65C FDTimes ARRI Camerimage6.20 150d
65C FDTimes ARRI Camerimage6.20 150d
65C FDTimes ARRI Camerimage6.20 150d
65mm Rebooted ALEXA 65 The New Large Format System from ARRI Rental
FDTimes ARRI 2014 Special
Art, Technique and Technology ARRI AMIRA
Film and Digital Times is the guide to technique and technology, ARRI AMIRA Jumpstart.........................................................4-7
tools and how-tos for Cinematographers, Photographers, Directors, ARRI AMIRA Factory Tour........................................................ 8
Producers, Studio Chieftains, Camera Assistants, Camera Opera- Stephan Schenk, Managing Director...................................9-12
tors, Grips, Gaffers, Crews, Rental Houses, and Manufacturers. Walter Trauninger, Managing Director...............................13-16
Its written, edited, and published by Jon Fauer, ASC, an award- Markus Drr, AMIRA Product Manager................................... 17
winning Cinematographer and Director. He is the author of 14 Assembling AMIRA................................................................ 18
bestselling booksover 120,000 in printfamous for their user- AMIRA Sensor Bonding and Clean-Room................................ 19
friendly way of explaining things. With inside-the-industry secrets- AMIRA Factory Tour (contd).............................................20-24
of the-pros information, Film and Digital Times is delivered to you Electronic Viewfinder............................................................. 25
by subscription or invitation, online or on paper. We dont take ads Testing AMIRA...................................................................... 26
and are supported by readers and sponsors.
AMIRAs Ready to Go............................................................. 27
Written, photographed and edited by Jon Fauer. ProRes UHD for AMIRA.......................................................... 28
Webmaster: Jon Stout. Contributing editors: Marc Shipman-Mueller,
Stephan Schenk, Walter Trauninger, Markus Drr, Sarah Priestnall, ARRI ALEXA 65
Chuck Lee, Tobias Brandstetter, Marc Dando, Stijn van der Veken, 65mm Rebooted: ARRI ALEXA 65 ......................................... 32
Contributing photographers: James Bryan Toten. Cover and Franz Kraus, Managing Director of ARRI ...........................33-34
renderings by Johannes Polta (polta.co).
Martin Cayzer and Neil Fanthom.......................................35-38
This edition consists of ARRI articles in Film and Digital Times Achim Oehler...................................................................39-41
Issues September 2013 to present. For duplication, reproduction, ARRI ALEXA 65 Views......................................................42-45
or copies, please obtain written authorization from Jon Fauer. Exterior Dimensions.............................................................. 46
Sensor Size Comparisons...................................................... 47
2014 Film and Digital Times, Inc. by Jon Fauer New ALEXA 65 Lenses.......................................................... 48
Arriflex 765 Lenses............................................................... 49
Film and Digital Times ALEXA 65 Development and Construction..........................50-51
Klaus Eckerl, IB/E Optics..................................................52-53
On Paper, Online, and On iPad Lenses for ALEXA 65.......................................................54-55
Marc Dando on Codex and ALEXA 65..................................... 56
www.fdtimes.com/subscribe Handling ALEXA 65 Data....................................................... 57
ALEXA 65 Workflow with the Codex Vault Lab 65.................... 58
Codex Vault Lab 65 Specifications (Codex S & XL).................. 59
iPad and iPhone ALEXA, ALEXA 65 and an Early 65mm Project........................ 60
The Blue Herring 65mm Project............................................. 61
Get Film and Digital Times for iPad and iPhone on the Apple Arriflex 765: 65mm Film..................................................62-63
Newsstand. Download our free app in the iTunes Store
ALEXA 65 Prototype Camera and Lens Views......................... 64
(search: Film and Digital Times).
ALEXA 65 Specifications....................................................... 65
Print + Digital Subscriptions ARRI ALEXA (35mm) Updates, Lenses, Accessories
Film and Digital Times Print + Digital subscriptions continue to
include digital (PDF) access to current and all back issues online. ARRI ALEXA SUP 9.0............................................................. 67
Henning Rdlein and Marc Shipman-Mueller.....................68-72
Digital (PDF) subscriptions ARRI ALEXA SUP 10.0.1...................................................73-74
Digital (PDF) subscriptions include unlimited access to the current ARRI ALEXA 3.2K ProRes for UHD.......................................... 74
and all back issues. www.fdtimes.com/issues ARRIRAW Converter & Meta Extract....................................... 75
ARRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphics......................................76-77
FDTimes Customer Service Stijn Van der Veken with Master Anamorphics...................78-79
For subscription or account questions, please contact us by phone ARRRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphics....................................80-81
MondayFriday, 9 am5:30 pm EST. ARRI Ultra Wide Zoom UWZ 9.5-18 T2.9................................ 82
Phone: 1-570-567-1224 Studio Mattebox SMB-1........................................................ 83
Toll-Free (USA): 1-800-796-7431 ARRI Wireless Controls.......................................................... 84
Fax: 1-724-510-0172 ARRI Accessories.................................................................. 84
Email via website: fdtimes.com/contact
ARRI LDE-1.......................................................................... 85
Mailing address: Film and Digital Times Subscriptions
WCU-4 Sofware Update Package 2.0..................................... 85
PO Box 922
Williamsport, PA 17703 USA
ARRI AMIRA
User switch
EI Exposure Index
switch
AWB Auto
Battery mount
white balance
WB White balance User shift button
button
switch (shifts between
Audio setup
buttons 1-4
control dial
RECORD - Push or 5-8)
to Record. Push User buttons
again to Stop. 1-8
Audio display
selector
Fan exhaust
MENU jogwheel:
push to access
MENU. Rotate to
navigate. Push
Rear "leg" and ENG style
the jogwheel to
tripod bracket mount
select.
Playback button: push Shoulder pad slides forward-back
to review. Push for at
8x select buttons, like
least 2 seconds to exit. Handgrip rosette
on the ALEXA Main
Display
VF2
RECORD
Open monitor from here
VF1
Exposure
Peaking
Monitor/GUI
Top handle adjusts
forward-back and has Viewfinder adjustment
-16 threads
WiFi antennna
Choice of on-board
battery mounting
brackets Bluetooth antenna
Microphone
Filters: Clear,
ND.6 (-2 stops),
Fan intake
ND1.2 (-4 stops),
ND2.1 (-7 stops) Lightweight support rods
slide in here
Stephan Schenk,
Managing Director
ARRI Cine Technik,
responsible for
the Business Unit
Camera Systems
((Sales, Product
Management,
Workflow and
Service)
ALEXA We announced 3 models, and the first one certainly was aimed at
TV drama and commercials. ALEXA is the camera of choice for
JON FAUER: IBC 2014 was the 5th anniversary of ALEXAs TV drama, especially in the US and Europe. But I think the whole
2009 prototype debut in Amsterdam. It was like the premiere industrys very willing to experiment. Our customers decide what
of a film or opening night on Broadway. The ARRI booth had camera and what lens they need for their particular project, and
a working ALEXA sensor in a display case shaped like a tele- when they think the equipment suits their needs, they use it no
phone booth and three prototype models in a packed confer- matter how a manufacturer intended it. From the start, they used
ence room at RAI. ALEXAs began delivery in June 2010. Its ALEXA for features as well. But certainly, the later models of the
been quite a success story. ALEXA range are aimed at feature film productions.
STEPHAN SCHENK: We really appreciate the great feedback we Whom do you consider to be responsible for the breakthrough
got from all around the world and are very happy that ALEXA in feature films?
has become almost the de facto standard in high-end TV drama,
commercials and feature films. If you look at the global box office There was not a single person or show, but a number of mile-
for 2014 at the end of September, you will find that 6 of the top 10 stones. Roland Emmerichs Anonymous was the first major fea-
feature films were shot with ALEXA cameras; of the rest, 2 were ture. Anna Foerster was the cinematographer, and Marc Weigert
animation, and the other 2 were shot on film. the VFX Supervisor, and they started the journey.
Of course, there is no direct link between the cameras perfor- The real breakthrough came when Roger Deakins expressed his
mance and the box office. But if you look at the cinematographers opinion after using ALEXA on In Time, saying how much he en-
of these features who chose to work with ALEXA it does say joyed using it. Since then he has captured all his features on AL-
something. Nevertheless, we are not resting on our laurels. We are EXA, including Skyfall, which I, and many others, think is the
in a constant dialog with professionals world-wide and get a lot best Bond ever. I definitely should also mention Bob Richardson
of advice on where to improve and how to take changing produc- and Rob Legato who paved the way when they won the Oscar for
tion methods into account. ALEXAs flexible architecture makes Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects on Hugo.
it possible to continually improve the camera with updates. That The next year it was Life Of Pi with the Oscar for Best Cinema-
way we can provide major new features to keep ALEXA up to date tography going to Claudio Miranda and Best Visual Effects to
and our customers and users happy. Bill Westenhofer. This year, an Oscar went to Emmanuel Lubezki
You talked about the success in feature films, but when ALEXA for Gravity along with an Oscar for VFX for Tim Webber and
was introduced, it seemed that the intention was TV and com- his team. Again, its not the camera, but its the cinematographer
mercials, and not necessarily features. What changed? and the creatives who get the awards. We are certainly proud and
thankful that they all used ALEXA.
ARRI Special Nov 2014 9
Stephan Schenk (contd)
In terms of box office, the biggest ALEXA success was certainly
Avengers, which is still the third-biggest box-office hit of all times.
Lenses
Here you also find 3 features captured with ALEXA amongst the What about the future in lenses? Will there be other formats?
top 10. Iron Man 3 is number six. Skyfall is number nine. But I do What are you pushing next?
not want to create the impression that we only look at Hollywood. Thats a very good question. 2013 has been another record year
Cinematographers all around the world are relying on ALEXA, for Ultra Primes, Master Primes and our Alura zooms. The ques-
and we value all their contributions and support to keep ALEXA tion is how many more PL-mount cameras will be introduced,
running. and how many more of those cameras are additional cameras?
