Analog Filmmaking Archives - Filmmakers Academy Filmmakers Academy Tue, 06 Jan 2026 22:50:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-Filmmakers-Academy-ico-32x32.png Analog Filmmaking Archives - Filmmakers Academy 32 32 How to Extend “Magic Hour” on Motion Picture Film https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-magic-hour-motion-picture/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 22:48:24 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107228 Every filmmaker loves “Magic Hour.” That fleeting window just after sunset provides the most flattering, ethereal light known to cinema. But when you are shooting on film, this time of day is terrifying. As the sun dips below the horizon, your light levels plummet by the second. On a digital camera, you might just crank […]

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Every filmmaker loves “Magic Hour.” That fleeting window just after sunset provides the most flattering, ethereal light known to cinema. But when you are shooting on film, this time of day is terrifying. As the sun dips below the horizon, your light levels plummet by the second. On a digital camera, you might just crank the ISO. On film, you have to be smarter.

In this excerpt from the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass, we extend a 15-minute window of twilight into a 40-minute shoot.

(Watch the first 6 minutes of Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass for free.)

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What You Will Learn in This Article

  • The “Twilight Filter Stack”: Why combining an 85 and 81EF filter is essential to correct the extreme 8800K blue shift of twilight on tungsten film.
  • How to Double Your Shooting Window: A location scouting strategy (using buildings/mountains) that turns a fleeting 15-minute “magic hour” into a 40-minute shoot.
  • The “West-First” Rule: The critical shooting order you must follow to ensure your talent remains lit by the fading sky for as long as possible.
  • Why 500T is the King of Dusk: Why choosing high-speed tungsten stock (Kodak 5219) is the secret weapon for seeing into the dark outdoors.
  • Reflector Strategy: When and why to switch from white bounce to silver reflectors to maintain eye light as ambient levels drop.

VIDEO LESSON EXCERPT: HOW TO EXTEND MAGIC HOUR

THE CHALLENGE: THE BLUE SHIFT

When the sun sets, the color temperature of the world shifts dramatically. The warm sun disappears, and you are left with the ambient light of the sky, which skyrockets to a very cold 8800 Kelvin or higher.

If you are shooting on standard daylight film, your footage will look aggressively, unnaturally blue. If you are shooting on tungsten film (which expects orange light), it will look even bluer.

Shane Hurlbut, ASC - Tungsten Film Stock

  1. THE FILM STOCK STRATEGY (500T)

To combat the dropping light levels, we need speed. I always choose the highest speed stock available: Kodak Vision3 500T (5219).

Why 500T? 

“T” stands for Tungsten (3200K). This stock is designed for indoor artificial light. This seems counterintuitive for an outdoor shoot, but 500T is the most sensitive stock Kodak makes. We need that sensitivity to see into the dark.

  1. THE FILTER STACK (THE “WARM-UP”)

Because we are shooting Tungsten film outdoors, we need to correct the color temperature.

1.  85 Filter This is our baseline correction. It converts the outdoor light to match the tungsten film.
2. 81EF Filter This is our “secret sauce” for twilight. Since the ambient sky light is so cold (8800K), a standard 85 filter isn’t enough; the image would still feel cold. The 81EF adds an extra layer of warmth (about 0.7 stops worth).

The Exposure Formula

With these filters in place, we are losing light. To compensate, I rate my light meter to 160 ISO (overexposing the 500T stock by roughly 2/3 of a stop) at 24 fps. This ensures a thick negative that captures rich color even as the light fades.

  1. EXTENDING TIME WITH GEOGRAPHY

Most filmmakers wait for the sun to hit the horizon to start their “magic hour” clock. That gives you 15 minutes, tops.

Pro Tip: Use buildings, mountains and trees to extend twilight magic hour (dusk)

PRO TIP: Block the sun early. Find a location with a large building, a mountain range, or a dense tree line to the West. Position your talent in the shadow of this object while the sun is still up.

By using a building to block the sun, we create “artificial dusk” 20 minutes before actual sunset. This simple location choice doubles our shooting window, giving us 40 minutes of usable soft light instead of 20.

  1. THE SILVER BULLET (REFLECTORS)

As the light levels drop, a white bounce board becomes useless. It simply doesn’t have the punch to reflect the weak ambient light.

Pro Tip: While filming at dusk (twilight), use silver bounce

Switch to Silver.

We bring in a Silver Reflector (or shiny board) to catch the remaining blue sky ambiance and redirect it into the talent’s eyes.

  1. THE “WEST-FIRST” SHOOTING ORDER

This is the most critical logistical rule of twilight photography. You must shoot your coverage in a specific order to survive the fading light.

Shoot WEST First (Camera facing East).

Why? Because the “source” of your light is the setting sun in the West (behind the camera). The Western sky is the brightest thing in the universe right now.

Shot 1 (Facing East) The hot Western sky is behind the camera, acting as a massive softbox illuminating the talent’s face. You get a beautiful reading (e.g., f/2.5).
Shot 2 (Facing West) Once the light drops further, then you turn around and shoot toward the sunset. Even though the subject is now backlit and darker (e.g., f/1.5), you have the bright, colorful twilight sky in the background to create a silhouette or moody separation.

If you shoot the silhouette first, by the time you turn around to shoot the face, the “softbox” in the Western sky will be gone, and your actor will be in the dark.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

Shooting motion picture film at twilight is all about logistics. By choosing the fast 500T stock, stacking warming filters, blocking the sun early, and shooting West-first, you can squeeze every photon out of the day.

UNLOCK THE FULL MASTERCLASS

Understanding filters is just one piece of the puzzle. To truly shoot motion picture film, you need to master the light meter, understand stock personalities, and know how to manipulate the chemical process itself.

In the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass, Shane Hurlbut, ASC takes you through every step of this journey.

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The “Tony Scott” Look: ND & Color Grads https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-tony-scott-nd-grad-filters/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 02:16:52 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107138 In the digital age, we have become accustomed to fixing exposure problems in the color grading suite. If a sky is too bright, we simply draw a Power Window, track it, and bring down the highlights. But when you are shooting on film — or even pushing a digital sensor to its limits in a […]

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In the digital age, we have become accustomed to fixing exposure problems in the color grading suite. If a sky is too bright, we simply draw a Power Window, track it, and bring down the highlights.

But when you are shooting on film — or even pushing a digital sensor to its limits in a backlit scenario — relying on post-production can be a fatal mistake. If you blow out the clouds on your negative, that detail is gone forever. It’s clipped. There is nothing to bring back.

To solve this problem in-camera, we turn to one of the most powerful tools in the analog cinematographer’s kit: Graduated Filters (Grads).

(This article is a deep dive into a lesson from the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass. Learn how to control contrast without a monitor in the full course!)

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What You Will Learn in This Article

  • The “Tony Scott” Aesthetic: How the legendary director used Hard Grads (specifically the “Tobacco” filter) to create his signature high-contrast, dramatic skies.
  • Hard vs. Soft Grads: The key differences between these two filter types and the specific scenarios (horizons vs. uneven terrain) that call for each.
  • The Geared Matte Box Technique: A step-by-step breakdown of how an operator and AC work together to “hide” a grad filter during a tilt shot.
  • Why Digital Still Needs Glass: Why relying on Power Windows isn’t enough when shooting in high-contrast, backlit environments where sensor clipping is a risk.

