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The tale of Lucasfilm, Skywalker Ranch, Star Wars and Canon DSLRs on a 40 foot screen!

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Glidetrack - No1 for portable dolly systems and sliders

LUCASFILMThe problem with email, especially getting several hundred a day, is you miss some. Some more important than others. One email I completely missed was from Rick McCallum. Producer of the Star Wars prequels and many other films and TV shows at Lucasfilm. He said he loved my work and wanted to talk to me about working together on a movie they were making. I missed this email. Not good.

Fortunately they didn’t give up on me. Head of post production Mike Blanchard phoned me up 3 weeks later to see if I could come over and consult about the potential of using video DSLRs for their productions. He called whilst I was shooting so it went to voicemail. I picked it up the next day and thought holy shit! They must have thought I was playing hardball by not replying to Rick. I wasn’t. I am just a bit useless with all the emails!

“Star Wars” has been a part of my life for over 30 years. I saw it as a child when I was 7 and the second film, “The Empire Strikes Back” affected me enormously. I was in tears when I came out of the cinema. My hero…Han Solo, frozen in carbonite taken by Boba Fett! Anyway, I digress…

 

NOOOOOOOO.....

NOOOOOOOO.....

Of course I phoned Mike back said yes please! 5 days staying at Skywalker Ranch as their guest and showing them how to get the best out of the Canon 5DmkII and the Canon 7D. They also wanted to be shown how to use the EX3, Letus Ultimate and Nanoflash.

So I flew to San Francisco on Saturday last week and drove to the ranch (via Best Buy of course!). What a stunning place. In the middle of nowhere with enormous beautiful natural grounds and complimentary buildings. I was put in the Federico Fellini apartment. Each apartment is named after a famous person. From architects to actors, composers, writers, photographers, filmmakers. The one I was in is the one where Clint Eastwood always stays. Yes, I slept in Clint’s bed!

The first night, knowing the weather was not supposed to be great over the next few days I did some night timelapses using my 7D and 5DmkII. I left them running until 3am when they froze over!

All photos are taken with the Panasonic GF1 with the 20mm F1.7 Pancake lens.

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The next day I spent the afternoon filming around the ranch, the morning was a washout but it was dry enough to start. Using my 5DmkII, Miller DS20 Solo tripod, 16-35mm F2.8, 24mm f1.4, 35 f1.4, 50mm f1.2, Shift Tilt f3.5 24mm and my 70-200mm IS f2.8. I also brought with me the new Glidetrack Shooter. Rick asked me to bring it and Alastair from Glidetrack kindly shipped one over to me straight away to take with me. The shooter gives you the ability to do really lovely simple dolly shots without the drag of a full dolly and track set up. I also used both the Fader ND 72mm variable ND filter and 77mm thin Singh-Ray vari-nd on every shot to keep my shutter to double the shooting frame rate for optimum film motion. That means when shooting on the 5d I was at 1/60th and on the 7d I was at 1/50th.

But still the weather was crappy. Very grey overcast day. Everything looked very flat and lifeless which makes it that much harder to make things look beautiful.

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The ranch is beautiful and reminds me a little of Scotland mixed with Italy. Rolling hills, horses, cows, a stunning lake and beautiful buildings. It was even cold, very much like Scotland. I left the rushes converting to Pro Res overnight and at 7 in the morning i put together a rough edit to show Rick and Mike at 9am.

I had, at this point, never seen my work projected on a really good projector before so this was going to be a real test of the cameras. Rick and Mike wanted to see how well the footage held up on the big screen. They had shot some stuff and weren’t happy with what they were getting. So they converted my edit into an MXF to play through Avid and I sat down to watch the edit. I was nervous. Never having seen my work on a big screen as good as this, but also George Lucas came in to watch and also the legendary sound designer Ben Burtt. My heart was racing. I watched as the edit played and they loved it. My favourite moment was when the star timelapse came on and Ben Burtt said “Hey, now, hang on!!” This was a very quick ungraded draft edit knocked together from a crappy grey day as a test, not supposed to be shown as an example of my work! Then Quentin Tarantino came in as he was due to talk at a screening of “Inglorious Basterds” and George said to Quentin, come see this. Quentin waxed lyrical, calling it Epic and William Wylersesque and was shocked it was shot on a DSLR. He had no idea you could shoot HD video on them or they were so good. I love George Lucas and Quentin Tarantino, so to have my work screened to them was pretty special to me. Rick, Mike and I also watched some of my other work on the big screen. “Venice’s People”, “San Francisco’s People”, “Cherry Blossom Girl” and “Sofia’s People”. They all looked incredibly good on the big screen. Better than I could ever have imagined. We watched everything in the Stag theatre at the ranch too. Probably one of the best screens in the world. 40 foot screen and it looked incredible.