As they say in Hollywood, this camera has legs. Will the current PL-mount cameras stay on the shelf or will they
be used for other applications? And if theres a new kid on the
Yes, we wanted to make sure that ALEXA has a long product cy- block, what lenses will it use?
cle. This is good for our customers, who can safely invest and get
a long return on their investment. This is also good for us, as it Most of the new cameras support PL mount, so all those cameras
allows us to continuously refine the camera. need PL-mount lenses. They have a common size. People want
to have a standard wherever they go in the world. If they are in
So we designed the camera in a way that we can easily upgrade the middle of a shoot and need an additional 12mm or 180mm
hardware and software, and our product policy is geared towards lens on their project, they want to be sure that they can rent it.
continuity rather than constant product replacement. When This is what they get with UPs and MPs and increasingly with the
more and more people started shooting ARRIRAW, for instance, Alura zooms as well. I think we will still see continued sales of
we could have just made a new camera and left it at that. But in PL-mount lenses.
parallel to the introduction of the ALEXA XT cameras, which
provide 120 fps uncompressed ARRIRAW in-camera, we also It would be tough if somebody decided to create a new format
made a new affordable side cover available so customers can up- for mainstream applications. But we are always open to new re-
grade their existing ALEXAs. quirements. For example, we have developed the new Ultra Wide
Zoom 9.5-18 for the requirements of sensors that need an extend-
We are also constantly working on Software Update Packages, ed image circle like the ALEXA Open Gate mode. The new UWZ
which you can install most of them free of charge. We just made is the first rectilinear zoom lens with little to no image distortion
Software Update Package 10 available with some really useful fea- and uniform high performance from the image center up to the
tures like ProRes 4444 XQ. I can confirm that SUP 11 is already corners in a never-before-seen image quality.
in the makingagain with some substantial new features like
ProRes 3.2K or ARRIRAW Checksum especially for the ALEXA What do you think about the trend of cinematographers using
XT range. vintage lenses? Is this here to stay?
Rental houses and owner-operators appreciate the value of their I think it will depend on the application. There will be features
ALEXA investment with over 4 years of usage. The camera keeps where they are relevant and others where they are not. If you look
running and running and is used no matter whether the applica- at Gravity or Life of Pi, those films preferred the look and perfor-
tion is a music video or a $250 million VFX-heavy blockbuster, mance of the Master Primes. Many cinematographers value the
no matter whether the deliverable is HD, 2K, UHD, 4K or IMAX. ability to shoot wide open at T1.3 with available light only and
very few aberrations. But if you shoot a romantic period movie,
4K and Consumer Electronics you might prefer vintage lenses to give it a special look in cer-
tain scenes. Different styles, different lenses and more choices are
Here comes the 4K topic. I think you also had some opinions great for all the creative people of our industry.
on the economics of home televisions.
Speaking of style, whats your feeling about anamorphic? Is
A lot of marketing is done these days to sell more TV sets follow- that going to be as big as I think it will be?
ing a substantial decline after all of us had equipped our living
rooms with flat screens. In order to sell more TVs, 3D was pushed Yes, I definitely think it will because shooting anamorphic is one
heavily, and now its 4K, or UHD as it rather should be called for of the best ways to give your film that special cinematic look. If
the TV industry. you look at the current films in the theatres, anamorphic is al-
ready big today. Actually, our Product Manager Marc Shipman-
To make it very clear, ARRI never was and still is not against 4K or Mueller and you predicted that there would be an anamorphic era
UHD, although some people might have that impression. We just coming, since historically, there was always a rise in anamorphic
want it for the right reasons. We feel that there is too much hype after every wave of 3D. The question now is, since anamorphic
and marketing and too little education on what is real and doable. always disappeared after a while, is it here to stay? Or is it another
Certainly, there are benefits to higher spatial resolution but this is wave and its going away?
only one aspect of getting a better image. Better dynamic range, Im not sure if it ever went away.
better colors, higher frame rates, and a number of other factors
also come into the equation. They all interact. For instance, high- True, but from what I learned it was rather cyclical in the past
er resolution in motion needs higher frame rates. What is great and also different in each region. Actually, when I started at ARRI
for sports live coverage is not necessarily great for a feature film or five years ago, I was discussing the different lens types and asked,
a TV drama. At ARRI, we aim to improve and to deliver the best Who is shooting with anamorphic lenses? I was told that ana-
overall image quality. morphic is especially big in India. On my next trip to India, I
Walter Trauninger,
Managing Director
ARRI Cine Technik,
responsible for
the Business Unit
Camera Systems
(R&D, Production
and Supply Chain)
JON FAUER: Walter, this may be the fourth time youve given What about image quality?
me a tour of camera assembly. And every time the technology We have always said that it is the overall image quality that is im-
has taken giant leaps. portant, not just one parameter. Image quality begins with the
WALTER TRAUNINGER: We experienced a big technology design of our sensors: starting from the D-20 to the ALEXA and
change when we went into production of ALEXA cameras in June now to the AMIRA. Each is another generation of a similar sen-
2010. Before that time, we produced about 30 film cameras per sor principle. The sensor is our unique design and has led to some
month, and then we had to change to producing 200 ALEXAs great looking images, and I think our customers appreciate this
per month. That meant re-engineering the manufacturing pro- obsession with image quality that we have.
cess from the ground up. Luckily, we have really good people who How do you explain why the life cycle of ALEXA has been so
took on the challenge. Christian Hartl, our Head of Camera As- great in this era of Moores Law?
sembly, and his whole team did a fantastic job. Now ALEXA as-
sembly is running very smoothly and we are facing the next task, I think there are two reasons. First of all, a professional motion
how to add AMIRA into the mix. The business environment for picture camera is not a consumer product, but an investment.
the whole company has also gotten more challenging as the mar- Different rules apply. For rental houses, the ultimate utilization
ket is becoming more dynamic. More competitors are appearing they can get out of the equipment is more important than flashy
on the market with more low-cost products. Our goal is to opti- features or a cool marketing campaign. And second, we design
mize and reduce the time it takes to get from the first product idea our products so they can last and have long product cycles. For
to the first customer shipment. Our product cycles are still rela- ALEXA, we are constantly delivering new and significant features
tively long because our business model is to produce cameras that with each Software Update Packet to take changes in the mar-
our customers will be able to use for more than four or five years. ket into account. Software Update Packet 11, for instance, will
include ProRes 3.2K, which allows an easy up-sample to ProRes
The time to market is important for us. We are working to im- UHD. Demand remains high. At the beginning of the year we got
prove the process we did with ALEXA for future cameras. At the more orders for ALEXAs than in the same period last year. The
same time, we also have to take care not to lose sight of the values ALEXA XT is more in demand than the Classic.
that are expected from ARRI productsreliability, robustness,
ease of use. Those qualities are expected, but they also expect our Are more people buying new XTs or are they upgrading their
products to become more affordable. existing cameras?
Who are they? Both, but we are actually selling more new ALEXA XT cameras
than upgrades. Some are upgrading their Classic ALEXAs, some
Producers, rental houses, owner/operators and sometimes people are selling them, but a surprising number of rental houses are
who compare data sheets more than the overall image quality. keeping their Classics and buying new ALEXA XTs as well. An-
ARRI Special Nov 2014 13
Walter Trauninger (contd)
other good indicator of a products value is the price for a used
cameras, which has stayed stable and high for ALEXA cameras.
How many ALEXAs are out there, approximately?
Well over four thousand.
Whats your expectation for AMIRA? Is it going to be as much?
At least as much, I think.
Thats quite a success story. Can we go back to the beginning of
the Walter Trauninger story? You worked on the Arriflex 765?
The Walter storyokay. It goes back to 86 when I was asked to
join a small, new company, ARRI Austria in Vienna. It was 100%
owned by ARRI. Seven of us started there. Some came from the
Eumig camera company. I was one of the mechanical design engi-
neers. My task was to calculate and design the movement of a new
65 mm film camera, the Arriflex 765.
The 765 ended up being manufactured in very low numbers for
our rentals. Its still used for specialty projects or when a high
speed 65 mm shot is needed, as it goes up to 100 fps. Ultimately,
the 765 won a Technical Oscar. Above: 11 years earlier at ARRI, different camera, shorter haircut. Walter
Do you think the small numbers of 765 cameras was because Trauninger with Arricam LT.
Kodak improved their film stocks? Opposite: Stephan Schenk and Walter Trauninger on the top floor of
Kodak improved film emulsions and invented T-grain. Its ironic ARRI, overlooking Munich
that this pushed 35 mm cameras and started a renaissance of 16
mm production, but this did not help 65 mm cameras. We fin-
ished that project after four years1986 to 1990. Parallel to that, 435 that could go 250 fps. We even had a functioning prototype
ARRI Austria started to develop accessories. I was the project you should have heard it at 250 fps, it sounded great. But then
manager of the first ARRI lens control system. Then we devel- towards the end of 2008 the market for film cameras disappeared.
oped the Arrihead, which was introduced in 1988 in Brighton. With a heavy heart, we stopped this development and started on
That was my first trade show with ARRI, presenting the Arrihead. the ALEXA instead. But we were able to save some of the work
Wasnt the Arriflex 765 the first camera where the movement from the 435 HS: the ALEXA user interface was originally de-
was separated from the spinning mirror shutter? veloped by Marc Shipman-Mueller for the 435 HS, and the AL-
EXA Studio viewfinder was based on the newly developed 435
Yes, and it was synchronized electronically. But our main task was HS viewfinder. So, in a very real sense, the ALEXA does have film
to get a very short transport angle. The combination of a big mir- camera DNA.
ror of 200 mm, with the new movement, 100 fps, and the mass of
65mm film was a challenge. We needed new methods like finite The Arriflex 435 camera was a great success.
element calculation, which was introduced at that time. In a fi- In 1993 I took over as Head of Development here in Munich and
nite element calculation, you break the complex geometry of a Vienna, and together with both teams we developed the 435. The
film camera movement into small, finite parts. This allows you to 435 was the first project I did as the Head of Development, and it
reduce the complexity and calculate the results of any change in did pretty well in the market.
design pretty accurately. That was a new concept that we imple-
When was the 435 first delivered?
mented at ARRI. We also introduced CAD at ARRI Austria in
1986. That was very early computing. We had to work in shifts, We delivered the first cameras at the end of 1995. In 1997 we
because the computer systems were so expensive. started co-development with Moviecam and Fritz Gabriel Bauer,
and we created the Arricam.
