Australian Cinematographer Abraham Joffe chose the Atomos Shogun monitor recorders with their daylight-viewable high brightness screens for his latest project which involved filming big cats in Kenya.
Australian Cinematographer Abraham Joffe chose the Atomos Shogun monitor recorders with their daylight-viewable high brightness screens for his latest project which involved filming big cats in Kenya. Every Flame and Inferno series recorder has a seven-inch display with an incredible 1500 nits of brightness.
When we are out here in the African bush we are often in pretty strong light. Even without a hood I can see whats going on the screen, Joffe enthuses.
Atomos is the best screen on the market in my opinion and its a piece of kit that would stay in my bag wherever I go around the world.
Another key feature for him is the peaking function: Getting focus is critical, so the ability to have a really strong peaking mode with different colours is fantastic, he says.
Its so good, in fact, that his team often just rely on the screen, not even looking at the cameras viewfinder, he adds.
In addition to peaking, the recorders also have the ability to magnify the image to check focus if you prefer.
Lookup tables, or LUTs as they are known, have become a common way of previewing what your finished footage will appear like when graded with different looks. Joffe likes to record as flat as possible so appreciates the ability to apply a LUT, which gives you a very good control over your exposure.
The Atomos Inferno and Flame series have a bank where up to eight LUTs can be preloaded for rapid preview. Hundreds more can be loaded at any time if placed on the SSD.
Incredible shots like these demand the highest quality recording, something that Joffe is acutely aware of: The most important feature for me is the recording capabilities. So, we shoot on a variety of different cameras and we like to shoot in 4K at least. We run 4K into these screens every single day.
He makes full use of the higher quality recording offered by the Shogun recorder: I record in a ProRes 4:2:2 10-bit stream and it records to SSD. What I love about the SSDs is that they are relatively inexpensive and super-fast so we can dump the footage back at camp and it offloads very, very quickly, he says. One reason Joffe favours SSDs over proprietary media is that his team can pack a lot of them: We are never without data.
Being able to play back recorded material instantly to show directors, producers and crew is also a key attraction of the Atomos devices for Joffe.
It can be a very bonding and motivating experience to look at footage straight after its shot, he explains.
That is an added feature that is invaluable to me now.
The recent price drop for the Atomos Flame and Inferno series monitor recorders makes them even more affordable to filmmakers who want to achieve the best possible results from their cameras – you can now get a 4K recorder for the cost of a HD product.
The 4K monitor recorder range starts at $795 (ex local taxes):
- The Ninja Flame offers HDR monitoring and 4K ProRes recording for popular cameras with HDMI outputs like the Sony a7s, a7sII, a7rII and a6500.
- Ninja Inferno is the perfect match for the Panasonic GH5 and other 4K 60 capable HDMI equipped cameras. It offers 10-bit precision direct to ProRes at the higher 60 fps frame rate.
- Shogun Flame offers affordable 4K recording over SDI and HDR monitoring from a wide range of professional cameras. FS-RAW from selected Sony cameras (with appropriate FS-RAW upgrade or expansion pack) is also supported up to 2K 120P.
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The flagship Shogun Inferno offers Quadlink SDI connections for cameras like the Sony F55 and Varicam LT. It can also do CDNG RAW and RAW-to-ProRes recording when combined with selected Panasonic Varicam and Sony FS cameras (again with appropriate FS-RAW upgrade or expansion pack). With the Sony FS5 with FS-RAW upgrade you can now even achieve 4K 120fps RAW-to-ProRes in a burst.