THE “GRAD MEISTER”: TONY SCOTT

If there was one filmmaker who defined the use of graduated filters, it was Tony Scott. From Top Gun to Man on Fire, he was the “Grad Meister.” He didn’t just use them to balance exposure; he used them aggressively to paint the frame with color and contrast. He was experimental and fearless — he didn’t care if you saw the filter line during a pan or a tilt. For him, the artifact was part of the aesthetic.

While you may not want to be as extreme as Tony Scott in every film, understanding the tools he mastered is essential for controlling exposure on celluloid.

1. THE HARD GRAD: PRECISION CONTROL

Chocolate grad filter on horizon shot in Days of Thunder - Tony Scott

The first type of graduated filter is the Hard Grad. As the name suggests, this filter has a sharp, defined transition line between the clear glass and the tinted (ND or Color) section.

The Look: 

It creates a hard edge in exposure. You can clearly see where the effect starts and stops.

The Tony Scott Signature: 

Tony’s favorite was the “Tobacco” Hard Grad filter (seen famously in Top Gun). It turned boring white skies into a rich, menacing orange-brown, adding immediate drama and heat to the image.

WHEN TO USE IT

Defined Horizons When you have a distinct, flat horizon line, such as in an ocean scene or a desert.
Cityscapes When you have a row of buildings that are all roughly the same height.
Flat Hillsides Where there isn’t much undulation to reveal the straight line of the filter.

 

2. THE SOFT GRAD: SEAMLESS BLENDING

Tony Scott Tobacco Grad - Soft Grad example

If the horizon is uneven or you need a more subtle touch, you turn to the Soft Grad.

The Look: 

This filter features a very gradual, feathered transition from clear to dense. There is no harsh line. Instead, the tint slowly “dives” into the deeper tones of the image.

The Benefit: 

It is much easier to hide. It allows you to darken a bright sky without darkening the top of a mountain, a tree, or an actor’s head that might cross into the upper part of the frame.

WHEN TO USE IT

Uneven Terrain Mountains, forests, or city streets with varying building heights.
Dynamic Shots When the camera is moving, and a hard line would be too obvious.

 

3. THE “BEAUTIFUL DANCE”: THE GEARED MATTE BOX

Shane Hurlbut places filter into camera matte box

Using a grad filter on a “lock-off” (static) shot is easy: you slide the filter down until the line sits on the horizon, and you leave it.

But what happens if you need to tilt?

If you tilt the camera up without adjusting the filter, the dark part of the grad will remain static in the matte box, effectively wiping down over your subject’s face or the middle of the frame. It looks like a mistake.

To solve this, you need a Geared Matte Box and a skilled 1st AC.

THE TECHNIQUE

6×6 Filters We use larger 6×6 glass filters (instead of the standard 4×5.65) to give us a more vertical range of travel.
The Gear The filter tray has a gear track on the side.
The Whip The AC attaches a long focus whip to the filter tray gear.
The Dance As the operator tilts the camera up, the AC must simultaneously crank the whip to raise the filter tray.

It is a synchronized performance. The goal is to keep the transition line of the grad “pinned” to the horizon in the image, even as the camera moves physically. When done correctly, the audience never knows a filter was used. They just see a perfectly exposed sky and a perfectly exposed subject.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

Digital sensors have incredible latitude, but they still clip. Film has incredible highlight retention, but it still needs help to see into the shadows. Graduated filters bridge that gap. Whether you are using a Tobacco Hard Grad to channel Tony Scott or a Soft ND Grad to save a cloud formation, these pieces of glass allow you to paint the image before the light ever hits the emulsion.

Ready to Master the Analog Workflow?

Understanding filters is just one piece of the puzzle. To truly shoot film, you need to master the light meter, understand stock personalities, and know how to manipulate the chemical process itself.

In the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass, Shane Hurlbut, ASC takes you through every step of this journey.

YOU CAN ACCESS THE FULL MASTERCLASS IN TWO WAYS

BECOME A PREMIUM ANNUAL MEMBER Get unlimited access to this masterclass, plus our entire library of hundreds of courses, monthly live coaching, and an exclusive community of filmmakers.
A LA CARTE PURCHASE Buy the standalone masterclass for a one-time fee of $129.99 and own it forever.

Forget “fast.” Choose timeless. Master the process.

This masterclass was produced in collaboration with Kodak. 

Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass - CTA Banner

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Super 8 Film vs. 16mm Film vs. 35mm Film https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-super-8-16mm-film-35mm-film/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 23:34:54 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107133 In the digital world, we often talk about sensors in terms of technical specs: resolution, dynamic range, and low-light sensitivity. But when you shoot on celluloid, you are selecting a capture format as much as you are selecting a personality. The gauge you choose — Super 8, 16mm, or 35mm — acts as a subconscious […]

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In the digital world, we often talk about sensors in terms of technical specs: resolution, dynamic range, and low-light sensitivity. But when you shoot on celluloid, you are selecting a capture format as much as you are selecting a personality. The gauge you choose — Super 8, 16mm, or 35mm — acts as a subconscious narrator, instantly signaling to the audience how they should feel about the images on screen. 

Are you telling a story of fragmented memory? 

The chunky grain of Super 8 might be your tool. 

Maybe you’re crafting a gritty, cinema verité drama. 

The texture of 16mm is unmatched. 

Or, are you painting a sweeping epic? 

The pristine resolution of 35mm is the gold standard.

Not all film is created equal. In this guide, we break down the “Big Three” formats, comparing their aesthetics, workflows, and budgets to help you match the gauge to your story’s emotional needs.

(This article complements our Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass. To learn the technical science of exposing these stocks, click the banner below!)

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What You Will Learn in This Article

  • The distinctive aesthetic personalities of Super 8, 16mm, and 35mm film, from nostalgic dreamscapes to pristine epics.
  • How grain structure and aspect ratio differ across formats and influence the audience’s emotional response.
  • A breakdown of the workflow and equipment required for each gauge, including popular camera models like the Arriflex SR3 and Canon 814.
  • Budgetary realities: A comparative look at the costs of stock, processing, and scanning for indie versus studio productions.
  • When to choose each format based on your narrative goals, visual style, and production constraints.

1. SUPER 8: THE DREAMSCAPE

Super 8 - Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (Season 1, Episode 9) | HBO

Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (Season 1, Episode 9) | HBO

  • The Aesthetic: Nostalgia, Memory, Intimacy, Chaos. 
  • The Grain: Heavy, pronounced, and soft. 
  • The Aspect Ratio: Typically 1.33:1 (4:3), though modern scans can crop to 16:9. 

Super 8 is the gateway drug of analog filmmaking. Originally introduced by Kodak in 1965 for the home movie market, it has evolved into a beloved aesthetic for music videos, dream sequences, and flashbacks. Because the negative is tiny (about 8mm wide with a single perforation), the image has a low resolution that feels impressionistic rather than realistic.

Why Choose Super 8? 

Choose Super 8 when you want to evoke a sense of the past or a fleeting memory. It breaks the “fourth wall” of perfection and feels handmade. It is imperfect, jittery, and deeply emotional.