At the beginning we had three shifts, then two shifts. Three or
four years later, everybody had their own personal computer. But Your job was Project Manager?
it was revolutionary at that time. Yes. And also co-designer. The concept came from Gabriel. It was
After the 765, we designed accessories and then the Arriflex 435. a combination, to take the best of both worlds. Moviecam and
I was the Project Manager and also calculated the movement for ARRI. I would say it had the electronics, drive system and robust-
the 435, which is very similar to the 765. The 435 was designed ness of ARRI, with the general layout, mechanical concept and
and tested for 180 fps, but we released it as a 150 fps camera. That user interface of the Moviecams.
gave us some headroom and ensured that it would work in all After the Arricam we designed the Arriflex 235 and the 416. I
environments, cold, hot, humid, you name it. was Head of Development. The Project Manager was Klemens
Wasnt there a model that was supposed to go faster? Kehrer. The Product Manager was Marc Shipman-Mueller. Marc
had been working for ARRI in the US for a while, but getting
Yes, and that is a tragic story. In 2007 we were working on a new
more and more involved with our camera development. From the We have enough space. Also, with the one-piece flow manufac-
US, he had helped on the 435 and designed the user interface of turing technique we are using, it is advantageous to have the indi-
the Arricam. In 2001 he moved back to Germany and became the vidual workstations as close to each other as possible.
Product Manager for all cameras, lenses and accessories. Are the manufacturing techniques different?
In 2003 I took over as the Head of the Camera Business Unit, and The AMIRA family requires somewhat less effort in assembly, but
I was in charge of manufacturing and camera, service and quality the testing process is more intensive because theres more func-
control. In the meantime I have been with ARRI more than 28 tionalitywe have more complex audio in there and other func-
years. So, for more than half of my life I have been working here. tions that we do not have in ALEXA.
Ive known you for that whole time then. Tell me about AMIRA The ALEXA Studios have optical finders. Is this the future or
camera manufacturing techniques. have we turned the corner for electronic viewfinders?
Since I became responsible for production, weve changed a lot. The electronic displays are getting better. And you want to see
I think you wrote about some of that in your ALEXA article a what the sensor sees. An optical viewfinder doesnt always show
couple of years ago. you what the sensor really sees.
AMIRA is very similar to the ALEXA with one additional re- Are legendary DPs, who said they will always want an optical
quirement. We assemble each one to order. Normally, ALEXAs finder, starting to change their minds?
are built anonymouslyin a standard configuration, put in the
warehouse and then delivered. But with the AMIRA we have so Some are and some are not. We have a product for each. Those
many different configurations, different mounts. Therefore we that want the optical viewfinder have their ALEXA Studio cam-
have to assemble it to order, when we know which camera is eras and they will still use their Studios with optical viewfinders.
needed in which configuration for a certain date, and we put it to- Its what they grew up with, what theyre used to, and theyre mak-
gether with the accessories. This required an additional assembly ing good films.
line and a slightly different process. From your position in development, where do you see the fu-
How many AMIRAs are you building per month? ture for our end of the business going for cinematography in
terms of cameras, lenses, sensors, acquisitionall that?
We are now looking at about 250 cameras per month, a mix of
ALEXAs and AMIRAs. Because of the way we have structured We just want to maintain and expand the position we have in the
the production line, we are very flexible regarding how many of market: the knowledge of application, of our customers and of
each we manufacture. our customers business models. We are not planning a change
of direction. We have a very good position in the high-end mar-
Did you have to find more space in this building on Trken- ket. We would like to improve products for workflow and as you
strasse for building the AMIRA? might say, to become more of a one-stop shop.
We can never say if something is secure, but certainly ALEXA has I think the cinematographers were the first to recognize that we
had a successful four year product cycle and is still going strong. provided a tool very similar to film, in its use and in its image
That indicates a certain stability. quality. They could use it like a film camera. I think that was the
first comment of Anna Foerster when she shot Anonymous. It
Film cameras would often work for more than 10 years. Some- felt like a film camera. I think it took a while until the studios
times they lasted the entire lifetime of the DP. What is the life recognized it.
cycle of an ALEXA digital camera?
Also the switch from two-third inch to a 35mm image sensor was
The ALEXA will probably exceed five years. Whats important to a big advantage for us. Starting with the ALEXA Studio, our sen-
us is that our products have a long product cycle. sor aspect ratio of 4:3 for anamorphic gave us a boost. You know,
Why is that? the ALEXA is still the only camera with a tall sensor, which works
best for anamorphic lenses.
Because it is our job to ensure that our customers can make a
living with our products. And you can only do that if you have What was the reason for the switch from two-thirds inch to
a reliable product that lasts for a long time. With the ALEXA we 35mm for TV?
achieved that through an open technology and hardware plat- I think its the look. They wanted to get better images with less
form that can be easily upgraded with new hardware and soft- depth of field for television shows.
ware. Since we delivered the first ALEXA, we have consistently
improved the cameras functionality, sometimes with major new How many product managers are there now?
features like ProRes 2K, ProRes 4444 XQ, or ARRIRAW Open We have five product managers now. Since 2001, when Marc
Gate. Shipman-Mueller was the only Product Manager, we have added
You said that a core value of ARRI is understanding. a greater number of more complex products, and this would have
been too much for a single person. So with a growing portfolio,
Its the close contact with our customers and knowledge about the we have grown our Product Management department.
demands of what they do. We have two kinds of customers. First
we have the working professional, the cinematographer, director, Marc Shipman-Mueller remains the Product Manager for high-
operator, assistant and DIT. They want to make the best image end cameras like ALEXA. Markus Drr is Product Manager for
possible with the least amount of fuss. The other is the company AMIRA, Thorsten Meywald for lenses, Hendrik Voss for Elec-
who buys the cameras and rents them. We are taking care of both tronic Control Systems (ECS), and Philip Vischer for Profession-
groups. The rental house needs a very reliable, robust camera, al Camera Accessories (PCA) Mechanical. In addition, we have
which can be used for nearly every application. The camera op- started a whole new department called Digital Workflow Solu-
erator or DP wants a product they can rely on in the desert, in tions, headed by Henning Rdlein. They are essentially in-house
the snow, the cold or wherever. We know about all these different workflow consultants that have been of tremendous value to us
applications and how to handle them. and to our customers.
I also want to add another point about ARRIour employees are In closing?
very loyal to us, and we are very loyal to them. During the finan- I think I would like to underline that ARRI kept their employees
cial crisis in 2009, we did not lay off anyone in production. That from the film-camera era, and it paid off because we did not lose
helped our employees, but it also helped us, since we were able to this experience and knowledge. When you visit, you will find that
maintain all that know-how of our employees. many of the same people who were building the analog cameras
That was 2009. How far into ALEXA were you? are now building the digital ones.
Development was at full-speed. We had to reduce labor hours at Ergonomics and user interfaces are important. The camera has to
the beginning of 2009 and by springtime some of the departments tell you if something is wrong, especially if you cant see it. Our
that used to make film cameras were still on short labor hours. film cameras were good at alerting you to potential problems be-
And soon after, we immediately ramped it up into overtime. cause with motion picture film, you sometimes didnt see the dai-
lies until days later. Now you see it on the monitor, but you dont
IBC 2009 was toward the end of the financial crisis. That was see everything. Theres still great value in the camera that tells you
pretty scary. if something is wrong, so you dont have a repetition of the same
Yes, having such a major technology change in the middle of a problem when you go to your next location.
global financial crisis was scary. But once we started to deliver In both the film and digital ages, nobody likes a re-shoot.
ALEXAs, things looked up for us. We started delivering the first
40 cameras in June 2010, and then we really ramped things up.
16 Nov 2014 ARRI Special
Markus Drr, AMIRA Product Manager
Since AMIRA is a next-generation camera, coming 5 years af-
ter ALEXA was introduced, is the software more sophisticated?
Its not that the ALEXA would fall behind, for that matter, because
the ALEXA still offers what we feel is the best image quality you
can get in the industry. So, ALEXA by no means has less image
quality. AMIRA just has different tools to let you modify the im-
age in-camera. I dont see that as a problem for ALEXA because
we see the applications of ALEXA as different from the AMIRA.
For the AMIRA, youre very often shooting alone or with a small
crew. Its very helpful to do these kind of things quickly in-cam-
era: for example, modify and bake the look into Rec.709. With the
ALEXA, youre probably working with a bigger crew and under
different circumstances.
Markus Drr, AMIRA Product Manager (above), was kind enough
to give me an Advanced AMIRA Lesson. Before joining ARRI, Are most people going to shoot Rec.709 with AMIRA?
Markus worked as Product Manager at Avid Technology, after I dont think so, but you certainly can do that. What we envision,
working as a cinematographer for many years and shooting a lot of as an ideal kind of scenario, is that pretty much everybody would
documentaries. These were excellent credentials for someone deeply shoot in Log C, with a Rec.709 or other look predefined and ap-
involved in the development of AMIRA. plied to the monitor and viewfinder outputs. The look is stored in
the recorded metadata, where it can be used in post production.
JON FAUER: One of the most interesting features of the This is a non-destructive decision because you can fully change
AMIRA is the 3D LUT Look capability. Can you explain it? your mind later about how the footage looks.
MARKUS DRR: The 3D LUT-based Look functionality in the So, the editing system can take the Log C and read the 3D LUT
AMIRA allows you to access the color processing of the camera metadata of the applied look as it was originally seen in the cam-
in a very sophisticated way. It really goes to the heart of the color era by the camera person, and it can automatically display the
processing in the camera. This is great if you want to define or footage in Rec.709 in the editing suite, with no action or attention
trim the Look of your program in advance or during shooting, required anywhere for the conversion. Its seamless and simple: in
as you have more creative control of the final outcome of your reality, you shoot Log C, but you never see it, and you only view
production. This way, you may also save some money in post. Rec.709 or your individual look. Once you would go into grading,
With a 3D LUT based AMIRA Look (.AML file), you have a lot you have the full Log C range available though.
of access points to modify how the image looks (color, contrast, Were going pretty much in that direction, but we are not yet
brightness, saturation, hue, etc). For the user, that offers several there. We also see that in the documentary style shooting world,
things. First, you can import 3D LUTs from grading tools (like if there is not an extreme time or budget pressure, people appreci-
AMIRA Color Tool or DaVinci Resolve) into the AMIRA Pre- ate shooting in Log C because they like the opportunity to modify
mium and use them for your own Log C to Rec.709 conversion. the images more than they would for Rec.709. Nevertheless, there
The other part of the story, which is probably even more excit- are productions that prefer recording directly in Rec.709 out of
ing, is that you have the whole look functionality where you can traditional workflow considerations or to avoid losing control
go to a grading suite, create your look with the typical ASC CDL once the project goes to post. With AMIRA, you can easily travel
parameters, save them as an AMIRA look file, load that in the both paths in an equally effective way.
camera and once loaded in the camera, you can apply that to the
Log C file as a meta-data, or you can also bake it into the Rec.709.
On top of that, you can also modify the looks for whatever ASC
CDL parameter, you can trim and change them in the camera.
