How do movies find that professional look displayed on blind? The difference between the professional look of a movie


The difference between the professional look of a movie and an amateur home video. is it the editing? Also im looking for a good 3ccd hd camcorder. any suggestions?
Answers: 
movies are generally shot on 35mm picture. the frame rate of film is 24 frames per second. if you want your video to look more approaching film, you are going to necessitate a camcorder that shoots in 24p. you'll stipulation to buy an external microphone for your audio. there are computer programs close to magic bullet that agree to you play with the color and contrast to finish the look you want. in short, within are a variety of factor that will affect the look of your video.
I'll assume by "HD" you mean HDV. By that, at hand are only 4-5 cameras out on the souk all range from 4,000$ and up. I'd recommend (before buying a camera that expensive) to browse around for cheap automatic (limited manual settings) and later buy software like Final Cut Pro / Avid and play around next to those programs. You'll find much more success within creating movies with "that professional look" beside better software than you will with better cameras. Because beside expensive cameras, they can only be used effectively beside GREAT training and extensive practice. There are lots factors that be in motion into getting that "professional look". Planning the shots, framing, lighting, eidting, and in some cases use of 24p a bit than consumer camcorders' 60i/30fps.

A skilled, experienced shooter will provide great video with pretty much any camcorder - but someone near no (or limited) skills and experience won't capture great video beside the best camera.

Use a tripod as much as you can. Use a LANC - only some cameras own them. Use external mics - which means the camcroder requirements a mic-in jack. Use manual audio. Practice. Lots.

And use what the pros use. MiniDV video based camcorders. They don't use internal frozen drive or flash based camcorders that store within high compressed MPEG2. They don't use DVD camcorders. They use primarily miniDV video when they use camcorders. That does not mean you involve to spend $3,000 on a camera - it does mean that miniDV cartridge is the best available video quality for editing.

And 3CCDs are OK - but it is not the solitary consideration. I'll take a single big CMOS over 3 tiny CCDs anytime... and in reality, I did - in my Sony HDR-HC1. It is adjectives about total surface nouns - not only in the region of how many imaging chips in attendance are.

Entry level:
Canon ZR800, ZR 950
Sony DCR-HC96
Panasonic PV-GS320

Mid reach:
Canon HV20, HV30
Sony HDR-HC7, HC9

High:
Sony DCR-VX2100, HDR-FX1, FX7
Canon GL2, XL2

OMG:
Canon XHA1
Sony HVRA1U, V1U, Z1U
Panasonic DVX100B, HDX200



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