THE WORKFLOW & COST

CAMERAS Highly accessible. You can find decent cameras (Canon 814/1014, Beaulieu) on eBay or through specialty houses like Pro8mm.
STOCK Comes in convenient 50-foot cartridges (approx. 2.5 to 3 minutes of footage at 24fps).
BUDGET This is the most affordable entry point. The camera costs are low, and the “all-in” bundles (stock + process + scan) offered by many labs make the logistics simple for first-time users.

2. 16MM / SUPER 16: THE INDIE SPIRIT

Carol Christmas composition department store

Carol (The Weinstein Company)

  • The Aesthetic: Grit, Realism, Texture, “The New Hollywood.” 
  • The Grain: Visible and organic, but sharp enough for theatrical projection. 
  • The Aspect Ratio: Standard 16mm is 1.37:1. Super 16 (single perf) is 1.66:1, easily croppable to 1.85:1 or 16:9.

If Super 8 is a memory, 16mm is a documentary. Historically used for news gathering and independent cinema (think Clerks, Pi, or The Texas Chain Saw Massacre), 16mm strikes the perfect balance between economy and quality. In recent years, it has seen a massive resurgence in high-end productions like Carol, Black Swan, The Fabelmans, and HBO’s Euphoria.

Why Choose 16mm? 

Choose 16mm (specifically Super 16) when you want a cinematic look that feels grounded and textured. It creates a psychological closeness to the characters. It feels “lived-in.” And it separates the audience from the hyper-reality of digital 4K, providing a layer of artistic abstraction without sacrificing detail.

THE WORKFLOW & COST

CAMERAS Industry workhorses like the Arriflex 416, Arri SR3, or Aaton XTR Prod. These are professional tools that require a skilled AC to load.
STOCK Comes in 100ft daylight spools or 400ft cores.
BUDGET The “Goldilocks” zone. It is significantly more expensive than digital but roughly half the cost of 35mm stock and processing. It allows indie productions to shoot film without a blockbuster budget.

3. 35MM: THE PRISTINE CANVAS 

Oppenheimer sheriff of Los Alamos

Oppenheimer | Universal Pictures

  • The Aesthetic: Epic, Glossy, Timeless, “The Standard,” “The Blockbuster.” 
  • The Grain: Fine, tight, and incredibly sharp. 
  • The Aspect Ratio: Versatile. 4-Perf (Anamorphic scope), 3-Perf (1.78:1/1.85:1), and 2-Perf (Techniscope).

This is the format that built Hollywood. From The Wizard of Oz to Oppenheimer (which mixed 35mm with IMAX), 35mm film offers a resolution and dynamic range that rivals and often exceeds the best digital sensors. It captures roughly 6K to 8K worth of data. The grain is present, but it serves as a subtle texture rather than a dominant feature.

Why Choose 35mm? 

Choose 35mm when you want the ultimate visual fidelity with the organic soul of celluloid. It offers superior highlight roll-off, incredible latitude, and a depth of color that feels rich and three-dimensional. It tells the audience they are watching a “Movie” with a capital M.

THE WORKFLOW & COST

CAMERAS Heavy-hitters like the Panaflex Millennium XL2, Arricam LT/ST, or Arri 435.
STOCK 400ft or 1000ft magazines.
BUDGET High. 35mm eats through stock much faster than 16mm (since the frame is larger, you get less time per foot). It requires a disciplined shooting ratio and a budget that prioritizes image quality above all else.

 

4. 65MM/IMAX: THE ULTIMATE SPECTACLE 

Orange sky in Dune: Part 1 (2021) | Legendary Entertainment

Dune: Part 1 (2021) | Legendary Entertainment

  • The Aesthetic: Immersive, Hyper-real, Grandiose. 
  • The Grain: Virtually invisible; unmatched clarity. 
  • The Aspect Ratio: 2.20:1 (Standard 5-perf) or 1.43:1 (15-perf IMAX).

If 35mm is the gold standard, 65mm is the platinum. This is the format of Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and more recently, Dune: Part Two. It uses a massive negative area (roughly 3-4 times larger than standard 35mm) to capture images with unparalleled resolution, sharpness, and color depth.

Why Choose 65mm? 

Choose 65mm when you need absolute immersion and scale. It creates an image so detailed it feels like looking through a window rather than at a screen. It demands attention and is typically reserved for landscapes, massive set pieces, or emotional close-ups where every pore matters.

THE WORKFLOW & COST

CAMERAS Extremely heavy, rare, and loud. Models like the Panavision System 65, Arriflex 765, or IMAX MSM 9802 are scarce and require specialized crews.
STOCK Uses the same emulsion as 35mm but on a much wider base.
BUDGET Astronomical. The stock is expensive, the cameras are expensive, and the processing/scanning workflow is highly specialized (often limited to specific labs like FotoKem). This is strictly the domain of high-budget studio features.

 

THE BOTTOM LINE: MATCH THE MEDIUM TO THE MESSAGE

There is no “best” format. There is only the right format for your story.

  • Super 8 for the dreamers and the memory-makers.
  • 16mm for the realists and the indie rebels.
  • 35mm for the epic storytellers and visual purists.

However, choosing the gauge is only the first step. To truly harness the power of film, you must know how to expose it. You need to understand how light interacts with the silver halide crystals, how to use a light meter, and how to manipulate the chemical process.

Ready to Stop Guessing and Start Measuring?

Join the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass on Filmmakers Academy. In partnership with KODAK, Shane Hurlbut, ASC takes you on a deep dive into the science of exposure for all three of these formats. Learn the craft that digital can’t teach you.

YOU CAN ACCESS THE FULL MASTERCLASS IN TWO WAYS

BECOME A PREMIUM ANNUAL MEMBER Get unlimited access to this masterclass, plus our entire library of hundreds of courses, monthly live coaching, and an exclusive community of filmmakers.
A LA CARTE PURCHASE Buy the standalone masterclass for a one-time fee of $129.99 and own it forever.

Forget “fast.” Choose timeless. Master the process.

This masterclass was produced in collaboration with Kodak. 

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Exposing Film in Harsh Sunlight Backlit Scenes https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-backlit-sun-shot-expose-film/ Fri, 05 Dec 2025 07:46:04 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107111 When shooting on film, you don’t have the luxury of a high-resolution monitor or waveform to check your exposure. You have your meter, your eye, and your knowledge of the craft. One of the most beautiful yet challenging lighting scenarios is the classic backlit sun shot. It creates separation, a stunning hair light, and a […]

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When shooting on film, you don’t have the luxury of a high-resolution monitor or waveform to check your exposure. You have your meter, your eye, and your knowledge of the craft. One of the most beautiful yet challenging lighting scenarios is the classic backlit sun shot. It creates separation, a stunning hair light, and a sense of depth — but if you miscalculate your ratios, you risk blowing out the highlights or losing your subject in the shadows.

Cinematographer Shane Hurlbut shows how to shoot film for daylight backlit scenes

In this excerpt from the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass, we go on location to break down my exact methodology for exposing daylight-balanced film stock in a high-contrast, backlit environment. This isn’t just about reading a meter; it’s about understanding how to control light, calculate filter factors, and make creative decisions about skin tone exposure that are baked into the negative.

(This article is a detailed breakdown of a lesson from the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass. Discover how you can access the full course at the end!)

