luuude wrote:What is your setup carl? VERY nice, crips images you got there.Ludvig
Thanks Ludvig. The transfer was done in Italy by Roberto Pirodda, using his own frame by frame setup, with a 2.5K 3 chip camera. The frames were saved as TIFFs. The digital processing is done my end using software I've been writing over the last year (when I get a chance). The code is written in C++, using a software development kit called
Qt. I also test and use code developed for more scientific applications such as medical imaging (eg. CAT scan visualisation)
I'm a big fan of the realist filmmakers, and their theories (Andre Bazin etc). I'm interested in working within (or pushing) that tradition in the digital age. The realist theory I'm pursuing has it's origin in Ancient Stoic philosophy. Plato's parable of the cave, in which cave dwellers believe the shadows on the wall are real, is one of the oldest critiques of that theory. In Stoic theory (against which Plato is arguing) the shadows on the cave wall
are real - a reality in their own right. A fundamental reality beyond which, or outside of which (ie. outside the cave) there is no other reality. Absurd as that might sound there is some really interesting ideas in it. It's the complete opposite of the platonism otherwise informing The Matrix, Dark City, and The Truman Show. In Stoic philosophy there is no other reality, such as aliens, or reality tv show producers, who are otherwise creating the shadows.
The philosopher, Deleuze, in his Cinema books, pushes Stoic philosophy to suggest a world outside the cave that is not much different from the world inside the cave - just a bigger cave. And a bigger image. And a bigger consciousness co-existant with such. Or something like that.
In platonism the world outside the cave is constituted very differently - the outside becomes a template, or formula for what is otherwise inside the cave. The equations of computer generated images can be regarded as platonic in this regard. The fundamental nature of the universe, not as an image, but as a formula for generating the images. The Stoics see it the other way around - the image as a fundamental reality, and the formulas being a secondary function (or echo) of those images.
Now while I'm using formulas and equations, it's in a way that is the opposite of platonic realism. Instead of a mathematical universe which would otherwise produce an image, one takes the images as already a reality in their own right, and use a kind of inside-out maths (statistics) to focus the bigger image. Now in the test I've only reconstructed what Deleuze would call a "photo-de-pose". This is the first type of image that Deleuze identifies in the Cinema books. It corresponds to classical philosophy. The posed image. But here it is reverse engineered from a motion picture film. The next step is to reincorporate that classical image (the posed or reposed) back into the "snapshot", and reconstitute the motion otherwise lost (as motion blur) in the creation of this particular classical image.
Carl