 

 

 

Ben Burtt with his Zacuto iphone grip junior

Ben Burtt with his Zacuto iphone grip junior

Mike and Rick were over the moon. They didn’t know how well these cameras would hold up on the big screen and it passed with flying colours. Lots of swear words of incredulity were used!

80% of the footage was shot on the 5DmkII at 30p, then conformed to 23.98p in Cinema tools, effectively causing a slight slowdown but as no sync was used this was fine. All the timelapses were done on the 7D apart from the first star one. Some shots of the mist on the lake were done on the 7D too in 23.98p mode. I found them indistinguishable in the edit. Picture profile was Neutral, sharpness all the way down, contrast all the way down and saturation down one notch on both cameras.

Original poster art in the main house

Original poster art in the main house

During the day I also went through the cameras with Mike and Rick on how to get the best out of them. Rick has my 7D training dvd so already knew a lot. I went through all the Zacuto gear with him. He particularly was impressed with the Tactical Shooter with Z-Finder. We also used the Marshall monitor and Miller DS20 Solo (and of course the Glidetrack)

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Rick McCallum

Rick McCallum

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Rick shooting with the Zacuto Tactical and Z-Finder

Rick shooting with the Zacuto Tactical and Z-Finder

[caption id="attachment_6783" align="aligncenter" width="670" caption="Rick McCallum with the Zacuto sniper kit"]Rick McCallum[/caption]
Mike Blanchard

Mike Blanchard

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The next day we shot with the Sony EX3, Letus Ultimate, relay and Nanoflash recording at 280mbs. Testing out this combination for the big screen too and it also looked pretty good! Although we did a lot less filming with this combo as it was the DSLRs that we really wanted to see how well they stood up.

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Ex3 with Nanoflash

Ex3 with Nanoflash

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Letus Ultimate with Relay

Letus Ultimate with Relay

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So why were we shooting with these cameras and why is Lucasfilm’s producer Rick McCallum interested in them?

First off Lucasfilm has been at the forefront of digital technology. They were instrumental in getting a 24p Sony HD camera to use for some shots in Episode 1 of Star Wars and shot episode 2 & 3 entirely digitally. So being ahead of the pack has always been something they do. Pushing the reluctant industry forward kicking and screaming!

 

George Lucas with the F23 on Episode 2

George Lucas with the Sony F900 on Episode 2

Rick and Mike had seen what these cameras were capable of and wanted to really know just how much you could push them. They had seen mine and others work online but really wanted to see how well they performed projected. The joy of these guys is they have a great attitude. If it looks great on the big screen then that is the most important thing. Not codecs, limitations, bit rates etc…all those are very important but the most important thing by far for them is how it actually looks and it passed with flying colours. That is what they really care about.

Here is the Stag Theatre at Skywalker sound where we saw the films on the 40 foot screen.

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On the day I left, Wednesday, I got up at the crack of dawn as I knew it would be really frosty. It paid off. I got some lovely shots of the frost and the mist which meant I could finish the edit properly as I had more footage to complete it. Which I did on the plane home using my 13″ MBP and then graded it using Magic Bullet Looks as well as tidying up the earlier edit and creating the new timelapse from stills.

Shooting on the ranch

Shooting on the ranch

Below is my polished edit of my film of Skywalker Ranch that I did on the plane home, not the rough cut that was shown. It’s a very gentle piece that captures the feel of the grounds. Mostly shot on the 5DmkII, conformed to 24p as it was non sync and the timelapse was all done with stills. I have to say as fan, a geek and a filmmaker. Being at the Skywalker ranch and being made so welcome by all these incredibly talented people has been a highlight of my career. Next week I get to meet up with Rick again in Prague, along with Albert Hughes (of the Hughes Brothers) who has just finished his latest film “Book of Eli” with Denzel Washington to do some test shooting with the new 1DmkIV. I will post footage and my review of that camera as soon as I can.

HUGE thanks to Lucasfilm for giving me permission to post this short!

Am hoping to get a red lightsabre in the post for Christmas! EDIT: I did, Lucasfilm sent me some goodies, check out this silly video of me unwrapping them here

As a special Christmas offer due to this incredible week I am offering a 20% discount for the 7D training video simply by entering the code “starwars”  at checkout.

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Want to download a 30mbps version? Click here to go to Exposure Room site and look for the download original version. It’s big, about 1.4gb but will look great on a big screen.


