Alex wrote:
The market you are underestimating is the the secondary camera market.
Meaning the production company has a primary camera for their shoot, but might be intrigued at a second option for their shoot.
They can do that now.
Alex wrote:Getting behind schedule, use the Super-8 camera to shoot insert shots while the main camera keeps on it's schedule.
If the main footage is 35mm or Super 16mm, it will never happen, even if you made the new Super 8 camera available for free, unless they specifically want the super 8 look and it's already been done with existing cameras.
Alex wrote:
Need some crazy wild POV shots, shoot it with the Super-8 camera.
And you need a new super 8 camera to do that? Better tell Oliver Stone to trash all the Natural Born Killers footage he shot with his used Beaulieu! How many productions will demand a new camera enough times to bring the price within reach of the majority of super 8 users?
Alex wrote:Is there a scene that probably won't be in the movie but the producers aren't sure as it not crucial to the story, shoot it in 8 and save some money.
If the scene isn't needed, then they won't be saving money since the real cost has nothing to do with film and processing and everything to do with labor, which will cost the same (if not more) if shooting in super 8. Shooting material that isn't needed is a waste, regardless of format used.
Alex wrote:Are you a producer about to give a million bucks to a production company, give the $15,000 grand first and a new Super-8 camera and see if they make a competent scene BEFORE committing a big budget to a feature.
I've got a better idea: Why not provide them with the actual format they'll be working in to see if they can actually handle a real budget before giving them a big feature project? I would hate to tie a prospective director's hands with super 8 and expect to see a product indicative of their real potential as a feature film director shooting in 35mm. Makes zero sense. That's like making A.J. Foyt do qualifying laps on a tricycle before handing him the keys to a Hemi.
Alex wrote:Don't forget that the reversal stocks are also available, and grainwise
should cut in with higher ASA stock 16mm.
No, they won't. Reversal and neg look totally different. Try shooting both, cut them together and see for yourself. Again, if the super 8 look is needed, it can already be accomplised with existing cameras for a lot less.
Alex wrote:I guess the poor super-8 filmmaker is poorer than the mini-dv videomaker. Because decent three-chip mini dv camcorders still cost into the thousands. Perhaps half of the "poor" super-8 filmmakers are middle aged and probably have spendable income.
You're making an assumption that for every poor super 8 film maker, there is a counterpart miniDV shooter that owns a three chip camera. The opposite is obviously true. For every poor super 8 film maker, I'll bet there are hundreds of equally poor single chip miniDV producers that are pleased as punch with what they are producing because their friends and relatives all tell them its all terrific.
YOUR ideas about quality and the need for a more sophisticated camera are not the majority's, whether shooting in super 8 or miniDV. Quality has nothing to do with it. Cost is everything to these people until they get to a point where the format is holding them back, then it no longer matters because they'll either move up to 16mm or a better video camera. The world doesn't need, nor will it support, a "better" single chip miniDV or super 8 camera if that camera is too expensive.
Alex wrote:
It's not fair to label all super-8 filmmakers as poor
I've never seen a rich one, other than Neil Young, and he hardly chose the most expensive, feature laden super 8 camera in the world to shoot his feature on. Instead, he shot at 18fps on a basic home movie camera. You can rest assured Niel Young could have afforded better, and better ones were available to him for the asking. You think that Pro8mm wouldn't have provided him with cameras for free just for promotional considerations?
Alex wrote:I'm sure many super 8 filmmakers would part (sell) with two of their better super-8 cameras and 500-700 dollars to get a new super-8 camera that offered previously unnattainable features.
But this is the Catch-22 that you keep avoiding: The price won't drop to only $500-$700 until thousands of super 8 users buy the thing at a more realistic selling price of about $2000+. That is simply not going to happen.
Roger