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WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS ARTICLE

  • The “Hand Cup” Metering Technique: How to get an accurate incident reading in harsh sunlight without false inflation.
  • Calculating Filter Factor: How to adjust your light meter to account for ND filters and ensure perfect exposure.
  • Managing Contrast Ratios: How to use bounce light to bring a high-contrast scene into a cinematic range.
  • Strategic Underexposure: Why underexposing skin tones on film can create a richer, more natural look, and how to adjust for different complexions.
  • The T-Stop Decision: How to balance aperture, filtration, and lighting to achieve a specific depth of field.

THE SCENARIO: SHOOTING DAYLIGHT STOCK (50D)

For this setup, we are shooting with Kodak Vision3 50D (5203). Because this is a daylight-balanced stock (5600K), we do not need an 85 correction filter. However, the sun is bright, and 50 ASA is still sensitive enough that we need to control the amount of light entering the lens to achieve our desired aperture. 

Shane Hurlbut, ASC shows how to shoot daylight film stock

My goal is to shoot at a T-stop of around T2.0 to T2.5. This aperture provides a beautiful, cinematic depth of field that separates the subject from the background. Without filtration, the sun would force us to stop down to f/16 or higher, ruining that aesthetic.

STEP 1: METERING TECHNIQUE – THE “HAND CUP” METHOD

The first step is to get an accurate reading of the light. I use an incident light meter with a dome (not a flat disc), but technique is critical.

Light Meter image with definition

THE PROBLEM When measuring the shadow side of the face (fill light), if the bright sun hits the back of the meter’s dome, it will artificially inflate the reading, telling you there is more light than there actually is.
THE SOLUTION I use my hand to cup the dome, blocking the direct sun from hitting it while allowing the ambient fill light to enter. This ensures I am measuring only the light falling on the shadow side of the subject’s face.

INITIAL READINGS

Backlight (Sun)

f/8.3
Fill (Shadow side)

f/2.5

This creates a massive contrast ratio (about 3.5 stops difference). While dramatic, I prefer a more controlled two-stop backlit scenario for this kind of beauty work. This means we need to bring up the fill level.

STEP 2: FILTRATION AND THE FILTER FACTOR

To get our T-stop down to my preferred T2.0–2.5 range, we need to cut the light. I chose an ND 0.6 (Neutral Density) filter, which reduces light by 2 stops. 

Cinematographer Shane Hurlbut, ASC places filter in film camera

PLACEMENT MATTERS 

I always place the ND filter in the matte box tray closest to the lens. This minimizes the risk of internal reflections and ghosting, especially when shooting directly into a strong light source like the sun.

UPDATING THE METER 

Before taking any new readings, I must update my light meter. I go into the menu and program a Filter Factor of -2 stops (for the ND 0.6). I also confirm my film speed is set to 50 ASA and my frame rate is 24 fps. Now, the meter will do the math for me.

NEW READINGS (WITH ND 0.6
Backlight f/4.3

 

STEP 3: SHAPING THE LIGHT WITH A BOUNCE

To reduce the contrast ratio, we bring in a Circle Bounce (a bead board or similar reflector). By positioning it high and reflecting the sun back onto the subject, we create a beautiful, soft fill light.

Cinematographer Shane Hurlbut, ASC shows how to shoot film in daylight and shaping light with a bounce

FINAL READINGS
New Fill (with bounce) f/1.4

STEP 4: THE EXPOSURE DECISION

Now comes the artistry. We have our readings:

Backlight f/4.3
Fill  f/1.4

I decide to set my lens aperture to T2.5. Here is why:

1. UNDEREXPOSING THE FACE

By setting the lens to T2.5 when the fill measures T1.4, I am intentionally underexposing the face by about 1.5 stops. For lighter skin tones (like our talent, Kira), this protects the highlights and keeps the skin looking natural and rich, rather than flat and over-lit.

NOTE: If the talent had darker skin tones, I would only underexpose by 1 stop to ensure rich detail in the shadows.

2. OVEREXPOSING THE BACKLIGHT

With the lens at T2.5 and the backlight measuring T4.3, the sun is now 1.5 stops overexposed. This creates a beautiful, glowing rim light that feels hot and sunny but retains detail without blowing out into a digital-looking clip.

THE RESULT

A perfectly balanced image with a 3-stop dynamic range between the key and the rim, all calculated precisely before rolling a single foot of film.

Filmmaker looks at monitor of cinematographer Shane Hurlbut using light meter for shooting film

THE BOTTOM LINE: CONFIDENCE COMES FROM KNOWLEDGE

This lesson illustrates the precision required to shoot film. You aren’t guessing; you are calculating ratios and making deliberate creative choices about how to place your exposure. By understanding your meter, your filters, and your film stock’s latitude, you can walk onto any set and confidently shape the sun to your will.

UNLOCK THE FULL MASTERCLASS!

This article covers just one lighting scenario from our comprehensive Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass. In the full course, Shane Hurlbut, ASC, takes you through complex setups including side-lighting, tungsten stock in daylight, pushing and pulling film, and the “twilight combo” for extending magic hour.

YOU CAN ACCESS THE FULL MASTERCLASS IN TWO WAYS

BECOME A PREMIUM ANNUAL MEMBER Get unlimited access to this masterclass, plus our entire library of hundreds of courses, monthly live coaching, and an exclusive community of filmmakers.
A LA CARTE PURCHASE Buy the standalone masterclass for a one-time fee of $129.99 and own it forever.

Forget “fast.” Choose timeless. Master the process.

This masterclass was produced in collaboration with Kodak. 

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Exposing Film Stocks: 16mm Film & 35mm Film https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-film-stocks-16mm-35mm/ Thu, 04 Dec 2025 06:41:58 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107100 In an age dominated by digital “fixes,” false color overlays, and the ability to change ISO with the scroll of a wheel, the true, hands-on craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare and vital skill. We see the “film look” imitated everywhere. Grain overlays, halation plugins, and LUTs designed to mimic Kodak Vision3. But […]

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In an age dominated by digital “fixes,” false color overlays, and the ability to change ISO with the scroll of a wheel, the true, hands-on craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare and vital skill. We see the “film look” imitated everywhere. Grain overlays, halation plugins, and LUTs designed to mimic Kodak Vision3. But how many modern filmmakers truly understand the nuts and bolts behind it all?

Film is making a comeback. From the IMAX spectacle of Oppenheimer to the gritty texture of indie darlings, directors are returning to the medium. But shooting on film is a discipline. It demands that you stop relying on a monitor and start trusting your eye, your tools, and your knowledge.

That is why I partnered with KODAK to create the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass. Drawing from my experience lensing over 23 feature films on 35mm, 16mm, and Super 8 since 1986, this course demystifies the process of exposing film.

Below is an in-depth look at the foundational principles covered in the first chapter of the masterclass. We are going to strip away the digital safety net and look at the science of film stocks, the difference between negative and reversal, and the glass filters required to paint with light.

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WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS ARTICLE

  • How to decode Kodak’s film numbering system to instantly identify formats (35mm vs. 16mm) and stock types.
  • The specific characteristics of Kodak Vision3 Color Negative stocks (50D, 250D, 200T, 500T) and when to use them.
  • The difference between Color Negative (ECN-2) and Reversal Film, and why films like Three Kings utilized the latter for a unique aesthetic.
  • The science of Analog White Balance, specifically how to use the 85 Filter to shoot tungsten stock in daylight without ruining your image.

