/PRNewswire/ In its latest sale for a prominent North American production rental company, Tiger Group will be staging a timed online auction on August 24.
Canon Creative Studio Presents: Sundance 2021 Standouts - Part 1
Examining a selection of the recent festival’s most interesting features, with an eye toward outstanding camerawork.
At top, from the feature Coda, which won multiple awards at Sundance this year.
Going mostly virtual for the first time, the 2021 Sundance Film Festival featured fewer movies than usual (73) but attracted an audience 2.7 times larger than its typical 11-day Utah edition, according to festival reps.
Though the excitement of unveiling new work in front of a live audience was a rare privilege tickets for theatrical presentations were sold at just a few venues in Park City and in select cities around the United States there was no dearth of noteworthy films. Here are a few of them, selected for their standout cinematography.
How I Shot That: The Cameras and Cinematography Behind Sundance’s Documentary Films IndieWire 2/1/2021
When choosing cameras and lenses, nonfiction filmmakers are not only guided by the look, feel, and cinematic language they want to employ, but also by what their production demands and resources allow. Which is why in answering the question of why they picked the gear they used to shoot their Sundance nonfiction feature premieres, this year’s crop of cinematographers and directors also tell us how they shot their movies the challenges and choices, as well as their cinematic styles.
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“Ailey”
Lens: Canon CN-E Cine primes; CN-E30-105mm zoom & L-series lenses.