Beautiful! Yep, you need a film camera with manual exposure. Exposure and focus are tricky with film. So much that even very recent Hollywood movies shot on film have focus issues in some shots. It's of course a matter of practice. It's worth it to get that precious look of real film. Best of luck for your future film projects! (Edited to fix spelling)
How did you achieve the "light leak/film burn" (for lack of a better term) transitions between shots? was this something done in-camera or was it added in during editing? Great video, man!
Thanks! I think almost all of them were done during editing, I just used one of those free super 8 light leak vids on youtube and overlayed them for the transitions.
hey, i wanted to ask if im allowed to take clips out of ur video to use it on a fan music video project of myself that i might upload to youtube, idk if i will get a response back but anyways im writing to let u know and also ask for permission to use it incase of Uploading it on this plattform. sincerely slimyy :)
Short answer: just a little bit Long answer: the film scans you get back will always need to be color corrected somehow, either by yourself or by the lab tech. I definitely punched up the colors a little bit but they are still naturally very vibrant