PART 1: UNDERSTANDING YOUR CANVAS (FILM STOCKS)

Before you can expose a single frame, you must understand the physical medium you are loading into the camera. Unlike a digital sensor, which has a fixed native sensitivity, film allows you to change your “sensor” every time you change a roll.

Arri Film Camera

  1. DECODING THE NUMBERS: 35MM VS. 16MM

Kodak organizes their film stocks using a specific numbering system. Understanding this code is the first step in professional film logistics.

THE PREFIX
52 Indicates 35mm film (e.g., 5203, 5219)
72 Indicates 16mm film (e.g., 7203, 7219)
THE SUFFIX The last two digits indicate the specific emulsion type (ISO and Color Balance).
  1. COLOR NEGATIVE FILM: THE INDUSTRY STANDARD

The vast majority of modern motion pictures are shot on Color Negative film. This film produces an image with inverted colors and tones. When printed or scanned, these colors are reversed to create the final positive image. Color negative is processed using the ECN-2 chemical process.

WHY USE NEGATIVE?
It offers superior dynamic range (latitude). It is forgiving in the highlights and can dig into the shadows, giving the cinematographer immense flexibility in the color grading suite (or timing lab).

Film Stock Exposure

CURRENT KODAK VISION3 STOCKS
50D (5203 / 7203) A Daylight balanced (5600K) stock with an ISO of 50. It has the finest grain structure, perfect for bright exteriors.
250D (5207 / 7207) A faster Daylight balanced stock.
200T (5213 / 7213) A tungsten-balanced (3200K) stock. The “T” stands for Tungsten.
500T (5219 / 7219) The high-speed workhorse. Tungsten balanced, ideal for low light and night scenes.
  1. COLOR REVERSAL FILM (VNF): THE “NEWS” AESTHETIC

Before video cameras took over, news broadcasters used Reversal Film, often called Video News Film (VNF). Unlike negative film, reversal film produces a positive image directly on the strip — like a slide projector image.

Video News for Film Walter Cronkite - Broadcast film stock

The Aesthetic Trade-off: Reversal film has significantly less dynamic range (latitude) than negative film. If you miss your exposure, the film is unforgiving. However, this limitation creates a unique, “cranked” aesthetic.

NATURAL, PUNCHY COLORS The colors are often super-saturated and vibrant.
UNIQUE BLOWOUTS When overexposed, reversal film doesn’t roll off gently like negative; it blows out in a distinct, harsh, yet artistic way.

Kodak Film used on Three Kings movie

CINEMATIC EXAMPLE
David O. Russell’s Three Kings (1999) famously utilized color reversal stock (specifically Ektachrome) to achieve its bleach-bypass-style, high-contrast look. The result was deep, unnatural blue skies and stark, golden-white sands that heightened the surreal nature of the narrative.

PART 2: ANALOG WHITE BALANCE (THE ART OF GLASS)

On a digital camera, if you walk from a tungsten-lit room (3200K) out into the sun (5600K), you simply dial a knob to change your white balance. In analog filmmaking, your white balance is chemically baked into the film stock. To change it, you must be a craftsman.

THE PROBLEM: SHOOTING TUNGSTEN FILM IN DAYLIGHT

If you load a roll of 500T (Tungsten) because you love the grain structure or need the speed, but you shoot outside in daylight without modification, your image will be overwhelmingly blue. The film expects orange light, but you are feeding it blue daylight.

Shane Hurlbut Exposing film stock

THE SOLUTION: THE 85 FILTER

To correct this “in-camera,” you must place an 85 Filter in front of the lens.

WHAT IT IS An orange-colored glass filter.
WHAT IT DOES It physically converts the 5600K daylight entering the lens into 3200K light before it hits the film emulsion.
THE COST Placing glass in front of the lens cuts light. You must account for this Filter Factor when calculating your exposure (typically a loss of 2/3 of a stop for an 85 filter).
85 Filter 85 Filter

This is the essence of analog filmmaking: solving problems with physics and glass, not software. 

STOP CHASING THE “LOOK.” MASTER THE SOURCE. 

What we’ve covered here—identifying stocks, understanding ECN-2 vs. Reversal, and filtration — is just the first six minutes of a deep, comprehensive education.

Shooting on film requires you to be both a scientist and an artist. You cannot rely on a waveform monitor or a false-color overlay to save you. You must understand lighting ratios, you must know how to use an incident meter and a spot meter, and you must understand how to manipulate the chemical process (Push and Pull processing) to achieve your vision.

READY TO MASTER THE CRAFT THAT ENDURES?

In the full Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass, I take you on location to master high-contrast backlit scenes, harsh side lighting, and the precise techniques for extending “magic hour.” We dive deep into filter factors, the philosophy of the “thick negative,” and how to control contrast using graduated NDs and attenuators.

YOU CAN ACCESS THE FULL MASTERCLASS IN TWO WAYS
BECOME A PREMIUM ANNUAL MEMBER Get unlimited access to this masterclass, plus our entire library of hundreds of courses, monthly live coaching, and an exclusive community of filmmakers.
A LA CARTE PURCHASE Buy the standalone masterclass for a one-time fee of $129.99 and own it forever.

Forget “fast.” Choose timeless. Master the process.

This masterclass was produced in collaboration with Kodak. 

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Why We Still Shoot Film in the Digital Age https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-shoot-film-digital-age/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 01:52:15 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107088 In an industry obsessed with the latest sensors, 8K resolution, and AI-driven workflows, a quiet but powerful movement is growing. It’s a return to the chemical, the tactile, and the analog. Filmmakers, from studio auteurs like Christopher Nolan to independent visionaries, are increasingly choosing to shoot on motion picture film. Why? In 2025, when digital […]

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In an industry obsessed with the latest sensors, 8K resolution, and AI-driven workflows, a quiet but powerful movement is growing. It’s a return to the chemical, the tactile, and the analog. Filmmakers, from studio auteurs like Christopher Nolan to independent visionaries, are increasingly choosing to shoot on motion picture film.

Why? In 2025, when digital cameras are more accessible and capable than ever, why go back to a technology that is over a century old? 

The answer isn’t just nostalgia. It’s about a fundamental difference in process, philosophy, and ultimately, the emotional resonance of the image. Shooting on film changes how you see, how you work, and how your audience feels.

Shooting 16mm on short film 'Kiss Me Goodbye'

Behind the scenes of Kiss Me Goodbye | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

In this spotlight, we explore the enduring relevance of celluloid through the lens of filmmaker Brendan Sweeney. His journey — from the digital revolution to a deep commitment to 16mm — illustrates why film remains the gold standard for storytelling.

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THE DIGITAL REVOLUTION AND THE FEAR OF LOSS:

To understand the resurgence of film, we have to look back at the moment it almost disappeared. Brendan Sweeney’s journey began right as the industry was undergoing a seismic shift.

“I knew I wanted to be a filmmaker after I saw The Fellowship of the Ring,” Brendan recalls. “I loved the way movies made me feel… the manipulative feeling of filmmaking.” 

