L.A. is what it is, so use it to get what you need and not be invested in trying to change it to be more substantial? Anyway, If I wasn't already subscribed - I would have f'kn subscribed after this masterful review! Great job Justin!
Thank you!
I wonder what a Fincher Fan says about Terrence Malick movies. Super Vid by You Justin!
Thanks! We shall see…
Excellent analysis. 🎥
Thank you
sir I am asking that in cameras we have rolling shutter as frame does not captured at same time but different moment of time and speed at which frame become in rolling shutter is called read out speed which is normally 20ms . so I am asking if we have shutter speed 1/16sec or 60ms .then frame has information bw 0 to 20ms or 0 to 60ms
Sorry i dont know the answer to the question.
@@JustinPhillip brother can you please ask to any person who has knowledge about it and answer my question
@@JustinPhillip brother do you ask from anyone your known
@@desistars7089 Difficult question to answer but easy to visualize. You just need to know the practical implications of the different cameras´ sensor readouts, including the crops on the sensor (reduces the readout time), and that, slower shutter speeds translates into more noticeable motion blur if the subjects or camera are in motion. So, 1/16s results into more noticeable rolling shutter that with 1/48s as the blur may "widen".There are thorought explanations with just a Google search.
Quoting kowalski71 in Reedit:
"The shutter speed is the amount of time that any individual pixel gets exposed to light. The readout time is the amount of time it will take for the camera to get through reading the entire sensor. This is an issue with electronic shutters where the camera is arbitrarily just capturing 1/50s (or whatever the shutter speed is) of the sensor readout but it goes through the entire sensor line by line sequentially. So if the camera can't read the entire shutter super quickly, then the subject may have moved by the time it gets to the end of the sensor readout. If you're shooting a subject that's traveling side to side in your shot then it's moving as you shoot and you get the rolling shutter effect where everything is slanted."
💯
Thanks for spoiling Seven for me 😒😒
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Well its thirty years old, but okay 🤣🤣
Now that's funny! 😀
Pls reply sir
7/11
😆
Justin, where are you moving?
Not moving just going on a road trip 😆 Got a second channel in the works! www.youtube.com/@localcallsphoto - Documentary series
Not actually moving, its my roadtrip for my second channel. www.youtube.com/@localcallsphoto