You also have other tools available such as Video look parameters
like gamma, knee, black gamma, saturation and so on. Or you
can do a vector based secondary color correction if you want to
reduce a certain color. You can do all that in-camera while youre
on set or on location. You dont need a grading station or cart.
You can do all that with the little screen in the camera.
AMIRAs 3D LUT look ability offers opportunities that, so far, have
not been possible with any other camera. Customer feedback tells
These are your grading suite in the viewfinder controls. To create your
us that many users see a lot of opportunity in that functionality.
own AMIRA Look within the camera, duplicate the default Rec.709 or
These Look Files are possible because the AMIRA has more any other Look, and save it with a new name. Next, using a monitor
processing power? attached to AMIRAs HD-SDI output, adjust the ASC CDL parameters
Yes. AMIRA has more processing: the color pipeline and LUT and/or the Video Look parameters. For a more comfortable way of creat-
conversion is based on a extended processing pipeline. ing or modifying AMIRA Looks, use the free AMIRA Color Tool.
At 10 am every Wednesday, R&D, Camera Assembly, CQM, Supply Chain, Purchasing, Parts and Service teams meet to discuss progress
Siegfried Wetscheck, head of Sensor Bonding and Clean Room Assem- The individual sensors are cut from the wafers
bly, shows how sensors arrive as round wafers in air tight gel packs
The cover glass is mounted into its carrier Cover glass is cleaned
The sensor, covered with plastic, is mounted to electronics board Heat sink on the rear side of sensor
Mounting sensor assembly to the internal spine and boards One-piece flow manufacturing: each assembly technician adds
something to the camera as it passes all the workstations.
20 Nov 2014 ARRI Special
AMIRA Factory Tour (contd)
AMIRA is built from over 1000 components in these bins (above). Many Andreas Weeber (above) member of the assembly team, whom many
of these parts are crafted at ARRI on the latest CNC machines (below). remember from his stint at ARRI service and ARRI Rental in New York.
ALEXAs (above) continue to be in high demand and are built in the same facility as AMIRA (below)
You can order your AMIRA with the following mounts: PL-LDS, B4 or EF. The PL and B4 mounts have a 12-pin Hirose connector to provide power and
data connection (rec start/stop, iris control, user button) to the servo of the lens. For B4 mount lenses, you can use the AMIRA B4 mount, the ARRI B4
to PL adapter or 3rd party adapters with approximately 2.5x magnification.
Just like familiar film cameras: reliable stainless steel shims set the If youre wondering what the factory uses to check flange focal depth of
flange focal depth of the lens mount the lens mount, its a DENZ FDC Flange Depth Controller
Correct Flange focal depth (52.00 mm) is confirmed when the red bar The FDCs calibrated hand wheel ring will display 0 when the
lines up equally between the green bars on a monitor that is connected measurement is correct. Its calibrated in increments of .01 mm and
to the output of the camera. corresponds to the thickness of shims to be added or subtracted.
Ensuring proverbial ARRI reliability: Sebastian Lange (middle), head of Central Quality Management and some of his team.
(AMIRA Product Manager Markus Drr is on the right, hugging his baby.)
Any documentarians dragging their feet on the way to the AMIRA to living room, from deal to distribution, or simply want to ar-
shop will doubtlessly hit the ARRI speed-dial button when they chive in UHD for future-proofability and potential future profit,
hear this. If their only hesitation, up to now, was caused by the AMIRA now offers an easy upgrade that requires no additional
ominous hyphenate future-proof, that anxiety is now assuaged. processes in postproduction.
Wildlife cinematographer Sophie Darlington recently wrote, I For major feature films, an up-sample to 4K can be carried out
think many wildlife production companies will be waiting for a after visual effects and other postproduction tasks have been com-
4K version to satisfy the pixel pickers. Yes, Sophie, this upgrade pleted at 2K resolution. For certain fast-paced AMIRA produc-
may be for you and them. tions, however, there may not be the time or resources for such
A new software upgrade for ARRIs documentary-style AMIRA processes in post, which is why 4K or UHD directly in-camera
camera will allow it to record ProRes UHD files, satisfying current has been requested.
UHD/4K requirements and offering future-proof headache relief. AMIRAs UHD uses the same efficient 1.2x up-sample filter that
An increasing number of producers, studios and companies have ALEXAs Open Gate mode employs in the ARRIRAW Converter
considered safeguarding the longevity of their programs by en- (ARC) to up-sample the same sensor pixels for 4K distribution.
suring that they will be suitable for UHD transmission, viewing, In the AMIRA, this up-sample to UHD happens in- camera, and
streaming or downloading. The old mantra of well just do the re- in real time.
make when the next standard rears its head is no longer credible. Outputting UHD broadens the distribution options. The 14+ stop
(Remember how long it took stations and studios to move from dynamic range remains unaltered, as does the colorimetry, con-
standard 16mm to Super 16mm, long after every new camera in trast, style and look. By making the sensors high-quality image
the world was already fitted with a S16 gate?) data compatible with higher spatial resolution formats, the UHD
For productions that need to generate UHD deliverables, AMIRA upgrade addresses concerns in certain regions and productions
will now offer the ability to record all ProRes codecs in Ultra High about a 4K future, allowing AMIRA to be used on any project, no
Definition 3840 x 2160 resolution directly onto the in-camera matter what deliverables are required.
CFast 2.0 cards, at up to 60 fps. This feature, available for purchase Markus Drr, ARRI AMIRA Product Manager, said, Feedback
through a software license (and a sensor calibration for existing on AMIRA from all over the world has been overwhelmingly pos-
AMIRA cameras), comes in response to feedback from AMIRA itive, and it is clear that the camera is already a great success, as it
customers, some of whom have been grilled about UHD/4K de- is being used on an amazing variety of challenging productions.
liverables by clients. It is made possible by the cameras image Already acclaimed for its phenomenal image quality, ease of use
quality, processing power and reprogrammable system architec- and versatility, the new ProRes UHD output will take these ben-
ture (FPGA). efits even further, adding value for customers in areas like China,
Whether a production is pursuing UHD production from lens where 4K is a major focus of industry attention.
LDS metadata
Same accessories as ALEXA XT cameras
Electronic Shutter 5 - 358, adjustable in 1/10 increments
0.75 to 27 fps (upgrade to 60 fps planned for early 2015)
EI 160 to EI 3200. Base is EI 800
Dynamic Range greater than 14 stops
Imagine this pitch to a studio executive: Now theres a new, large format 65mm digital motion picture
Hamlet meets The Greatest Story Ever Told. Around the World camera from ARRI, the new ALEXA 65. The aspirational part of
in Eighty Days, South Pacific, Ben-Hur, Exodus, West Side Story, that sentence is 65; the enabling part is digital.
Lawrence of Arabia, Mutiny on the Bounty, Its a Mad, Mad, Mad, Imagine an ALEXA (35mm) camera with a sensor that is 3 times
Mad World, Cleopatra, My Fair Lady, The Sound of Music, The larger. It has a familiar ALEXA body style, about the same size
Agony and the Ecstasy, Lord Jim, Grand Prix, 2001: A Space Odys- and weight, a little bit wider, with a digital 65mm format sensor.
sey, Ryans Daughter, Patton... And new 65mm lenses.
A litany of the greatest 65/70mm films of all time should be re- There will be three groups clamoring to be first in line to try these
warded with an immediate green light. There is, however, one mi- new rental-only cameras. Creative minds will conjure epic scenes
nor setback, a single word, film. and awesome effects to benefit from the ALEXA 65s high resolu-
These greatest of all films, in their epic 65mm format, demanded tion and large format, shallow depth of field. The images I saw
epic logistical effort, 70+ pound temperamental cameras whose recently were so stunning you felt as if you could reach out and
movements sometimes required oiling after every take, and set- touch them in ways more appealing than any current 3D projec-
ups that were not, shall we say, swift. Film, processing and dailies tion.
could average around $2500 for a 10-minute roll. Technical types will revel in the ALEXA 65 cameras 6K resolution
Nevertheless, large format 65mm cinematography has contin- and seamless familiarity with existing ALEXA 35mm systems.
ued to inspire as the aspirational format, the object of desire, for Producers, distributors and exhibitors will rejoice in the reboot of
almost every cinematographer, director and producer. There is a format that historically has enticed audiences out of their living
magic in it, perhaps in the same way that Richard Avedon once rooms and back into the theaters.
described large format still photography. It requires you to think, As Lawrence said in the greatest large format film of all time, I
to compose, to slow down and create more carefully, he said. think this is going to be fun.
ALEXA 65, that is a simple one, because by its nature and build it Most of the DI facilities say they are prepared for 4K. But if there
is a true ALEXA and 65 because it is a digital replica of a 65mm is a lot of CGI and VFX shots, different versions, and everything
film camera, where 70mm was the distribution format. done in 4K, and if you bring them tons of terabytes, then I think
they will ask for some more money to deal with this volume of
How will this 65mm digital format be distributed? data.
Its the same file as an ARRI ALEXA (35mm) file. It just has more Is the special effects world changing? Up to now they were
data. Its very compatible with the ARRIRAW workflow. It will be mostly saying they wanted to work in 2K, but it seems like
a RAW-only camera, because we are opting for the highest pos- there is a lot of interest from the special effects world in this
sible quality, not only highest resolution, but best color rendition new camera.
and best dynamic range, without any compression artifacts.
The high resolution, low noise image free of artifacts will be very
The camera will generate a serious amount of data. Handling that suited for plate shots, because it allows for reframing, zooming or
will not be easy, will not be inexpensive and that might limit the stabilizing. Things that have been done in the past with VistaVision
number of projects that will be able to afford it. can be done digitally now, and I dare say, with even better quality.
Please explain the workflow. I can imagine some very high end commercials would also like
The ALEXA 65 is a camera system, comprising of a camera body, to use this because agency art directors always love to blow up
a dedicated 65mm lens package and a dedicated Codex Vault im- the image.
age processing & storage unit. The Vault will handle RAW data I am quite confident about this application. I also see good op-
from regular ALEXAs as well as from the ALEXA 65. Offering a portunities in special venue productions like launch films for au-
complete capture system as a rental package ensures best overall tomobiles or in fashion, where perfect images need to fill huge
performance and quality of service. We want to provide a com- screens.
plete system rather than offering bare bones camera and then
forcing everyone to add various building blocks. Will the ALEXA 65mm camera be rented only from ARRI?
Are you possibly going to offer it for sub-rental from the major
This is a turnkey system? rental houses?
