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Rating: Summary: technically good, aesthetically bad Review: This book is good to learn a lot of the technical aspects of filmmaking, but it lacks in the aesthetic aspect of filmmaking or video making in general which is an important quality in a cinematographers book. That is the only thing that I had a problem with, other than that this book is a great book to learn the technicalities of filmmaking. If you want to learn about lighting, camera angles, equipment ect., then this is a great book and I recommend it, but if you are looking for an aesthetic approach then you might consider a different book.
Rating: Summary: Not sure what all the fuss is about... Review: ...despite the hype, this book is NOT a "great reference book" of cinematography. Instead of a thorough explanation of the craft & art of cinematography, it is instead a slim text which cursorily navigates the dual topics of technical/hardware requirements, and then briefly gestures at some of the aesthetic decisions required of good cinematography. If you want technicals, books which cover similar territory are "Matters of Light & Depth" (Lowell), "Cinematography" & "Film Lighting" (Malkiewicz), "Placing Shadows" (Gloman/Letourneau), or even "Bare-Bones Guide" (Schroeppel -- which includes a very practical description of the 'Rule of Thirds', ie. the "Golden Mean"). If you're on a 'classical' kick, you could do a whole lot worse than "5 C's" (Mascelli), "Painting with Light" (Alton), or even "The Visual Story" (Block), which explores new media thru the lens[sic] of Eisenstein. Actually, you probably should buy "5 C's" & "Painting" anyway; they're very old, & just-recently returned to print... & in this age of accelerated obsolescence, these books might vanish again, forever. But if you are interested in the aesthetics of cinematography, you'd do *much* better with texts such as "Cinematography: Screencraft" (Ettedgui), or with the classic "Film Art: An Introduction" (Bordwell/Thompson). In fact, after all the great reviews for "Cinematography: Image Making", I was expecting some sort of full-color/high-quality updated version of "Film Art". Nope... not even close. IMHO, the book which best combines both worlds (technical + aesthetic) is Viera's "Lighting for Film & Electronic Cinematography". He starts with basic principles, & then quickly moves to famous shots, breaking each one down in terms of what the cinematographer was thinking, what they were 'aiming' for, & how [specifically] to put your lights to duplicate that setup. Wow. So perhaps the title ("Cinematography: Image Making") is a misnomer, & should be "Technical Image Making". No wait-- there are some shots of beautiful cinematography in the text, right? Um, yes, but... with one terrible caveat: the majority of the images in this book which do come from great films -- are DIGITAL SCREEN-CAPTURES FROM VIDEO(?!!!) Interlaced, blurry, artifacted, awful. Unconscionable. What a waste of potential, & of good photo-stock paper. Save your $$ for Viera's book, or Lowell's. Or you could do a whole lot worse than "5 C's" or Alton's book... which are old, but classics, describing theory & techniques as appropriate today as they were 100 years ago. "3 Stars" for "Not-Bad"; "1 Star" for "Crushing Disappointment".
Rating: Summary: COMPREHENSIVE Review: As an amateur film maker I have found this to be very well written and easy to understand. I also can see why an experienced film maker would benefit from this book. There is alot of information and many helpful pictures.
Rating: Summary: Well written, Great Book for the Beginner or Pro Review: As an amateur film maker I have found this to be very well written and easy to understand. I also can see why an experienced film maker would benefit from this book. There is alot of information and many helpful pictures.
Rating: Summary: So, who edited this book? Review: Believe me, this is a great book. It's filled with some highly technical and aesthetically educational information. But whoever did the editing on this potentially superlative bit of course work was either a little over eager to make a certain word count, or deluded enough to think that they could just blast a myriad of small holes in Mr. Brown's writing and no one would notice. The last two-thirds of the book is just wonderful, filled with all the information I had hoped would be there. The first five chapters, however, and maybe I'm missing something here, it's possible, are indiscriminately missing thoughts and ideas. The concepts appear to be developing, and then, "poof!", part of the abstract has been lifted, and we are left to fill in the missing pieces for ourselves. I doubt this is a technique for adult learning. I found myself, at times, very frustrated. That wouldn't be so bad, but then our little under-achieving editor seems to think that one illustration will serve the purpose for multiple examples. One reference was used three times. Due credit, however: usually one of the cited examples was used correctly. And, lastly, when subjects are listed in the index by page, it really ought to be the correct page. I'm still looking for "SED". On the upside, the chapter on video is just about the best I've ever read: tight and accurate. Ditto on "exposure", "color theory", "controlling color", "optics" and the balance of this beneficial book, with, of course, at times, lest we forget, the occasional misdirected clarification or glaring omission. The book is printed on great stock, the cover and the binding will certainly hold up for years. Its just an irritating shame that these initial chapters are so marred. Maybe I purchased an early edition. Let's hope that Mr. Brown's work is wildly popular so that the publishers can go back and correct their errors for subsequent editions.
