Hollywood's color madness

With the invention of digital color-grading, the practice of tweaking the palette of films in post-production has exploded. So is the future all orange and teal?

You might have noticed a color revolution in cinema recently, because Hollywood seems to gave gone teal-and-orange crazy. Studio films from Hot Tub Time Machine to Iron Man 2 have used the combination, with the greenish-blue teal forming a backdrop and the orange (which includes flesh tones) in the foreground. The film blogger Todd Miro has suggested it's all down to the colors being complementary: "Anyone who has ever taken Color Theory 101 knows that if you take two complementary colors and put them next to each other, they will 'pop', and sometimes even vibrate," he wrote, posting dozens of stills from the year's big movies, united by the prevalence of teal and orange.

 

Back in the day, if you wanted your movie to have an artistic, stylish color palette, you had to go through the pain in the ass process of using filters on your lights and camera, or get the footage exposed just the right way. It was expensive, it was difficult and it was limited to people who really knew what they were doing. So if someone took the trouble, it meant they had a good reason, dammit.


It's no conspiracy, though, says Stefan Sonnenfeld, a leading Hollywood colourist who worked on the Transformers films (Miro counts them among the main offenders). "There's no specific colour decision-making process where we sit in a room and say, 'We're only going to use complementary colors to try and move the audience in a particular direction – and only use those combinations,'" he says. "Every film has its own look. We are always pushing our tools and our creative capabilities on every project."

 

"Color-grading is an absolute necessity now," says Sonnenfeld, "Because there are so many different formats that are being used, from film stock to digital capture, semi-professional to consumer cameras. Blending all that stuff and having it work cohesively is a very important part of the process."

 

Digital Colorization

 

The big change that digitization made was it made much easier to apply a single color scheme to a bunch of different scenes at once. The more of a movie you can make look good with a single scheme, the less work you have to do. Also, as filmmakers are bringing many different film formats together in a single movie, applying a uniform color scheme helps tie them together.

One way to figure out what will look good is to figure out what the common denominator is in the majority of your scenes. And it turns out that actors are in most scenes. And actors are usually human. And humans are orange, at least sort of!

Most skin tones fall somewhere between pale peach and dark, dark brown, leaving them squarely in the orange segment of any color wheel. Blue and cyan are squarely on the opposite side of the wheel.

It seems plausible that, regardless of whether or not it has its origins in color theory, orange-and-blue has now reached the level of “convention.” For better or for worse, coloring your movie this way makes it really look like a movie.


But do colorists just execute directors' instructions, or are they artists in their own right? The lines have to be drawn on each job, and sometimes the colorists are forced to call the shots. As color grading technology continues to improve, we might see more filmmakers branch out into more novel palettes. Until then, keep an eye out for more orange and more blue.

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Free Color Grading Tools

DaVinci Resolve Lite

“DaVinci Resolve Lite includes all the same high quality processing of the full DaVinci Resolve. However it limits projects to UHD resolutions or less, a single processing GPU and a single RED Rocket card.” 

Some limits:

1) You can only work in 4K or lower resolution
2) Only process on a single GPU and a single Red Rocket Card
3) No Stereo 3D support
4) No noise reduction, power mastering, remote grading and sharing

Red Giant Colorista Free

Colorista is an amazing product from the prolific mad genius of  rebel filmmaker, Stu Maschwitz. When it was released it was, quite simply, the three-way color corrector that Adobe forgot to build in After Effects. It had primary and secondary color grading tools, skin tools, masking tools and it lived right there in the plug-in window.

The app has matured into an amazingly powerful color finishing tool that lives in most NLEs and After Effects as a plug-in, it’s called Colorista II and it’s US$199.

Red Giant released a free version of the app called “Colorista Free” that has just the three way color correction tool and numeric inputs. But when you combine this with the built-in tracking masks in Adobe Premiere CC 2014, you get a really stable, powerful primary and secondary color correction tool for free.

 

Kinemax 6k

KineMAX is capable of Capturing and Recording 6K RAW without external recorder. KineMAX is honoured as one of three cinema camera models in this planet. 6K RAW is recorded as KineRAW(.krw) codec which is compressed lossless RAW format developed by Kinefinity. For 4K and lower resolution, it can record Uncompressed CinemaDNG; for 3K and lower resolution, it can record Cineform RAW which is easy to be edited and graded in mainstream DI software. 6K RAW capturing and recording leaves very large room for reframing, trimming, and CG, especially for 4K delivery. At same time, it also features capturing and recording 6K, 4K, 3K, 2K, 1080p in both S35mm frame and crop mode: that means KineMAX can cover from 1080p to 6K, every mainstream resolution in one camera. KineMAX may be the most compact and powerful cinema camera for 6K&4K RAW capturing and recording now.

KEY TECHNICAL FEATURES :

16 f-stops 
KineRAW codec 
100fps SLOW-MO 
4K 4:3 Anamorphic 
Super 35mm
KineStation 
Built-in Cineform RAW 
NEW LOCK-TYPE EF/F MOUNT
KineMOUNT Interchangeable Mount 
CinemaDNG  
3G SDI and HD Digital Display  
M4/3 and S16mm  
LIGHT-WEIGHT AND COMPACT 

PRICE $8000.00 

Davinci Resolve 12 Getting New Editing Features – NAB 2015

Blackmagic Design announced Davinci Resolve 12 here at NAB this week. This new version includes 80 new features and significantly expands its video editing capabilities.

The new update will include significant improvements in the user interface, enhanced video editing including multi-cam, new media management tools including metadata filtering and smart bins, brand new professional audio engine with support for VST/AU plugins, 3D keyer, a new 3D perspective tracker, enhanced curve editing, and more.

Resolve 12 is planned for a July release for $995, but current users can upgrade for free.

New Editing Features:

  • New Interface
  • Metadata filtering
  • Multicam Editing
  • Improved trimming
  • Nesting timelines
  • On-screen controls for motion graphics
  • Customizable transitions with curves editor
  • Real-time audio mixing using recordable fader moves
  • VST/AU plugins
  • Export to Avid Pro Tools
  • Improved media management

Other Features

  • Metadata filtering
  • Enhanced 3D tracker
  • New 3D keyer

Cost

  • Full Version: $995 for new users (free upgrade for current users)
  • Resolve Lite: Free