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Caption:
The upcoming documentary My Ireland was shot in locations across
Ireland using two JVC GY-LS300 4KCAM Super 35 camcorders. |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DANCING FOX PRODUCTIONS TOURS
IRELAND WITH JVC GY-LS300 4KCAM TO SHOOT
DOCUMENTARY - WAYNE, NJ (Sept. 20,
2018) –
JVC
Professional
Video, a division of JVCKENWOOD USA
Corporation, today announced My
Ireland, an upcoming feature-length
documentary focused on Irish displacement, was shot on location
across Ireland with two JVC GY-LS300 4KCAM
Super 35 camcorders.
- Based in St. Louis, Mo., Dancing Fox Pictures
was hired by Monaghan Productions, also in St. Louis, to serve as
cinematographers and crew for the production. Dancing Fox
specializes in multi-camera event coverage, promotion videos, and
cinema services. The company purchased its
GY-LS300s in June just prior to the shoot.
-
- Dancing Fox co-founder Elliott Geolat went to
Ireland in June and July, conducting interviews and collecting
B-roll footage across the country, from remote rural villages to
Dublin. “We needed something portable and cinematic, and something
that would be fast to use,” said Geolat, who shot most of the
footage. “The GY-LS300 is a cinema camera that handles like an ENG
camera. It was fast and handy, but delivered an image that was
filmic.”
- The documentary, which should be completed in
early 2019, explores several causes of Irish displacement, including
emigration to other countries to seek employment, mass evictions by
vulture funds, a growing homeless crisis, and citizens with
low-paying jobs who are unable to afford housing. The story reflects
the life of My Ireland
director and producer Anthony Monaghan, who left the country when he
was 15 to find employment.
-
- Most of the interviews were scheduled, but
some were added during the shoot. For the impromptu interviews,
Geolat needed to be able to setup quickly, often in locations where
lighting was far from ideal. “It’s a compact camera, but all the
external controls are at my fingertips. It’s so fast to setup,”
he said. “I spent more time leveling the tripod than prepping the
camera for a shot.”
- For My Ireland,
Geolat paired his GY-LS300s with three Rokinon Cine DS prime lenses.
To create a cinematic look, My Ireland
was shot in 4K/24p in J-Log mode, which expands dynamic range by 800
percent with film-like latitude. “I didn’t want to make a
documentary with a small-chip look,” Geolat explained, “so that
Super 35 sensor gave plenty of depth of field. It’s as shallow as
you’d ever want it.”
-
- While Geolat avoided on-screen zooms to
maintain a more cinematic look, he did use the camera’s Prime Zoom
feature, which allows fixed-focal lenses to zoom in and out without
losing resolution or depth of field, for some shots. “The Prime
Zoom feature is amazing,” he noted. “If I needed to zoom in a
pinch, I could get closer without moving the tripod.”
-
- Geolat recently shot additional footage for
My Ireland
in St. Louis with Dancing Fox co-founder Christopher Gibbs, and is
already planning to use the cameras to shoot a full-length narrative
feature next year. He praised the GY-LS300’s streamlined menu,
built-in neutral density filters, and low-light performance.
“Usually the words ‘cinema’ and ‘budget’ don’t go
together, but they do in this camera,” Geolat said. “At its
price point, it offers a set of features that you just don’t find.
This is the best budget cinema camera in the world.”
-
- ABOUT JVC
PROFESSIONAL VIDEO
Headquartered in
Wayne, New Jersey, JVC Professional Video is a division of
JVCKENWOOD USA Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of JVCKENWOOD
Corporation. The company is a leading manufacturer and distributor
of broadcast and professional video equipment, as well as D-ILA
front projection systems. For more information, visit JVC’s
website at http://pro.jvc.com
or call (800) 582 5825.
# # # Caption: The upcoming documentary
My Ireland
was shot in locations across Ireland using two JVC GY-LS300 4KCAM
Super 35 camcorders.
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