>fuck up action scene with distracting vignette shadows
>still not JJ enough for Disney
it's OK, Gareth, you tried.
>vignette shadows
>distracting
the autism is strong in this one.
>>71799963
you're that guy who still likes early 2000's fads like bullet time and shaky cam, right?
>>71800131
nope I just wouldnt consider a slight shadow in the corners to be distracting enough to "fuck up an action scene".
nor would I consider them to be so enraging that I would run to my computer, start a thread on /tv/ about how they have mentally scarred me.
>>71800309
>a slight shadow
sure, anon.
>>71800436
I never noticed them until you pointed them out.
But now the movie is 100% ruined and I will not be able to find any joy in it. If the fun of the movie could be quantifiable, it would now be 0. 0 fun. Thanks for showing me the error of my ways so I don't have to waste my precious enjoyment on a horrible film that has unnoticeable shadows on the edges of the picture.
>>71800722
control your sarcasm please, it's very confusing.
I just watched some long scenes from Force Awakens on youtube, wasn't expecting it to be this bad, but it is..
>applying Instagram filters is now considered expert filmmaking
>>71799905
The movie is going to be forgettable trash and it has nothing to do with the vignette shadows.
>>71799905
ITT: retards believe that camera artifacts are aesthetic choices
The center of the image receives more light than the edges, idiots. This is more noticeable with certain lenses.
>>71803595
it is more noticeable depending on what shutter speed they select. The higher the speed, the less motion-blur there is, but more light is required on set to make the captured image the same brightness
>>71802266
>> Pretending color grading didn't exist for decades before instagram
Fucking kids these days
>>71804881
more like this please
can we save this shitposting thread by turning it into a learn-about-cameras thread
>>71804881
Yes but not only
from wiki:
>Wideangle rangefinder designs and the lens designs used in compact cameras are particularly prone to natural vignetting.
>Telephoto lenses, retrofocus wideangle lenses used on SLR cameras, and telecentric designs in general are less troubled by natural vignetting.
>>71805598
>>71804881
is this what they teach at film school?
>>71805885
I wouldn't know, I went to films.