Skywalker Ranch

All large photos are ©2009 www.philipbloom.co.uk

Responses

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  • Hi,
    first great movie. And my question is, what is the name of the music. It sounds great an fit into the pictures.

  • Hi Phillip,

    Thanks for posting your samples – they look great!
    For my corporate video jobs I’ve been renting HDV cameras as needed but I have a personal documentary project that I want to work on with little chance of funding. Now I have plan to re-purpose my 5D MkII and capture audio on an external recorder. I think I have a Glidetrack in my future as well!

    Regards,

    Vinny.

  • Dear Philip,
    I have a little motion design thing on at vimeo and since the reception is good my iPhone snoors in my pocket from time to time when yet another friendly fellow has “liked” my project – I think you now this feeling. And today I followed one of these followers to his site and guess what – he had nothing on yet …. just links to 5 people, which were You, Vincent Laforet, and some others. And I suddenly felt surrounded by all you famous 5D fellas…stars of the scene…the creme de la creme of 5d film…and now I read, that you actually peed into the Lucas toilet bowl…….what an incredible day.

    Best Pepe Lange

  • [...] Cameras for Red Tails, Possibly Star Wars TV Series | /Film And scroll down this page for results: The tale of Lucasfilm, Skywalker Ranch, Red Tails, Star Wars and Canon DSLRs on a 40 foot screen! | … So on one hand (and at the top end of the camera scale), Canon probably has the edge on the video [...]

  • Love a good story, well done.

  • [...] a damn thing. But if Robert Rodriguez can film El Mariachi on $5,000, why can’t I? If the 5D is good enough for Lucas and Tarantino, it’s good enough for me. I recently watched and have been inspired by [...]

  • *wow*

    Inspiring and beautiful results….it so fantastic movie. Canon is the perfect Friend for us Photographer ;-)

    best regards from Germany

    Michael

    • Philip– thank you for sharing this, (and everything else you share), Your works are magnificent. You are such an inspiration for all of us. Thanks for taking us on your journey to the Skywalker Ranch – I love the Tarantino/Lucas exchange, I smiled all the way through the blog from tech/specs to your humbled honesty toward this epic experience.

      Cheers,

      Zack Gietek

  • Inspiring blog and beautiful results

  • A little late to the party, but the link just popped up via one of my twitter folks. Beautiful, beautiful work. Just bookmarked you so I can take a gander at all of the other goodies.

  • [...] don’t miss this interesting article about the week Philip spent at Skywalker Ranch with Rick McCallum and George [...]

  • [...] shot a nice little piece of SkyWalker Ranch. Thanks to motionographer for the tip. Also, check out Mr. Blooms blog post on the shoot. Good [...]

  • [...] epic 7-minute short film goes well beyond that, with one jaw-dropping followed by another.  Philip Bloom’s blog post on the shoot is also a useful guide into his process and his [...]

  • [...] In light of the approaching new year I would like to discuss some of the new products that we have in the works of for all you hdslr users out there. I know, many still think these devices are not true serious video shooting cameras because all of limitations they have like Odd shaped form factor, aliasing, flash banding, rolling shutter and so on. But to those who think in such way let me just say that everything has limitations, consider Film for example: Outrageously expensive, needs tons of light, 24 fps not good for fast action because of strobing, film cameras don”t record audio, and need large crew to operate, and the list keeps going. With a list like that you would wonder why anyone would even think shooting on film, but the answer is always because the image was well worth all the trouble. The same goes for todays new HDSLRs cameras, the image they produce is well worth all the trouble and in this coming year we will see a lot more productions using them whether is for TV or the big screen, 2010 is the year we will see the release of motion picture shot on HDslr. Don’t believe me? read this: The tale of Lucasfilm, Skywalker Ranch, Red Tails, Star Wars and Canon DSLRs on a 40 foot screen! [...]

  • I loved what you achieved with the short, I wish I could achieve even a small percentage of the end result
    Ray

  • You rock Philip. G-d bless you. ;)

  • [...] camera I used was the Canon 7D DSLR with accessories to shoot video like a Rode shotgun microphone and a LCDF viewfinder. The small size [...]

  • [...] we were a little tapped out.  Not just because of cost, but because Philip Bloom used it on his Skywalker Ranch short to great effect, we purchased a Glidetrack SD [...]

  • [...] This in-depth account of Philip Bloom’s visit and subsequent shoot at Skywalker ranch is a good read with some great video and stills. Thanks to Neil Smith’s RAWWorks blog for the link. [...]

