Can you tell us something about the lenses you used? GY: 24p and wanted it for ease of use in tight spaces. How many frames per second and why a Canon 5D Mark II? shallow focus pulls the actors faces to forground
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What is the difference in how it looks on a TV screen compared to a regular camera? You can find also a Twitter-interview of Greg Yaitanes, the director of the show. Speaking via Twitter, he said that this was to achieve a shallow depth of field and a ‘richer look’.
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Greg Yaitanes, director of FOX broadcasting company’s medical drama series ‘House’, used the camera, a selection of Canon’s prime lenses and, the 24-70mm and 70-200mm lenses to shoot its season finale. Wow, interesting….Ī Canon 5D Mark II has become the first video-capable DSLR to film a whole episode of a US primetime series. I have seen a quite old news from May 2010, telling us that the whole season was filmed with a Canon 5D MarkII. Posted in private, saint barth, saint barts, St Barts, travelling | Tagged saint barth, saint barthelemy, saint barts, st barth, st barts | Leave a reply French Provence – Hyères (04) The hope remained, strong as ever, and now some kind of wisdom had replaced the joy, which isn’t such a bad deal after all. The unadulterated joy and hope of our first trip had, over the years, been tempered by pain. The leeward side (sous le vent-places like Corossol and Public) speak patois.
Jean, L’Orient) express themselves in a kind of Creole. Barts is the way the language weaves and flows with the division of the island. "Except," noted Piter, "the hippies have grown up and smoke cigars now instead of joints." The island remains what it has always been-a place for libertines, hippies, and people who have inherited that early pirate spirit. Here, the lingering darkness of history does not exist. The stain of slavery, the sense that something truly evil happened, the seething resentment of injustice, is something you can still smell on other Caribbean islands but never on St. Imagine the laid-back, barefoot, sixties, hippie-ish spirit, what the French call décontracté, served up with just the right amount of impeccable taste, good food, and ridiculous attention to quality-perfection, non? Geezers playing pétanque, pastis, baguettes, Jacques Brel on the radio, every Peter Mayle cliché, but delivered without any of the stuffy uptightness of the mainland French. Barts was more like a village in Provence than an island in the Caribbean, and he was right. I remember the local vicar, Charles Vere Nicholl, saying years ago that St. Barts, a completely different world from the one you see splashed all over the pages of magazines. No show off, back to the roots.Īnd over the years, I have discovered a parallel, private universe on St. Not the St Barth (I prefer The French term -) of the magazines and TV shows, the one we have also discovered the last years, and that make this destination so unique. A very emotional article from a journalist who *really* knows St. Condé Nast Traveler has published a very interesting article about St.