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W**S
Bravo, Mr. Brown!
This is a true update of a true classic performed by a true professional and teacher. The first edition has been my creative companion for several years. It has been my go-to resource for reinforcing the basics, and serves as a yardstick to measure my current level of knowledge. The first time I read it (one sitting, while waiting at LAX) I understood some stuff, but it did set my course toward cinematographer, and established the framework for the stuff I had to learn and experience in order to craft stunning images that tell compeling stories. I'm still working on that; and the worn, marked-up pages are falling out of my first edition.Second edition is not simply an update to encompass more of digital cinematography. Many of the explanations and descriptions have been refined, and do a superior job of helping one to grasp the concepts.There are a few typos and grammar gotchas and oversights bla, bla, bla. Who cares? The content is what counts, and the content is superb.No matter what the occupation (this is my fifth career), the devil IS in the details - usually boiling down to basics. We generally don't screw up the fancy stuff, it's usually overlooking something basic that causes screw-ups. Blain Brown attempts and succeeds in helping the reader build a solid foundation of basic cinematographic knowledge and toolsets. He provides the foundation, it's up to us to build the structure. It's what a good teacher does, and it's why I usually re-read cover-to-cover once a year or so.It's a good book for beginners even though it's a little advanced. It takes a lot of lighting and shooting and time in the trenches to figure all this stuff out. There will be "oh yeah" moments when you discover something and it clicks with something you read before.For the intermediate level, it's a perfect text and reference.For advanced practitioners? I guess that depends on that person's needs. To me, "advanced" is ASC members and others at that level of professional expertise. Folks at that level mostly seem to be down to earth, still learning, and solidly grounded in the basics.Yeah, I think this book is great! I would recommend it to anyone who is serious about visual storytelling at any level. Thank you, Mr. Brown, for caring enought to share, to inform, and to inspire.
B**K
Solid study on cinematography and serves as a baseline for what Directors and DP's need to know.
Without getting into too much of a song and dance about how this book has impacted me, I feel it necessary to give a little background on myself in hopes of putting this book into better perspective for potential buyers. For the past year and a half I've decided to dedicate my life to pursuing a career in filmmaking. This has all been self-taught, reading 19 books, making multiple short films, corporate videos, working and making money in both my creative and business endeavors as a freelancer of sorts. I have read books on overall film production, directing, editing, making cinematic images, corporate videography, etc. I consider myself a Writer & Director, but I have also recently been doing work in cinematography. As a filmmaker you have to have a huge amount of respect for what goes into crafting the film image. This book gives a solid foundation for how important the cinematographer is, not only from a cinematographer perspective but also from an overall filmmaking perspective. So if you're likely in a similar position as me in trying to better yourself as a filmmaker, this book will undoubtedly be of use to you. If you're someone who wants to have a career solely as a cinematographer, you'll need this book in addition to the many more specialized books on lighting, camera operating, lenses, post-production color grading and correcting, etc to develop your abilities. So in conclusion, I highly recommend this book as a solid theory and practice-oriented look at the process of cinematography and the tools necessary to make cinematic images.
A**R
Pretty good intro to cinematography book
Pictures are key, and they use a lot of good images to illustrate and create a kind of "encyclopedia" of basic cinematographic concepts and terms. Enjoyed the book, but probably the only way I'm going to learn cinematography is to practice with a camera.
E**R
I loved it.
It was so cheap and helped me so much in filmmaking. I loved it. Some sections of it were not as helpful as others, but in all its a really helpful resource.I ordered this and a couple other filmmaking books. I liked this one the best. The "DSLR Cinema: Crafting the Film Look with Video" was not helpful AT ALL. The author just talked and talked about the gear and about philip bloom. It was also very misleading, and implied that you needed everything in the book to make a film, when all you really need is a camera and and idea.I've gotten more useful information from random videos on youtube than in that book, about both gear and filmmaking on a budget on DSLRS. This book actually talked about filmmaking, and wasn't just a useless catalog of photography gear.You can tell from the other reviews that this is a great book. Buy it.DSLR Cinema: Crafting the Film Look with Video - I found this not useful at all. For 20 bucks, it's very cheap, but it doesn't even come near the amount of useful information this has in it. It talks much more about the gear you'll need than actually using it. (if that made sense)Anyways, this is a great book and I'd recommend it to anyone interested in filmmaking.
L**E
One book that will make cinematography much easier to understand
As a 2d/3d Artist constantly creating content , images and dealing with cameras in both 2d plane and 3d virtual environment creation, I was always concern about having the right framing to tell the right story and having the right composition. Since I bought this book , it gave me a totally new perspective what to look forward in creating believable and interesting camera composition for my virtual creations. Now I am able to understand more and have a reference book to go back in , in moments of doubt. This is a well written book that is very easy to understand and relate to, even if you are totally new to the world of cinematography. A must have for both the creative environment shot design artist, the movie director, and anything inbetween. Even architectural visualisation could benefit from it.
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