  • Hi Philip,

    You wrote, “Rick and Mike wanted to see how well the footage held up on the big screen. They had shot some stuff and weren’t happy with what they were getting.”

    Then you showed them your footage and they loved it. Soooo, what was it that made the difference? Lenses? Camera settings? Not having Philip as DP? Any insight is GREATLY appreciated.

    As always, thanks so much for taking time to read and answer.

    Jason

  • AMAZING piece of work! I recently purchased the 7D
    and am still waiting to take it out for a test spin.

    You’re footage has me salivating over doing so…

    One question:

    Where did you get the mic attachment for the 7D,
    and what make/model is it?

    CHEERS!

    Joaquin Montalvan
    Sledgehammer Films

  • [...] you like photography, cameras and being awesome, read this then watch [...]

  • [...] to the co-host gig of the other Zacuto show Critics, to his latest piece de resistance, the Skywalker Ranch video. However, months before he was invited to by team Lucas to shoot at Skywalker Ranch, I had the [...]

  • very cool. i still see a little cmos wobble garbage in those dolly shots but really impressive consider the price the cameras. congrats.

    • you sure? not seen it myself on net or on big screen…have you downloaded the mp4 to see it it’s there

  • The time lapse footage @ 3:45 is amazing. I’ll be looking forward to hear more about your future with Lucasfilm.

  • What lenses do you recommend for canon 7d to shoot at movie or music video quality even the crop factor issue

  • Great story on so many levels: the experience, meeting heroes, TEACHING heroes, the reward of landmark accomplishment and then, not only to be left with very special footage, but also to line up further projects with these extreme innovators. Inspirational stuff Philip – over the moon for you. Thanks for sharing!

  • Loved the moment of the light saber unveiling ;-) I laughed out loud :)

    • i never grew up!

  • Congrats. Amazing stuff!

  • Wow amazing! Great story and great work!

  • Great story … !! Nice work, and great to know about the Glidetrack.
    Together with George Lucas, Q Tarantino, Ben Burtt …. !! That’s a dream !!
    Well done. I love the short movie.

    WOW !

  • It’s simply great! Congrats, it’s really a huge step on anyone’s career.

  • Oh my oh my. Your ability to master the exposure of both the night sky and the cottage in the same shot looked absolutely brilliant.

    Can I come next time? I’ll carry your bags and everything! :)

  • [...] INTEL SHARE | SAVE [...]

  • [...] I recently came across this absolutely amazing HD video by Philip Bloom. If you’re a turbo Star Wars geek like me, you’ll absolutely love it! If you’d like to read about the camera gear he used to shoot it, just head over to his post about it. [...]

  • This was such an inspiring read – thanks for sharing it!

  • Great story! I admire how humble you are about everything!

  • [...] Jump over to Bloom’s blog to read the behind the scenes of this video. [...]

  • [...] out the whole behind the scenes and story of Philip Bloom’s, [...]

  • [...] Bloom has published an amazing short film created for Lucasfilm. The video shows beautiful shots of Skywalker Ranch. Visit Philip’s [...]

  • [...] Philip Bloom’s tale of Lucasfilm, Skywalker Ranch, Red Tails, Star Wars and Canon DSLRs on a 4… [...]

  • [...] Click here if you haven’t seen his video yet. After you view Matt’s video go to this blog post by Philip Bloom. I strongly suggest you first scroll down to the bottom of the blog post and watch the [...]

  • Brilliant, as per usual, Philip! Love the slider work. You convinced me months ago on the Sony EX1 w/Letus Extreme (so I went out and made a 97 minute feature that way) — and now you’re convincing me that the 7D is at a level where it can be taken seriously. If the Skywalker team are all over this, then it’s a huge signpost to the future. Congratulations that you are now being recognized as an “authority” by such distinguished and cutting-edge filmmakers. Great job!

    • thanks Markus!

  • [...] one recorded in Dehli. Even more recently, Bloom has managed to gain traction from DoPs such as George Lucas and Quentin Tarantino, as a recent post on his website indicates. Tarantino was quoted as saying that the quality from [...]

  • hey philip, I dont know if this was covered yet, but what is the quick plate system you have on the glidetrack, I just got one, and am trying to avoid spinning my camera around everytime…. thanks!

  • [...] Awesomer | The tale of Lucasfilm, Skywalker Ranch, Red Tails, Star Wars and Canon DSLRs on a 40 foot screen! Tags: DSLR, ムービー blog comments powered by Disqus var disqus_url = [...]

  • I’ve been lurking on your blog for a while, but this made me finally register and comment. These images are incredible. I love your work.
    -kody

  • your post is so cool

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