Coming from that world, I can attest that movies and commercials are using much much much more light than you might think to light that background and they're shooting at a deeper stop than you'd think, so therefore bright objects are less bright relatively speaking. And an Alexa can handle much more dynamic range than our GH2vks. Plus they're using fantastic pro lenses with excellent anti-halation coatings that noe of us can afford. Sorry to be so little help. Also, often enough, those headlights you see have been gelled with ND or hosed down with streaks and tips (messy! watch out!) The big guys have resources that we don't, and therefore follow the advice of the other posters who are offering simple tips like "frame out those bright sources". ... Actually, if you are using a small number of friendly cars, ND gel and streaks and tips are within the realm of possibility. If you're using streaks and tips, get comfortable with the output of the spraycan on an unimportant object. Don't hold the can too close to the glass. Press the valve with the can pointed AWAY from the glass and SWEEP the stream smoothly over the target. Mask off the surrounding car parts if you're going to see it at all well. You can wipe it off afterwards also, but that's messier. Do repeated LIGHT passes until the glass is dark enough. USe your spotmeter (if you have one) but don't point it right at the brightest part of the light; that'll always be blown out. Enjoy. .02 from the grip department
you can also try to correct a little on post masking and tracking!
davhar has the right answer to this question.
You haze the lights, you dont' do anything to the camera. That's pretty much how it's done.
So, has anyone here shot with Ultra con filters on the GH2? I am more interested in daylight exteriors (under trees/dark shadows etc) It seems that a little bit more DR could be pulled if they were used with the GH2. I'm interested in buying a couple and to be honest, Tiffen's info is not as good as I would have hoped. I've worked with them back innaday (35mm film and some super 16), but I have no idea of their limitations with dslr video.
As to the original post, my only suggestion is to try to light the actors a bit and shoot with a faster ISO.
I use Ultra Contrast filters regularly to lift the blacks just a little. It doesn't add a lot of DR but it does seem to take the very darkest material above the noise floor. You can crush the black back down to kill the noise and still retain the shadow detail. (This is becoming less necessary with the latest hacks.) I often use a UCC3 in a high contrast situation. The 5 is good for preserving some shadow detail in uncontrolled bright sunlight. A 1 or 1/2 can be helpful on a controlled set to squeeze a little more from the image.
I see a difference in the quality of the graded footage, but it is subtle. But it can make the difference between no shadow detail or having a lot of noise in your blacks.
anyone tried the Formatt lowcon filters? Better or worse then the Tiffens?
Just as @airboxlights says, lights on studio movies and tv have a buttload of gel on them. I'm a precision driver in LA and the grip department comes by and uses reg ND or sometimes a yellow gel to take down our lights and you can stand right in front of them and stare at them with hurting your eyes. They take down the level that much. Pretty much every other light that is in the background or away from the action is the same. BTW, the first video looked pretty damn good to me in regards to lens flare.
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