Rating: Summary: COMPREHENSIVE Review: I bought this book because of the glowing review it received in American Cinematographer and then soon after it was the requred book for my cinematography course at USC Film School. I have dozens of books about cinematography, and this is the only one I've ever seen that covers every aspect of cinematography. Most books are either sort of airy, light-weight musings about aesthetics and philosophy and the other kind is strictly technical: lenses, exposure, etc. This is the one book that covers just about everything you need to know in order to be a professional cinematographer (or an amateur who knows as much as a pro). It covers everthing from the basics to very advanced stuff and the one thing that most of my camera assistant and camera apprentice friends really like is that it covers "professional practice": the way things are done on real sets, including things like what are the responsibilties of each person: the AC, the gaffer, the grip, etc. It has a chapter on lighting and one on creating the "look" of a film, but the one thing it doesn't go into heavily is set lighting. That is, I guess, because this author has another book about lighting (which was also a textbook in a film school course I took.) He (or she?) also says in introduction that lighting is a vast subject and there is no way to fit it into one or two chapters - it has to have it's own book. Anyway, this book is so good, I bought some to give as Christmas presents to friends. Even the ones who are already working professional DP's enjoyed it and said they loved it. I think it is also used in some of the directing courses here at USC. The first half of the book is about the kinds of things a director needs to know as well as the DP: coverage, editorial, crossing the line, that kind of stuff.
Rating: Summary: Thorough and professional Review: I've got a whole shelf full of books about cinematography, lighting and filmmaking. Most of them claim to be "thorough" and "professional" but very few of them actually are. This one really is. It covers pretty much everything that you need to know to be a professional cinematography - and that's a lot. It is also written for directors as well as cinematographers; the first half of the book is basically "what directors need to know about cinematography and what cinematographers need to know about directing": things like continuity, the language of the lens, and what he calls camera dynamics and so on; basically, storytelling with the camera. I've been a professional DoP for years and I learned many new things from this section of the book. The second half is more focused on the technical aspects of cinematography: lighting, exposure, special effects, color and that sort of thing, but a great deal of that is likely to be of interest to directors as well (if they are the kind of director who wants to know what the limitations and possibilities really are): things like shooting High Def, digital video, shooting green screen and special processes like bleach-bypass, cross-processing, time-slicing, etc. There's always new stuff to learn as a DoP. A lot of us these days shoot video and High Def as well as film. The author points out that, while most people think of "cinematography" as referring to film only, it actually is from the Greek terms meaning "writing with motion" and so it applies equally well to video, DV and High Def 24P (all of which are covered here). Except for one chapter everthing in this book applies as much to video, DV and HD as it does to film. Like most cinematographers and directors, I have a huge library of books about lighting and cinematography, some good, some bad; there is no doubt in my mind that this one is going to be considered the definitive book on cinematography and storytelling with the camera. I would reccommend this book for gaffers and AC's who want to move up to camera, working cinematographers early in their career, people who shoot video and High Def, film students and definitely for directors and directing students: this is all the stuff they don't teach you in film school.
Rating: Summary: equipment & technical guide Review: It's much technical guide more than a visual-aesthetic course about cinematography. So much equipment & technical explanations but very brief knowledge for visual language and photodirection. Anyway this is nice book. If you looking for step by step guide to shooting and directing, you better search for the books by Steven D. Katz
Rating: Summary: equipment & technical guide Review: It's much technical guide more than a visual-aesthetic course about cinematography. So much equipment & technical explanations but very brief knowledge for visual language and photodirection. Anyway this is nice book. If you looking for step by step guide to shooting and directing, you better search for the books by Steven D. Katz
Rating: Summary: Excellent overall cinematography book Review: When I first read this book, I already knew quite a bit about cinematography. This book filled in a large number of gaps in my knowledge. It did a rare thing for a cinematography book - it provided information on the actual lights that are used to create cinematic magic (HMIs, Fresnel lenses, PARs, etc.).
The author makes extensive use of computer design (Poser) to show actors, their positioning to the camera, and various lighting scenarios. Using these graphics, the book shows blocking from various angles - all very helpful to the beginning filmmaker.
The book also includes up-to-date information relating to problems faced by current filmmakers (video-to-film transfer, aspects of HD photography, processes such as ENR, etc.). While only described in overview, the explanations were clear and provide a good foundation for these moving targets.
The only topic I thought should have been covered in more detail was blue screen/green screen photography. As anyone who has done compositing with some sort of chroma key knows, the technical aspects alone are difficult. However, that's nothing compared to the problems of achieving artistic cinematography around/with these chroma key shots. It would have been great if some sense of the challenges and solutions of the cinematography of chroma keying would have been included.
Great book, though.
Dan Rahmel
Author: "Nuts and Bolts Filmmaking"
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