It needs to be. And for the first productions, there will be an ex- The ALEXA 65 will be marketed as a complete system from ARRI
pert on set to make sure that everything works to its best per- Rental exclusively. There will be a Business to Business rental
formance level with the minimum amount of technology based model, as we also want to service our customers, who usually buy
distraction. our products. But again it will be the complete system.
Will there be an opportunity in the future to add additional Youll never sell this camera?
lenses, perhaps with different mounts?
Never say never. But seriously, when we first started looking into
I think that all depends on how well this camera system is re- the market for such a camera, the interest in purchasing was very
ceived by the industry. small. Almost all of the rental houses said, Well, if you do it, and
Will this larger digital format influence the way digital pictures if we have shows, it would be great if we could sub-rent. But the
are projected? Perhaps the DCI specifications may change? interest from our customers in actually investing in and owning a
65mm camera was non-existent. And that was the reason why we
The original DCI Specification, if I remember correctly, were is-
offered the project on an exclusive basis to our rental group. They
sued in 2005. Although it seems like yesterday, in IT terms this
committed to and financed the project.
is ages ago. At that time PCs, storage media and data rates were
quite different to what they are today. Projection technology has How does this camera position ARRI in the current business?
also evolved significantly since then. Also the digital cinema was At the risk of repeating myself, the ALEXA 65 is building on the
specified when film was still the predominant reality and its lega- success of the ALEXA, adding in a huge amount of alias-free reso-
cy limitations had to be respected. lution. If, for example, you want wide opening shots that stay on-
Concerning resolution, todays specified data rates for 4K are the screen for a long time, then this camera will truly show off. Giv-
same as for 2K.That means that fine detail - for which 4K would ing directors and cinematographers the ability to create that unique
be required in the first place - is lost in the JPEG 2000 codec due beautiful 65mm look and also to enable extreme VFX these are
to the limited data rate. the use cases the camera was designed for. We want to make sure
that we have an offering for the very high end of filmmaking.
MARTIN: ARRI Rental in Germany, ARRI/CSC, ARRI Media We have just taken on Dana Ross, who is our very first ARRI
and ARRI Lighting Rental in the UK, and Illumination Dynam- Rental representative in Los Angeles. His role absolutely is about
ics. Located in 17 offices throughout 7 countries. relationships with the community, the cinematographers and the
post and visual effects people.
From October this year, all our global rental companies - includ-
ing our lighting and grip rental businesses will be incorporated Dana was every cinematographers best friend at Technicolor.
under our new brand. Apart from Illumination Dynamics. Thats MARTIN: Dana is now our Executive of International Marketing.
because its rental business is more focused on moving light tech- His role is really to be out there and spread the word about what
nology, broadcasting and events. It makes sense that they retain were doing, talk to people about what were up to, listen to them,
that name, certainly for the immediate future. But, of course it feed that back and create a really strong relationship in a location
will have an ARRI Rental company brand association as they are where weve never been strong as a rental company. And whether
still very much part of our group. youre a cinematographer who is Mexican, Australian, Kiwi, Brit
When cinematographers turn up somewhere in the world, they or of any nationality, youre probably going to pass through Los
need to know that its an ARRI owned rental company, supported Angeles at some point and weve never had anyone specifically
by everything you would expect from ARRI. ARRI brought me on from our rental group there. We are so lucky to have Dana join us
board 2 years ago as the CEO of the ARRI Rental to help bring our with his knowledge, skills and relationships.
global rental companies closer together. And then, behind the scenes we are putting in common integrat-
How is ARRI Rental structured? ed operational systems and processes, so its more than technol-
ogy and branding. Its much more about having a common way
MARTIN: My first move was to create a Rental Group senior man- of doing business in all our group companies, as well. Weve now
agement team consisting of myself, Simon Broad, Thomas Loher, set up a Quality Control Group. Previously in our rental group,
and David Everitt. Rather than have a bricks-and-mortar head of- each individual company would have had its own way of dealing
fice we now have a senior team of existing executives already in with camera packaging and set-ups. We have to have a common
our global rental businesses operating as a virtual headquarters. approach and a common quality control. We have a group thats
With Thomas Loher (also Managing Director of our Mainland talking about a much more global approach to technology, and
European rental operations), we have the insight of a great opera- how we set it up. So thats another real positive, as well.
tional manager with a vast knowledge of the industry. The real goal for David, Simon, Thomas, Neil, Dana and me, and
David Everitt (Finance Director of our UK operations) has very for the whole team, is that we really want ARRI Rental to be an
strong financial and analytical skills. innovator as well as a rental company. With the ALEXA 65 cam-
era, ARRI sales had already decided it was not viable to be de-
Simon Broad (President of our US rental operations) has over 3
veloped as a product for sale. The quantities would be too small,
decades of successful industry experience and specific experience
and therefore the pricing would be prohibitive. Also, it required a
in marketing.
complete system to be developed including lensing and workflow.
Together we take an overall view of all parts of the ARRI Rental
With whom are you partnering on the ALEXA 65 project?
business around the world. Weve brought on Neil as the execu-
tive for technical marketing to bring together all our technical MARTIN: The camera is built by ARRI and developed through
people around the world in order to advise and help develop new the ARRI R&D Group with Achim Oehler as the project leader.
products. Weve got a lens team. We have a workflow team. We We cant take credit for that! But, ARRI Rental did have signifi-
have a technical marketing team around the world that meets on cant input into the cameras specifications and to make it into a
a regular basis, chaired by Neil, to talk about technology and how system. To include Codex as a workflow partner, to have IB/E
it interacts with our clients, what our clients are looking for, and Optics as a lens partner and for us to develop a system, thats very
how we can create that. much part of what we are managing through ARRI Rental. With
Opposite: the ALEXA 65 development team. Above: with concept box and completed ALEXA 65 camera .
to think in completely different terms than a normal electronics We do both. We try to do some things on our own, to realize our
engineer. Michael also designed the Arriscan sensor, by the way. own ideas, which is not easy, because the design houses are not
And hes, in a sense, the technical lead. prepared for that. They have their own building blocks. And they
We have a digital designer, Reiner, and the digital designer is re- want to have customers go there and say, Okay, I want to have a
ally so important, but most people underestimate the discipline. sensor of a set size, and set speed, and that latitude.
Digital design means putting code into FPGAs or doing ASICs, so And then they tell you, Okay we can do it, or not. Then they put
its one of the most important disciplines here at ARRI. And hes together their blocks. And eventually, if youre lucky, or unlucky,
a really great engineer. it depends on the success, they invent a new block, or they modify
Then, we have two more software engineers. One is a specialist a block, or they talk to another fab about how they could do it.
for calibration procedures, and the other is a very good hardware But what they dont like is when a guy like Michael shows up
engineer. and says Okay, guys, let me tell you how to design the sensor.
We have an electronics engineer, and then weve got David, who It drives them crazy. But its really hard to design everything by
brings a lot of camera usability expertise into the team. David yourself. You would need millions of Euros for the design tools
worked for ARRI Rental before joining our team here. and very experienced designers. And you just cant buy a design
team. Its such a special discipline.
One engineer, Alois, is doing nothing but sensor optimization, in
other words, tweaking the sensors day and night. Sorry for not Does the big 65mm sensor have a similar high dynamic range
mentioning all of the team members now even though it is a small technology as current ALEXA cameras?
team. We are 10 people, but of course we use the complete ARRI Yes, it looks like an ALEXA camera. It has the same image char-
infrastructure here. Our service department, manufacturing and acteristics.
QC department are involved from an early point in time in most And then, what we did was to use the complete ALEXA concept.
of the projects. We enhanced the electronics with modern FPGAs, we updated
We work closely with all other R&D teams at ARRI and we ex- the electronics with the latest components, so theres nothing old
change ideas and experiencessometimes simply during a coffee in there. We can use it for another five years. At the same time,
break in our coffee lounge. we can reuse about 90% of the software. There are about 20 man-
Yes, I noticed your industrial strength, incredibly high-tech years of software design in that camera. You would never be able
coffee machine. Thats impressive. And I had no idea that you to fund a project like that or do all that just for a small series of
had so much sensor design capability right in house. I was al- cameras. The image processing chain represents, I would say, an-
ways under the impression that you just farmed it out to some other 40 man-years, or so. All in all there is a tremendous amount
sensor design company, and that was it. of ARRI in-house development inside the ALEXA 65.
Focus Tape
Hook
M6 Rosette M6 Rosette
Jogwheel: rotate to
select, push to set
Bottom of Camera:
2x 3/8x16 Mounting Threads
Top of Camera:
5x 3/8x16 Mounting Threads
on Handle
65mm format lens Aperture Close Focus Length Front diameter Image Circle Weight
24 mm T4.8-32 .38 m / 15 101 mm / 4 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.5 kg / 3.8 lb
28 mm T4-32 0.35 / 14 101 mm / 4 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.5 kg / 3.8 lb
35 mm T3.5-32 0.5 / 20 120 mm / 4.7 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.8 kg / 4 lb
50 mm T3.5-32 0.6 / 24 120 mm / 4.7 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.8 kg / 4 lb
8 0mm T2.8-32 0.7 / 28 120 mm / 4.7 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.8 kg / 4 lb
100 mm T2.2-32 0.3 / 12 120 mm / 4.7 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 1.8 kg / 4 lb
150 mm T3.2-45 1.3 / 43 120 mm / 4.7 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 2.2 kg / 4.9 lb
300 mm T4.5-45 2.45 / 8 200 mm / 7.9 114 mm / 4.5 62 mm 2.6 kg / 5.7 lb
50-110 mm Zoom T3.5/4.5-32 0.7 / 28 62 mm 4 kg / 8.8 lb
Above: Neil Fanthom, Michael Cieslinski, Martin Cayzer. Below: Pre-prototype camera and lens: proof of concept.
ALEXA 65 sensoractual size: 54.12 x 25.59 mm (6560 x 3102) Collectors items: ARRI D-20 T-shirt and Arriflex 535
Manfred Jahn, Head of ARRI Camera Rental and Project Leader of the Barrels for the ALEXA 65 lenses
ALEXA 65 lenses at IB/E Optics.
ALEXA 65 XPL
Klaus and Little Buddha. This is appropriate, since the first major feature lens mount
shot with the Arriflex 765 was Little Buddha. Bernardo Bertolucci was
the director; Vittorio Storaro, ASC, AIC was the cinematographer.
Klaus is almost as passionate about travel to new places as he is about
optics, and his office is filled with items from his journeys.
