see if you can get a flexible plastic mirror to make the world's cheapest anamorphic setup by bending it into an arc so that it captures a vertically compressed image that can be desqueezed in post. i suspect strongly it will have some interesting imperfections and artifacts that could have their own flair compared to true anamorphic glass.
Glad you enjoyed it I tried to dub him using A.I. cloning voice, but it sounded really weird, I hope the subtiltes aren't a big problem for English speakers.
@@MathieuSternIt's much better with subtitles than dubbing. Even if you don't understand him, you can read along and you'd lose some of his character if it were someone (or something) else voicing him.
@@MathieuStern the subtitles are much better than AI voices! I love to see the real character of people and the voice is an extremely important part for that.
Si je ne devais retenir qu'un seul mot de cette vidéo, ce serait "organique". C'est une superbe invention et ça à l'air tellement naturel pour Théo. Bravo à lui. Merci pour le partage Mathieu. Superbe image pour l'interview. Tu utilisais quel objo ?
So creative. The cinematography for the interview. I wonder how much time it took for you to Setup the right exposure and the focus…. Maybe it’s easy for you. But not for me… the different lenses and perspective….😊
I have been experimenting with using a mirror to extend the length of my "set" to be able to use longer and shallower lenses. It's quite challenging really. You often get weird visual defects and light leaks and oddness. Especially since I'm not using a first surface mirror. The reflections in the mirror add a lot of softness. I guess if you want to deliberately use it as an effect that is fine but since I want it to be invisible it has been a struggle with little success. First surface mirrors are pretty pricy 😅
Fascinating I live it, Like putting a hall of mirorrs in a lens 🎉. Great stuf, its passionate film makers like this that will keep pushing boundries of the such.
the magic shutter sort of reminded me of the highspeed camera build by Pentacon in east germany the "Pentacon Pentazet 35 ZL 1", totally different field of use but I wonder what would happen if you combine these two ideas🤔.
Would it be possible to mount two exact lenses to one camera slightly apart from each other and then quickly change from one to the other like this to get a fake 3 d effect?