It doesn't have to be, it just has to look beautiful to watch and it's getting there. Digital does not need to have grain like film to look beautiful, but it does need good latitude and high resolution. The stuff I've seen from the RED camera beats a lot of stuff I've seen from many film shot productions.etimh wrote:Digital will NEVER "be" like film--we all know the ontological arguments for this.
Digital is it's own animal the same way film is. We still shoot super 8 because it's different, can look good when done right and it's relatively cheap. That same argument could be made for digital, it's different, can look good and it can be cheap. Of course it all depends on what is shot , how it's shot and by whom. I've seen many a super 8 film, 16mm & 35mm that looked awful and unwatchable, I won't name names, the same goes for digital. I've seen Digital stuff that looks wonderful and super 8 too. It also depends on your subject matter and whether film or digital would suit it better.
Arguments that Digital is inferior to Film because you can't shoot Digital using the same techniques as Film are fallacious and dumb, they're 2 different things, so they acquire different approaches.