Klaus, Martin, Neil in IB/E Optics rooftop screening room Assembling optical elements in the clean room
Codex Vault S
with 8 TB
Removable
Transfer Storage Codex Capture Vault S
Drive 2TB On-Set Cart
Vault S Vault XL
On-Set Near-Set
ARRI Rental has partnered with Codex to deliver a streamlined case but could equally well be configured in a rack in a facility.
system, capable of managing the data requirements of produc- Containing multiple CPU and GPU cores, Vault XL can render
tions using the ALEXA 65 camera. The Codex Lab 65 consists of out full ALEXA Open Gate 6.5K ARRIRAW files in near real-
two pieces: the Codex Vault S and the Codex Vault XL. These two time. Dailies for offline can be transcoded simultaneously at
pieces provide an on-set and near-set workflow combination with speeds far greater than real-time. 2K or 4K files can also be gener-
all the necessary tools for managing data, archiving and generat- ated easily depending on the particular post-production pipeline.
ing dailies. The camera original files can be archived to dual LTO tapes with
Shown here on a Codex Cart, the Codex Vault S is the familiar full verification using the industry-standard LTFS format.
Codex Vault, already used on hundreds of productions world- With the Codex Review Module, files can be played back on a
wide. Its a rugged, modular system, designed to go wherever calibrated display with the correct look applied. A full QC can
needed and as comfortable on location-based productions as it is be carried out efficiently using a sophisticated timeline and intui-
in studios. Camera original material can be quickly cloned to Co- tive user interface, and detailed QC reports can be generated. The
dex 8TB Transfer Drives (RAID-protected) and then drives can system also includes full color correction, including support for
be sent to a near-set Codex Vault XL. ACES and ASC CDL, as well as non-destructive, primary color
Vault XL is a rack-mounted network-attached device, ideal for grading tools.
near-set or a post-production facility. Its shown here in a flight
CPU CPU
Intel Core i7-3740QM Processor 2 x Intel Xeon Processor E5-2690 v3
4 cores, 8 threads 24 cores, 48 threads
6M cache 30MB cache
Clock speed 2.7GHz, max turbo frequency 3.7GHz Clock speed 2.6GHz, max turbo frequency 3.5GHz
AVX instruction set extensions AVX 2.0 instruction set
Memory Memory
1600MHz DDR3 RAM 2133MHz DDR4 ECC
Ingest Ingest
4 x Capture Drive XR 1 x Capture Drive 2TB
1 x Capture Drive 2TB 1 x Transfer Drive 8TB
2 x SxS Card
1 x CFast 2.0 Card Storage
1 x CF Card Removable Transfer Drive Bay
1 x 2.5 SSD 8TB Solid-state Transfer Drive Module
Storage Outputs
Removable Transfer Drive Bay 4 x 3G-SDI
8TB Solid-state Transfer Drive Module 10-bit HD / 2K / 4K
DisplayPort
Outputs
4 x 3G-SDI GPU
10-bit HD / 2K / 4K GPU Engine with 2880 Cores 6GB Texture Memory
GPU Networking
GPU Engine with 2880 Cores 1GbE and 10GbE Interface
6GB Texture Memory
Vault Platform Software
Networking GPU Processing
1GbE Interface Metadata Editing
Virtual File System
Vault Platform Software Transcoding Engine Export
GPU Processing Archiving
Metadata Editing Data Reporting Import
Virtual File System Clone Offload
Transcoding Engine Export
Archiving
Vault Review
2K / 4K Player
Data Reporting
QC Tools
Import
Color Correction
Clone
LUT Pipeline
Offload
Audio Sync
Vault Review
2K / 4K Player
QC Tools
Color Correction
One word may explain why epic 65/70mm films came and went, post chain in place. They supported a group led by Richard Edlund
and why I think the new ALEXA 65 digital format is here to stay. of Boss Film and others, including MGM, the last operating 65mm
Economics. Its expensive to shoot 65mm film1000 feet of 65mm lab. They financed the building of the COSHARP (Continuous
negative costs about $1372 today. Only 45 American features were Optical, Slit, High-Speed, Anamorphic Reduction Printer), which
shot in 65mm between 1955 and 2014. Thats not a great business was a high speed, high resolution optical film printer. Proposed
modelfewer than 1 per year. (15 in Europe during that time.) by Richard, it promised to assure a cost effective dailies process.
Nevertheless, 65/70mm production was always a desire in the Richard Edlund said, At the heart of the 765 was a revolution-
dream factory. The digital ALEXA 65 could expedite those dreams ary new movement design which ran with sealed bearings, didnt
in viable and affordable ways previously unimaginable. require lubrication, and could safely run at high speeds in reverse.
The first 70mm film was probably Birt Acres 1896 short The Hen- The COSHARP produced 35mm anamorphic prints with key
ley Regatta, and over the next century, there were many attempts numbers. It was tested against the Technicolor step printer and
to impress large audiences in big theaters. Todd-AO was intro- was shown to be far superior, and could run at well over 100 fpm.
duced in 1955 with Oklahoma. Mike Todds memorable defini- When Eastman Kodak came out with a new intermediate stock
tion was Cinerama out of one hole. MGM Camera 65, designed (5244) and Dolby invented a six-track sound system for 35mm
by Panavision, arrived in 1956 and in 1959 Panavision released printsthese improvements brought the death-knell to 65mm
Super Panavision 70. feature production.
In 1985, ARRI began work on the Arriflex 765 motion picture The Arriflex 765 made future camera developments possible.
camera. They completed 10 cameras by 1988. Otto Blashek It could go to 100 fps, forward and reverse. It had a huge spin-
was head of the design team. In an interview with Alexander ning mirror shutter that couldnt be linked mechanically as had
Felsenberg (in70mm.com), Blaschek said, Our market research been done in the past. Because of the large mass of the mirror,
and discussions started in 1983, and it was our US subsidiary, Ar- movement and the 65mm film itself, they couldnt use traditional
riflex Corporation who contributed to this to a great extent. toothed belts. This was the first camera with electronic syncing of
Volker Bahnemann, former President of the US subsidiary, and independent motors for each of the major functions and became
current board member of ARRI AG, said, The 765 camera came the basis of the Arriflex 435 and other cameras to follow. The
out of the ongoing desire in the industry to revive the big-screen movement was a multi-link design, from which the 435 benefit-
blockbuster and David Lean type of large format, epic picture. ted as well. Construction of the Arriflex 765 began in 1985, and
three years later, 1988, the cameras were ready.
Panavision and ARRI were both interested in doing something.
Because there was not sufficient capacity in Munich, the Arriflex Otto Blaschek said, Before starting the new design, it was impor-
765 camera project got off the ground when I assured funding tant to have a close look at [other] 65mm cameras already in ex-
through an outside group of investors to set up a new R&D facil- istence and on the market. I was able to learn about the problems
ity. Otto Blaschek, ARRIs chief engineer, was charged with the of (these) earlier models.
project and set up the new facility in Vienna. That is how ARRI In most cases, the earlier camera models were not completely
Austria was started. The Arriflex 765 was their first project. suitable for sync sound recording. Sometimes, their noise-level
ARRI realized that a new 65mm camera also required a secure was as high as approximately 50 dBA at a frame rate of 25 fps. It
goes without saying that this eliminated simultaneous sync sound Arriflex 765 Specs
shooting. In many cases, these cameras were also extremely heavy
and bulky, so filming was not so simple and involved great efforts. Format: 65mm - 5 perf Frame: 1:2.2
Mirror Shutter: 180 - 5 in 15 increments; 172.8, 144
Another problem [with these other pre-765 cameras] was wind- Lens Mount: Maxi PL 64 mm diameter
ing-up of the wider and thus heavier film stock. There were fre- Flange focal depth: 73.5 mm
quent break-downs. Generally speaking, operational dependabil- Aperture: 52.50 x 23.00 mm (1.91 x 0.87)
ity was not guaranteed to such an extent as we are used to with Groundglass /Projection Area: 48.40 x 22.00 mm (1.91 x 0.87)
todays professional 35 mm cine cameras. These were some of the Viewfinder: 4x / 8x Noise level: < 25 dbA
reasons why there were no more big films shot in the 65 mm for- Video assist: 80/20, 50/59, 100% video on request
mat during the past years. Technology was simply not perfected Frame rates: 2 - 100 fps forward and reverse
enough. This is where we saw our prospects. Run-up time: 0-24 fps in 1 second
The Arriflex 765 was designed with what was described as the Magazines: 500 (150 m) and 1000 (300 m) displacement
user ergonomics of 35mm motion picture cameras of the time. Movement: dual 3-tooth pull down claw, dual single pin registration
Never mind that a contemporary Arriflex 35BL-4s was 32 lb with- Motors: 2 crystal controlled DCmotors (movement and shutter,
out lens or film. The Arriflex 765 had a standard 5-perf 65mm electronically synchronized), 2 DC-motors in the magazine)
gate, with dual 3-claw pulldown (on each side of the film), and Power: 24 V DC
dual single-pin registration. This stabilized the film to less than Dimensions (L-W-H) with 500 (150 m) magazine, without lens: 22.4
.1% of picture height at reasonable sound levels. x 14.6 x 15.7 (570 x 370 x 400 mm)
Dimensions (L-W-H) with 1000 (300 m) magazine, without lens:
The projected image had an aspect ratio of 2.2:1,with a film nega-
24.8 x 14.6 x 20.9: (630 x 370 x 530 mm)
tive area about 3 times larger than a 35mm anamorphic frame
Weight of camera with loaded 500 (150 m) magazine, without lens:
and 2.5 times larger than a Super35 frame.
about 70 lb (32 kg)
At left: two
765 cameras
on location in
Bhaktapur, Nepal
for Little Buddha
Overview Connectors
Camera ALEXA 65 65mm Viewfinder ALEXA EVF-1
Digital Cinema Camera BNC connector 4 x 3G SDI
Sensor type ARRI A3X CMOS sensor - MON (1) Out: 2 x 3G SDI
Image Aperture 5-perf 65mm (full camera aperture) - MON (2) Out: 2 x 3G SDI
Sensor active image 54.12 x 25.59 mm SD card For software updates and menu settings
area (diagonal 59.87 mm) (like ALEXA)
Sensor Resolution New high speed mode for fast ARRIRAW
6560 x 3102 (maximum recordable)
frame grabs (planned feature)
Size Other connectors Focus / Iris / Zoom motor connections
5 x RS 24V for accessories
Weight 10.5 kg / 23.2 lb
1 x 12V for accessories
Size L: 338.7 mm / 13.3
(body without mount, TC I/O (5-pin Lemo)
W: 208.3 / 8.2
EVF, handle, antenna) H: 163 mm / 6.4 1 x LDD, 2 x LCS, ACC
Overall length (body L: 387.8 mm / 15.3 BAT (pin 1: GND, pin 2: +24 VDC)
with XPL mount) Mount adds 49.05 mm / 1.9 to length ETHERNET, EXT (multi-pin accessory),
Power 24 VDC
Other
Lens Mount ARRI XPL Mount
Camera IP Address 169.254.XXX.123
Lens Mount Contacts LDS
Synchronization Like ALEXA, RET IN and EXT: Sensor sync,
Optical Center 105 mm / 4.13 from base
processing and HD-SDI outputs for 3D and
Accessories Same as ALEXA XT range multi-camera
Shutter Electronic, 5 - 358 Monitoring 3 independent color outputs:
adjustable in 1/10 increments 1. EVF LogC/709/ARRILook
Frame Rate 20 - 27 fps (full aperture) 2. MON (1) OUT LogC/709/ARRILook
(sensor capable of 60 fps 3. MON (2) OUT LogC/709/ARRILook
upgrade planned for Q1/2015) All with optional overlays.