But as he entered film school, the landscape was changing. The “Digital Revolution,” spearheaded by cameras like the Canon 5D and the RED One, was in full swing.

Lord of The Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring - High Key Lighting Example

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring | New Line Cinema

For a young filmmaker, this created a sense of urgency.

“I remember thinking… if I want to be a director like all of my heroes — Kubrick, Cimino — something inside me told me that I need to be able to learn how to shoot on film before it’s gone.”

 

Film Camera Arriflex SR2

“Harriett” the Arriflex SR2 Film Camera | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

Brendan had realized that the masters of cinema had all been forged in the discipline of celluloid. To truly understand the craft, one had to understand its original medium. So, while universities were liquidating their film equipment, Brendan went against the grain. He bought an Arriflex SR2 camera for $1,100 — a steal for a piece of cinema history — and committed to learning the “dead” language of film.

THE BRENDAN SWEENEY PHILOSOPHY OF FILM:

The most profound difference between film and digital isn’t resolution or dynamic range; it’s the process.

On a digital set, the monitor is king. We shoot, we check playback, we tweak, we shoot again. We can “fix it in post.” 

Film strips away that safety net.

“With a film test, or just shooting film in general, it’s your mind,” Brendan explains. “It’s using your mind to craft something.” 

Filmmaker Brendan Sweeney shoots film in the California desert

Brendan filming in the desert | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

Without a high-definition monitor to rely on, the filmmaker must trust their knowledge of exposure, lighting ratios, and lenses. You have to visualize the image in your head before you capture it. This forces a level of intentionality that digital rarely demands. 

“The film matters, the f-stop matters… you have to think through every detail.” 

This heightened state of focus trickles down to the entire crew. When the camera rolls, everyone knows that money is physically running through the gate. The stakes are higher, the focus is sharper, and the resulting energy on set is palpable. It creates “analog, adrenaline-fueled moments” where the entire team is synchronized in pursuit of a perfect take.

WHY FILM FEELS DIFFERENT:

Technically, digital sensors have come a long way in emulating film. But there is an aesthetic quality to celluloid — a “soul” — that is incredibly difficult to replicate with 1s and 0s.

In his short film Kiss Me Goodbye, Brendan chose to shoot on Orwo N74 Plus, a black and white stock, to evoke a timeless, Twilight Zone-esque atmosphere. 

Brendan Sweeney shooting on a film camera

Behind the scenes of Kiss Me Goodbye | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

“There’s really something about shooting a movie in black and white versus color,” he notes. 

The grain structure, the way it highlights bloom rather than clip, and the organic texture of the image create a separation from reality that feels more dreamlike and cinematic.

Even in color, film has a distinct signature. The video below is Brendan’s first-ever film test, using Kodak VISION3 500T 7219 & 250D 7207. While yes, the light is certainly hot, you can see the glowy, velvety nature of 16mm film. 

In a test shot in the California desert using Kodak Vision3 250D and ORWO N74 Plus, the results were immediate.

“It just looks like 16mm beauty,” Brendan says. “The shadows are definitely cool, but the environment’s warm, which is a cool duality.”

Digital images can often feel clinical or hyper-real, adding a whole other technical obstacle to counteract. Film, with its chemical imperfections and organic grain, often feels more human. It softens the edges of reality, allowing the audience to project themselves into the story more easily. 

It is, as Brendan puts it, “a medium that takes precision, but it’s also a medium that’s extremely forgiving.”

 

THE “STORE 242” EXPERIMENT: MIXING MEDIA

The true test of a film’s relevance is how it stands up against modern digital workflows. For a fashion commercial for the boutique Store 242, Brendan and cinematographer Shane Hurlbut, ASC devised a concept that used both formats to tell a story.

The concept was a dress “birthing out into the world.” For the gritty, industrial interiors, they shot on 16mm Kodak 250D with Zeiss Super Speed lenses. The grain and texture of the film captured the raw, confined energy of the space. 

“The sheer level of detail here… was really awesome,” Brendan notes.

As the character escapes into the open desert, the production switched to a RED Weapon Dragon 6K digital camera. The contrast was intentional: the “pristine, crystal clear” digital image represented the open, modern world, while the film represented the textured, organic origin.

Store 242 - Behind the scenes of shooting on film - Brendan Sweeney and Shane Hurlbut, ASC

Brendan behind the scenes with Shane Hurlbut, ASC | Courtesy of Brenday Sweeney

This project highlighted how film could be used for more than just a “look”. It’s a storytelling tool. It also proved that even veteran DPs like Shane Hurlbut, who had championed the digital revolution, still found immense value and joy in returning to the discipline of film.

THE FUTURE IS ANALOG (AND DIGITAL):

So, is film better than digital? It’s the wrong question. They are different brushes for different paintings.

“There’s places where digital is better than film, and vice versa,” Brendan acknowledges. “There’s things that digital can do that film could never do.” 

Cinematographer Stefano Ceccarelli shooting on film Cinematographer Stefano Ceccarelli shooting on film
DP Stefano Ceccarelli behind the scenes of Kiss Me Goodbye | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

High frame rates, low-light sensitivity, and immediate workflows are undeniable advantages of digital cinema.

However, for narrative storytelling — for capturing the human condition — film remains the “preferred” medium for many. 

“If it’s a grounded and modern-day piece, I still think film brings a certain level of quality and craftsmanship to it that maybe is not found in some other places,” Brendan says.

 

HOW TO START SHOOTING FILM TODAY:

If you are an indie filmmaker inspired to shoot film, the barrier to entry is lower than you think. You don’t need to buy an Arriflex SR2.

Filmmakers shooting stills photography on set

Stefano Ceccarelli shooting stills photography | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney

1. START WITH PHOTOGRAPHY Buy a 35mm still camera. Learn to expose manually without a screen. Understand ISO, aperture, and shutter speed intimately.
2.  TRY SUPER 8 Pick up a cheap Super 8 camera. Companies like Pro8mm offer bundles that include the film cartridge, processing, and digital scanning, making the workflow simple and accessible.
3. VISIT A RENTAL HOUSE If you’re in a major city, go to a camera rental house. Ask to see their film cameras. Build relationships. The film community is passionate and eager to help those who want to keep the medium alive.
4. JUST DO IT Don’t be afraid of the technology. “You have to train yourself to realize these tools are meant to be used,” Brendan advises.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

Shooting on film in the digital era is a choice to prioritize craft over convenience. It’s a commitment to a process that demands more from you but gives back something intangible and beautiful in return. 

Whether you are shooting a student short or a feature film, choosing celluloid is a powerful declaration that the way you make a film matters just as much as the story you tell.

As Brendan concludes, “Now that I move into other projects, film is just something that I want to continue to shoot, because when you look at the results… it’s just incredible.”

 

STOP IMITATING THE LOOK, MASTER THE SOURCE. 

In an age of digital “fixes,” the true craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare skill. To bridge this gap, Filmmakers Academy has partnered with KODAK to launch the definitive Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass.

Taught by Shane Hurlbut, ASC, this course offers a comprehensive, “brick-and-mortar” education that demystifies the entire analog process. Drawing from his experience shooting over 23 feature films on 35mm and 16mm, Shane teaches you to stop relying on a monitor and start trusting your eye, transforming you from a digital operator into a true artisan of light and chemistry.