ISO Settings 200 - 3200 ISO. Base is 800 ISO. All options are available during playback.
MON OUT tools: Zoom, Overscan, Overlay
Dynamic Range >14 stops info, Frame Lines, False Color, Peaking
Recording System * Upgrade planned for Q1/2015 CDL CDL server support like ALEXA XT
Recording File Format Uncompressed ARRIRAW In-camera playback Playback via EVF, HD-SDI MON OUT includ-
Recorder Crop Modes 5-perf 65mm (full aperture, 1.78 extraction), ing Audio
8-perf 35mm (24x36mm - future) Audio Two channel recording and playback,
Storage (type) Codex XR capture drive Analog line inputs,
Storage (capacity) 480 GByte capacity Headphone monitor output
860 MByte per second data rate Remote UI Existing RCU-4,
Storage (recording time) 11 minutes @ 24 fps Web-Remote via ethernet, WCU
ALEXA Classic 16:9 sensor ALEXA XT 4:3 sensor ALEXA XT Plus 4:3 sensor
ALEXA XT Studio 4:3 sensor ALEXA Fiber Remote 16:9 sensor ALEXA XT M 4:3 sensor
ALEXAs longevity (and return of investment) can be attributed cameras with the XR Module upgrade. Developed in cooperation
to the steady stream of reliable Software Updates (SUPs). SUP with Avid, DNxHD 444 delivers master quality images.
9.0 was delivered in 2013 with more media, more metadata, im- ARRI LDS and Cooke /i System Metadata
proved ProRes recording, ARRIRAW Open Gate, Lens Metadata
support, Pre-Recording and more. Support for the open source Cooke /i system as well as ARRIs
Lens Data System (LDS) is already implemented on ALEXA XT
More Media Choices - CFast 2.0 Support cameras and ALEXA Classic cameras with the XR Module up-
From SUP 9.0 on, all ALEXA XT cameras and all ALEXA Classic grade. This is now extended to ALEXA Classic cameras with an
cameras with the XR Module upgrade can use ARRIs new CFast LDS-PL mount (but not ALEXA HD, ALEXA HD Plus, ALEXA
2.0 Adapter to record and play back with CFast 2.0 cards. These M and ALEXA XT M).
cards offer high data rates up to 120 fps ProRes 4444 16:9 HD. ARRI LDS and the Cooke /i system supply ALEXA cameras with
ProRes Recording: Higher 4444 Frame Rates focus, iris, and zoom settings, serial number, and other metadata
The maximum frame rate of the highest quality ProRes codec at that is recorded with each frame of picture. This information
the time, ProRes 4444, is increased to 120 fps in 16:9 HD mode. can be shown on ALEXAs main display, sent via HD-SDI to the
This is made possible by the increased processing power of AL- directors monitor, or sent wirelessly for the script supervisors
EXA XT cameras or ALEXA Classic cameras with the XR Module notes.
upgrade. These higher data rates are available on either XR Cap- Alura 1.4x and 2x Extenders
ture Drives or CFast 2.0 cards. The new Alura 1.4x and 2x Extenders have smart LDS-enabled
Pre-Recording PL mounts. ALEXAs with an LDS PL mount will be able to see
Pre-recording lets you record from an earlier point in time, even if that an extender has been attached to an LDS lens (or a non-LDS
youre late pushing the start button. ProRes pre-recording comes lens used with the Lens Data Archive). The camera will re-calcu-
for most ALEXA cameras (not ALEXA HD or ALEXA HD Plus). late and display the new lens metadata values.
When pre-record is enabled and the REC button is pushed the LDS Source Switch
first time, the camera will store picture, audio and metadata to a The lens data source switch improves flexibility in using the
temporary ring buffer. This is a section of memory on the actual ARRI Lens Data System. It lets you choose the source of the lens
recording medium (XR Capture Drives, CFast 2.0 cards or SxS data: either the encoders built into LDS lenses or the CLM motor
PRO cards). When the REC button is pushed a second time, the encoders along with a Lens Data Archive table.
camera will keep everything that was stored in the buffer and con- Self-Healing Metadata
tinue to record from there. You can capture events that occurred
in the pastvery metaphysical. ALEXA will detect an incomplete metadata file, compare it with
the frames actually recorded and reconstruct the metadata ac-
The amount of time captured in the buffer depends on codec, as- cordingly. This self-healing metadata will work on most AL-
pect ratio, resolution, and frame rate. The buffer can be set to short, EXA cameras and with all three supported recording media (XR
medium or long. The camera will calculate and display the corre- Capture Drives, CFast 2.0 cards or SxS PRO cards).
sponding buffer time. For example, with a 4:3 aspect ratio, shooting
2K ProRes 4444 at 24 fps, the buffer can store up to 14 seconds. Additional WCU-4 Operation
Better DNxHD 444 Recording and ALEXA XT/XR Support The Wireless Compact Unit WCU-4 offers an even tighter in-
tegration with most ALEXA cameras, including display of pre-
DNxHD is available in 444 for all ALEXA cameras with a DNx- recording status, the ability to switch from regular speed to high
HD license, including ALEXA XT cameras and ALEXA Classic speed and a software switch for lens motor direction.
ARRI Special Nov 2014 67
Henning Rdlein and Marc Shipman-Mueller on SUP 9.0
16:9
Sensor Size
ARRIRAW
ALEXA
16:9,
4:3
4:3,
and
Sensor Size
Open Gate
Compared
ARRIRAW
flow Solutions. We talked about ALEXAs new SUP 9.0 and how it
fits into current production and post production procedures. A few Sensor Size
= ARRIRAW
additional explanatory notes about Codex technology and files [in
brackets] come from Sarah Priestnall of Codex.
Jon Fauer: Marc and Henning, whats new in ARRI Software
Update Packet (SUP) 9.0?
Marc: Lets begin with support for ProRes. With SUP 9.0 we can
now record, with the XT camera, ProRes 4444 (pronounced can only record up to 60 fps.
ProRes four by four) up to 120 fps. Previously ProRes 4444 only
went to 60 frames a second. With SUP 9.0 on the XT cameras, its Lets talk about the ALEXA XT Open Gate in SUP 9.0.
up to 120 frames a second as long as you record to XR Capture Marc: Open Gate works only for ALEXA XT, XT Plus and XT
Drives or CFast 2.0 cards. Studio cameras in ARRIRAW. ALEXA XT M support is planned
Another update is that we now have DNxHD on all cameras, Clas- for Software Update Packet 10, which, by the way, were working
sic Alexa as well as ALEXA XT, and weve added DNxHD 444. on right now. Open Gate on the XT cameras uses the sensors
entire active image area of 3414 x 2198 photosites.
I think a large portion of customers record on ProRes 4444 Log C
and I always say if we would have known this we probably could ARRIRAW Open Gate will be used for some shows as the sole
have avoided doing some of the other flavors of ProRes. So much format, and other shows will continue to shoot in 16:9 or 4:3 and
stuff is done ProRes 4444 Log C. That is the standard. What we shoot only certain scenes in Open Gate. Open Gate will be used
saw at the beginning of 2013 was an increase in ARRIRAW pro- for visual effects, wide angle establishing shots, things like that.
ductions, but people didnt like the fact that they needed to use an They may record those scenes in Open Gate, and then switch
extra recorder on top of the ALEXA. When the ALEXA XT came back to whatever their regular format is for the rest of the show.
out a lot of people who wanted to do ARRIRAW got the chance How do you switch from regular to Open Gate if you are a cam-
to record it internally. Were seeing ARRIRAW on some of the not era crew in the field? Do you have to send it back to ARRI?
so high budget feature films now, as well as on high-end commer- Marc: It depends what kind of camera you have. If you have an
cials. Because with the ALEXA XT camera, ARRIRAW recording ALEXA XT made before December 1st, 2013, the camera actually
is all included in the camera. has to go into ARRI service for a special adjustment. You have to
With SUP 9.0 supporting the CFast 2.0 card, are you seeing have Software Update Packet 9.0 installed. If you have an ALEXA
more people using them on ALEXAs? XT that was built after December 1, you just have to make sure
Marc: Thats starting very slowly. The cards are just coming to the it has SUP 9.0 and then theres just one switch in the menu. You
market. I think weve just received our first adapters from Codex select from sensor mode 16:9, 4:3, or Open Gate. It takes about 30
for the CFast 2.0 cards. They are the same cards that the AMIRA to 40 seconds and then you are in Open Gate and you can record
uses. I actually think very little is going to happen on that front ARRIRAW. One thing is important to note. Since we are using the
with ALEXA until the AMIRA hits and then some people with whole sensor, you now have an image circle of about 33.5 mm.
both cameras are going to choose to buy CFast 2.0 cards. Right So you must be sure to test, especially with wide angle lenses, to
now the advantage of CFast 2.0 cards on ALEXA is recording make sure that they cover the entire image area. We found with
ProRes 4444 at 120 fps, whereas on the SxS Pro 64 GB card you our wide angle Master Primes and Ultra Primes the boundary is
somewhere around 18 to 21 mmlonger lenses are OK. Our 9.5-
18 mm Ultra Wide Angle Zoom covers fully. With other zoom
lenses, its all over the place, so be careful.
In post production, how do you know that its Open Gate? Is it
in metadata?
Henning: Yes, its in metadata. We are currently updating all the
SDKs out there and informing all our partner companies about
The ARRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphic family made its debut at (darkening) at the corners of the image. Master Anamorphic
IBC Amsterdam in September 2012 with a 50 mm T1.9. lenses produce a smooth anamorphic bokeh, free of artifacts.