This masterclass covers everything from the unique personalities of Kodak’s Vision3 stocks to the precise science of using light meters and glass filters. You’ll learn to control contrast in-camera, master filter factors, and handle complex lighting scenarios without a digital safety net.

LIMITED-TIME OFFER:

This exclusive training is available as a standalone masterclass or included with a Premium Annual Membership. It’s time to stop chasing the “film look” and start learning the source.

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Shooting-Film_KMG BTS outside Behind the scenes of Kiss Me Goodbye | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney Film Masterclass CTA Banner LOTR-Fellowship_High-Key-Lighting Shooting-Film_Harriett “Harriett” the Arriflex SR2 Film Camera | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney Shooting-Film_Brendan in desert Brendan filming in the desert | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney Brendan Sweeney Film camera Behind the scenes of Kiss Me Goodbye | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney Store 242_BTS Shand and Brendan Brendan behind the scenes with Shane Hurlbut, ASC | Courtesy of Brenday Sweeney Shooting-Film_Stefano film camera Shooting-Film_The Stefano BW Shooting-Film_KMG BTS Stefano Ceccarelli shooting stills photography | Courtesy of Brendan Sweeney EXP-FILM-PLATFORM-WATCH-NOW-C-1920X1080 Film Masterclass CTA Banner
2025’s Standout Movies Shot on Film https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-2025-movies-shot-on-film/ Wed, 26 Nov 2025 07:54:29 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=107052 For the first time in the digital era, 2025 has proven to be a year of resurgence for the organic, unpredictable, and deeply human texture of celluloid. The numbers tell the story. Kodak surges in 2025, selling as much film since 2014 when motion picture film took a downturn due to the digital revolution. The […]

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For the first time in the digital era, 2025 has proven to be a year of resurgence for the organic, unpredictable, and deeply human texture of celluloid. The numbers tell the story. Kodak surges in 2025, selling as much film since 2014 when motion picture film took a downturn due to the digital revolution. The shifting wind marks a win for proponents of celluloid like Christopher Nolan and Martin Scorsese. Although its staying power remains to be seen. 

Nevertheless, Filmmakers are no longer choosing film simply for nostalgia. They are seeking the “film look” — that indefinable magic of grain, color depth, and highlight roll-off that digital still struggles to emulate. From massive summer blockbusters to intimate indie dramas, directors are returning to the chemical process to give their stories a heartbeat.

LIGHT. METER. EXPOSE. FILM.

Before we dive into the films that defined this analog renaissance, there’s one question every filmmaker asks: 

How do I actually do it? 

Shooting film is a discipline. One that requires moving beyond the monitor and trusting your craft. Learn the process with this masterclass in collaboration with Kodak. 

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THE FILMS THAT DEFINED 2025’S ANALOG LOOK

From VistaVision epics to 16mm horror, here are the standout films of 2025 that proved celluloid is back and better than ever.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

Paul Thomas Anderson continues to be a champion of large-format filmmaking. For his adaptation of Vineland, he didn’t just shoot on film; he revived the legendary VistaVision format. 

By running 35mm film horizontally through the camera, Anderson and DP Michael Bauman achieved a negative size double that of standard 35mm. The result is an image with breathtaking resolution and clarity that still retains the organic grain structure of film, perfectly suiting the film’s epic, sprawling narrative.

 

SINNERS

Ryan Coogler returned to his roots while simultaneously pushing the envelope. Sinners utilizes a fascinating hybrid approach. To capture the gritty, period-specific texture of the 1930s South, huge portions of the film were shot on IMAX 65mm for unparalleled scope and immersion. 

However, for flashbacks and moments of raw intimacy, the team utilized 16mm, creating a stark visual contrast that highlights the versatility of the analog medium.

BUGONIA 

Known for his bold visual experiments, Yorgos Lanthimos teamed up again with Robbie Ryan to create a unique look for Bugonia. They utilized VistaVision cameras to capture a distinct, high-resolution image that feels both modern and timeless. 

The choice of film stock emphasizes the film’s surreal atmosphere, with the rich color reproduction of celluloid grounding the absurdity in a tangible reality.

DIE MY LOVE

Lynne Ramsay’s psychological drama required a visual language that mirrored its protagonist’s fractured mind. To achieve this “hyper-real” look, the team shot day exteriors on Kodak Ektachrome 100D, a color reversal stock known for its intense saturation and high contrast. 

For night scenes and darker interiors, they switched to Vision3 negative stocks, creating a disorienting but beautiful clash of textures that digital simply could not replicate.

 

JURASSIC WORLD REBIRTH

In a surprising and welcome move for a VFX-heavy blockbuster, director Gareth Edwards chose to shoot the latest Jurassic World installment on 35mm film. Working with veteran DP John Mathieson, the choice was made to give the dinosaur epic a gritty, grounded reality reminiscent of the original 1993 classic. 

The film grain helps integrate the CGI creatures into the live-action plates, creating a more cohesive and believable world.

JIMMY & STIGGS

Indie horror maverick Joe Begos proves you don’t need a blockbuster budget to shoot film. Jimmy & Stiggs was shot entirely on 16mm, embracing the format’s grain and “imperfections” to create a raw, grindhouse aesthetic. 

The handheld camerawork and vibrant lighting choices play into the strengths of 16mm, giving the film a punk-rock energy that feels dangerous and alive.

THE SMASHING MACHINE

For this biographical drama about MMA fighter Mark Kerr, Benny Safdie utilized 35mm film to capture the raw physicality and sweat-drenched intensity of the sport. 

The texture of the film stock adds a layer of period authenticity to the late 90s/early 2000s setting, avoiding the overly polished look of modern digital sports movies.

MATERIALISTS

Following the success of Past Lives, Celine Song continues her commitment to the analog image with Materialists. Shot on 35mm, the film uses the medium’s natural color response to capture the nuances of romantic tension and the vibrant energy of New York City. The softness and warmth of film perfectly complement Song’s character-driven storytelling.

THE PHOENICIAN SCHEME

Wes Anderson is perhaps modern cinema’s most staunch defender of film. For his latest project, he partnered with Bruno Delbonnel to capture his signature symmetrical compositions and pastel color palettes on 35mm. The result is a film that feels like a moving storybook, with the film grain adding a tactile quality to the meticulously designed sets and costumes.

ROOFMAN

Derek Cianfrance has always been a filmmaker deeply invested in emotional realism, from Blue Valentine to The Place Beyond the Pines. For Roofman, a crime drama based on the true story of Jeffrey Manchester—an eccentric robber who lived secretly inside a Toys “R” Us—Cianfrance reunited with DP Andrij Parekh to capture the story on 35mm film. 

The choice of celluloid grounds the sometimes absurd, larger-than-life elements of the plot in a tangible, gritty reality. It lends a texture to the mundane spaces of retail stores and fast-food restaurants, transforming them into a cinematic stage for a character study that balances crime, comedy, and pathos.

SENTIMENTAL VALUE

Joachim Trier returns with Sentimental Value, a film that explores memory, family, and the power of art to reconcile the past. Shot on 35mm by Kasper Tuxen, the film uses the medium’s inherent warmth and organic quality to underscore its themes. 

The story follows a filmmaker (Stellan Skarsgård) attempting to reconnect with his estranged daughters by casting one in his autobiographical film. The use of film stock acts as a visual bridge between the past and present, blurring the lines between reality and the fiction being created within the story. It creates a “memory palace” aesthetic where every frame feels weighted with history and emotion.

SPLITSVILLE

Michael Angelo Covino’s sophomore feature, Splitsville, is a raucous comedy about open marriages and friendship gone wrong. To capture the chaotic, improvisational energy of the ensemble cast (which includes Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona), Covino and DP Adam Newport-Berra chose to shoot on 16mm. 

This format perfectly complements the film’s “unromantic comedy” tone, recalling the texture of 70s screwball classics. The grain and agility of 16mm allow the camera to be a participant in the messy, hilarious, and often physical interactions, giving the film a raw, immediate vitality that a polished digital image would have smoothed over.

THE THEFT OF THE CARAVAGGIO

For his debut feature, Joshua Cassar Gaspar took on the mystery of a real-life 1984 art heist in Malta. The Theft of the Caravaggio is a fictionalized thriller shot entirely on location and exclusively on 35mm film. Gaspar and cinematographer Daniel Cawthorne aimed to capture a “poetic quality of motion” that they felt digital could not replicate, citing early 2000s classics like A Beautiful Mind as inspiration. The use of celluloid provides a rich, textured aesthetic that elevates the film’s noir-ish atmosphere, using natural light and deep shadows to create a visual world where reality and illusion constantly blur.

STOP IMITATING THE LOOK, MASTER THE SOURCE. 

In an age of digital “fixes,” the true craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare skill. To bridge this gap, Filmmakers Academy has partnered with KODAK to launch the definitive Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass

Taught by Shane Hurlbut, ASC, this course offers a comprehensive, “brick-and-mortar” education that demystifies the entire analog process. Drawing from his experience shooting over 23 feature films on 35mm and 16mm, Shane teaches you to stop relying on a monitor and start trusting your eye, transforming you from a digital operator into a true artisan of light and chemistry.

This masterclass covers everything from the unique personalities of Kodak’s Vision3 stocks to the precise science of using light meters and glass filters. You’ll learn to control contrast in-camera, master filter factors, and handle complex lighting scenarios without a digital safety net. 

LIMITED-TIME OFFER:

This exclusive training is available as a standalone masterclass or included with a Premium Annual Membership. It’s time to stop chasing the “film look” and start learning the source.

Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass - CTA Banner

THE BOTTOM LINE: 

2025 has made one thing clear: film is not a relic of the past; it is a vital, living medium for the future. Whether it’s the immersive scale of IMAX or the gritty intimacy of 16mm, film makers are rediscovering that the “soul” of cinema often lies in the silver halide crystals of a physical strip of film. 

As we move forward, the choice between digital and film is no longer about “old vs. new,” but about choosing the right canvas for the art.

This video is proudly lit exclusively by Nanlux-Nanlite Lights and sponsored by B&H and Hollyland. 

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Film is Back. Are You Ready? Exposing Motion Picture Film https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/blog-exposing-motion-picture-film/ Fri, 21 Nov 2025 01:57:21 +0000 https://www.filmmakersacademy.com/?p=106958 In an age of digital “fixes,” LUT packs, and false color, the true, hands-on craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare and vital skill. We see the “film look” imitated everywhere, but how many filmmakers truly understand the alchemy that creates it? Film is making a comeback. From the IMAX spectacle of Oppenheimer to […]

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In an age of digital “fixes,” LUT packs, and false color, the true, hands-on craft of exposing celluloid has become a rare and vital skill. We see the “film look” imitated everywhere, but how many filmmakers truly understand the alchemy that creates it?

Film is making a comeback. From the IMAX spectacle of Oppenheimer to the gritty texture of indie darlings, directors are returning to the medium that started it all. But shooting on film isn’t just a stylistic choice; it’s a discipline. It demands that you stop relying on a monitor and start trusting your eye, your tools, and your knowledge.

On November 25th, Filmmakers Academy, in partnership with KODAK, is launching the definitive guide to this timeless craft: the Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass.

EXPOSING MOTION PICTURE FILM TEASER:

A “BRICK-AND-MORTAR” EDUCATION FOR THE MODERN FILMMAKER:

This masterclass is a deep, comprehensive dive into the art and science of analog cinematography, taught by Shane Hurlbut, ASC. Drawing from his experience lensing over 23 feature films on 35mm, 16mm, and Super 8, Shane demystifies the entire photochemical process, teaching you to be both a scientist and an artist.

Whether you are an aspiring DP looking to shoot your first short on 16mm or a digital native wanting to understand the foundational principles of light and exposure, this masterclass provides a playbook you simply cannot find anywhere else online.

WHAT YOU WILL MASTER:

THE TOOLS OF THE TRADE 

Learn to stop guessing and start measuring. You will master the incident meter for perfect exposure and the spot meter for precision contrast control.

FILM STOCKS 

Understand the unique personalities of Kodak’s Vision3 color negative stocks (50D, 250D, 200T, 500T) and the vibrant, unforgiving nature of color reversal film.

Shane Hurlbut holds filters for film camera Hand inserting filter tray into film camera

THE SCIENCE OF GLASS

Master the critical concept of “Filter Factor” and learn how to calculate it for any piece of glass. Discover how to use essential correction filters (85, 80A) and creative filters (81EF, Color Enhancers) to bake your look into the negative.

CONTROLLING CONTRAST

Learn advanced techniques for taming bright skies and hot spots. Do so using graduated ND filters, attenuators, and the “beautiful dance” of operating a geared matte box.

Shane Hurlbut uses light meter on film shoot - Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass Shane Hurlbut outside with film camera

ADVANCED EXPOSURE TECHNIQUES 

Go beyond the basics with lessons on lighting ratios, the philosophy of the “thick negative” for richer blacks, and the chemical magic of Push and Pull processing.

REAL-WORLD SCENARIOS

Join Shane on location as he breaks down how to expose for challenging high-contrast backlit scenes, harsh side lighting, and the fleeting, beautiful light of twilight (magic hour).

DIGITAL CAPTURES. FILM IS CRAFTED.

When you shoot on film, you are making definitive creative choices before the camera ever rolls. You are painting with light and chemistry, not just capturing data.

By mastering these analog skills, you gain a deeper understanding of exposure, color, and contrast that will elevate your work on any camera system, digital or film. You will learn to see the world differently. Not as a waveform, but as a landscape of light waiting to be shaped.

HOW TO JOIN THE MASTERCLASS:

The Exposing Motion Picture Film Masterclass launches on November 25th. You can access this exclusive training in two ways…

1. BECOME A PREMIUM ANNUAL MEMBER Get unlimited access to this masterclass, plus our entire library of hundreds of courses, monthly live coaching, and an exclusive community of filmmakers.
2. A LA CARTE PURCHASE Buy the standalone masterclass for a one-time fee of $129.99 and own it forever.

Choose the craft that endures. Stop chasing the “look” and start mastering the source.

The post Film is Back. Are You Ready? Exposing Motion Picture Film appeared first on Filmmakers Academy.

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Shane with film camera filters Shane with filter tray and film camera Shane with light meter outside Shane with film camera