The MA 35 mm T1.9 and 75 mm T1.9 were unveiled at NAB 2013, The 15-blade iris helps create a bokeh that is elliptical (oval) and
followed by the 100 mm T1.9 at IBC 2013, then the 40 mm T1.9 consistently illuminated. See the framegrabs (opposite page).
and 60 mm T1.9 at ZEISS Cine Lens Day in November 2013. The lenses are compact, light, and have a fast aperture of T1.9 at
The family was complete when the MA 135 mm T1.9 was pre- all focal lengths. They are typically ZEISS with reliable and du-
sented at NAB 2014. (Lens sets are rarely complete. DPs, like rable mechanical construction. Improved protection against dust
Oliver Twist, always ask for more.) and spray means less downtime and fewer repairs.
ARRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphic lenses have an innovative opti- The ARRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphic lenses herald the return to
cal design, with almost no breathing and minimal distortion. an era of anamorphic big-screen productions at a new, previously
Anamorphic mumps (faces looking wider in close-ups) is au- unseen, level of quality.
tomatically compensated by careful positioning of the cylindrical ARRI/ZEISS Master Anamorphic lenses were developed by ARRI
lens elements. There are 4 to 8 cylindrical elements in each lens. and ZEISS, manufactured by ZEISS, and exclusively distributed
The optical design reduces chromatic aberrations and shading by ARRI.
Newest member
of the Master
Anamorphic
family:
135 mm T1.9
Sheng Lu
I See
(China)
MA 50 mm
60 mm Master Anamorphic, T 2 +2/3, 1/2 Tiffen Black Satin, ISO 800, WB 4300
The year is 2040. Professor Viktor (Koen De Graeve) discovers a Alles Voor Lena (The Sum of Histories)
way to send emails back in time. Using the Casimir effect (quan- Production company: Caviar Belgium
tum field theory in which the space between micro-objects can Producer: Frank Van Passel
attract each other) he tries to fight for his beloved Lena. But the Director: Lukas Bossuyt
past isnt easy to manipulate and every small intervention can DP: Stijn Van der Veken, ASC, SBC
have far-reaching consequences to the presentsomething that
Viktor soon discovers. The Sum of Histories is a love story with a Technical info:
touch of sci-fi. Cinematographer Stijn Van der Veken, ASC, SBC ARRI ALEXA XT ARRIRAW
explained his creative choices. ARRI / ZEISS Master Anamorphic lenses
The story happens 35% in the present and 65% in the future Cooke S2 spherical lenses rehoused by True Lens Services (TLS) UK
(2040). The Director wanted a light, romantic, vintage feel for Codex Action Cam on Codex RAW
the present ,which brought me to use old Cooke S2 lenses because Lucky Camera Brussels - rental company
of their warm, slightly soft and imperfect performance. We have a
set rehoused by True Lens Services in England.
For the future scenes we went for a set of ARRI/ZEISS Master
Anamorphic lenses. They have a fabulous bokeh, a unique look I am a big fan of anamorphic, especially because of the way the
smoother than Master Prime lenses, and still an amazing and focus falls offwhich is the narrative aspect of the lenses. Their
powerful image all the way open to T1.9. We have a set of six MA best performance for me in terms of storytelling for the main
lenses, from 35 to 100 mm. characters is situated between 3 and 6 feet, depending on the lens.
A lot of people consider anamorphics mainly for artifacts. For A lot of people try to create their look in grading, but I rather
me, shooting a movie is an artistic opportunity to use lenses in all set my look on the set. I dont like to put looks in gradingfor
conditions. We did a night shoot in a park, under difficult con- me, that seems too artificial. I achieve the look with lenses and
ditions, available night light, no practicals. I call it lighting with lighting.
milligrams. Many lenses cannot handle these extreme, low light, Stijn is shooting ARRIRAW on ARRI ALEXA. They have one
contrasty conditions. However, like Master Primes, the Master LUT: the same one is used on set, for viewing and editing. This
Anamorphics maintained quality all the way to T1.9. As I said LUT then becomes the starting point for grading. Its a custom
before, Master Anamorphics are smoother, a little gentler on faces LUT derived from the ARRI Low Con LUT with the same satura-
than Master Primes. On MCU or CU shots, Ill soften them a little tion, and as Stijn calls it, a bit more bite.
with Tiffen Black Satin diffusionwhich Kees van Oostrum,
ASC recommended to me.
(1) PL Mount is 54 mm diameter, stainless steel, with Lens Data System (LDS) contacts.
(2) The distance from the entrance pupil relative to the film/sensor plane at infinity focus.
(3) Horizontal (H) and vertical (V) angles of view for a Super 35 Cinemascope format camera aperture (22.5 mm x 18.7 mm / 0.8858 x 0.7362).
ARRI introduced a new Ultra Wide 9.5-18 mm T 2.9 zoom lens Exchangeable metal rings for mattebox donuts
at IBC 2013 and production models were shown at IBC 2014. It Metal rings to protect front element
covers angles previously considered the domain of primes. If you Matches ARRI/Fujinon and ARRI/Zeiss lenses
want a rectilinear wide-angle zoom lens where straight lines stay Available in ARRI PL LDS or Canon EF mount
straight, horizontally and vertically, even at close focus, this is Distortion is less than 1% even at 9.5 at close focus. (That is even
for you. Distortion is less than 1% at 9.5 mm and less than 0.1% less distortion than the ARRI/ZEISS Ultra Prime 8R.) The 33.7
at 18 mm. mm image circle makes the 9.5-18 mm zoom lens a good candi-
Image circle larger than 33.7 mm date for ALEXA 3.4K Open Gate.
Very low image distortion, even at 9.5 mm
Almost no breathing (image size changes when focusing) Dimensions
Uniform field illumination even at close focus
Very high resolution and contrast all the way to image corners Weight: 4.5 kg / 9.9 lb
Entrance pupil position stays constant over entire zoom range Front diameter: 156 mm / 6.142 in
Patented optical design Average barrel diameter: 112 mm / 4.409 in
LDS for lens metadata Length from PL mount to front: 335.5 mm / 13.209 in
ARRI's new Universal Motor Controller UMC-4 is a 3-axis lens motor controller with:
3-axis remote control of focus, iris and zoom on any camera
LDS Lens Data Archive for accurate lens data with any lens
Long-range wireless
Timecode interface for lens data synchronization
Focus-tracking with ultrasonic measurement devices
Serial connector and Ethernet connector
Large display
SD card slot for lens data storage and file upload
ARRI Accessories
Lightweight Rods
ARRIs new Lens Data Encoder LDE-1 provides metadata for lenses that dont have LDS metadata built in. The position of the lens ring
to which it is attached is encoded. This can be useful not only with lenses lacking LDS, but also when using a manual follow focus unit
or non-ARRI wireless lens control system.
The LDE-1 plugs into an ALEXA Plus or Studio (or a UMC-4).
Software Update Packet (SUP) 2.0 for the WCU-4 simplifies lens programming. The WCU-4 hand unit now offers a lens programming
interface on its large LCD screen, so a lens scale can be programmed wirelessly in less than a minute, with no additional equipment
besides the WCU-4, UMC-4 or ALEXA Plus Module and lens motors. The resulting lens file is stored on an SD card, which can be
taken out and reused elsewhere.
Additional features of WCU-4 SUP 2.0 include support for the ENG Motor Controller EMC-1 and focus tracking with the UMC-4, as
well as minor bug fixes and improvements in response to customer feedback. The software update is free of charge and will be available
beginning November 2014.
Subscribe
www.fdtimes.com/subscribe
For subscription or account questions, please contact our cus-
tomer support team MondayFriday, 9 am 5:30 pm EST.
FDTimes Customer Service
Phone: 1-570-567-1224
Online:
Toll-Free (USA): 1-800-796-7431 www.fdtimes.com/subscribe
Fax: 1-724-510-0172
Email via website: fdtimes.com/contact
Mailing address: Film and Digital Times Subscriptions Call, Mail or Fax:
PO Box 922
Williamsport, PA 17703
Direct Phone: 1-570-567-1224
Toll-Free (USA): 1-800-796-7431
(Our editorial offices are in New York City.)
Fax: 1-724-510-0172
Print + Digital Subscriptions
Film and Digital Times Print + Digital subscriptions include dig- Film and Digital Times Subscriptions
ital (PDF) access to current and all back issues online. PO Box 922
Williamsport, PA 17703
Digital (PDF) subscriptions USA
Digital (PDF) subscriptions include unlimited access to the cur- 1 Year Print and Digital, USA 6 issues $ 49.95
1 Year Print and Digital, Canada 6 issues $ 59.95
rent and all back issues. www.fdtimes.com/issues
1 Year Print and Digital, Worldwide 6 issues $ 69.95
All FDTimes issues since May 2005 are here. Click SUBSCRIBER 1 Year Digital (PDF) $ 29.95
DOWNLOAD for the issue you want. You only need to enter your
1 year iPad/iPhone App upgrade + $ 9.99
username or email. (normally 29.99) Get FDTimes on Apple
Newsstand with iPad App when you order
iPad and iPhone a Print or Digital Subscription (above)
Get Film and Digital Times for iPad and iPhone on the Apple Total $ __________
Newsstand. Payment Method (please check one):
First, download our free app in the iTunes Store (search Film VISA Mastercard American Express
and Digital Times) or directly from your browser: Check Enclosed (payable to Film and Digital Times)
tinyurl.com/fdtimes-iPad
Credit Card # _________________________________________
Theres a free preview issue to try out.
3 or 4 digit security code_________________________________
Get individual issues, back issues, or an annual subscription.
Expiration Date________________________________________
Hold the iPad vertically, and you get single page view. Hold it Signature ___________________________________________
horizontally, landscape mode, and youll see two pages, like the
printed edition. You can zoom in and high resolution remains. Name ______________________________________________
Company ____________________________________________
(Note: Apple iPad annual subscriptions do not include access to
back issues the way our Digital PDF access works. FDTimes iPad Title________________________________________________
and iPhone Apple Newsstand app and technical support is han- Address ____________________________________________
dled by Pocketmags.) City ________________________________________________
New subscribers to Film and Digital Times can add the Apple State or Province ______________________________________
Newsstand iPad/iPhone Edition for only $9.99 extra per year
Country _____________________________________________
saving almost $20 over buying it from Apple. (You will receive a
separate log-in for the Apple edition.) Zip or Postal Code______________________________________