The Alexa 35 is booming! As IndieWire released its camera survey, it seems that the new Super 35 flagship from Arri is among the most popular cameras chosen by Sundance 2024’s filmmakers. The Arri 35 causes the notable Super 35 format to go back to the game. Furthermore, the Arri Alexa Mini is the most popular camera five years in a row. Watch the segmentation.
Sundance 2024’s Narratives: Camera Manufacturers’ chart
As you can see in the chart, Super 35 is the dominant format. As we thought that large sensors would pull down the notable Super 35, it’s not as simple as that, since the Arri 35 kicks the Super 35 to the popularity line again. Additionally, this is the first time that we have seen a solid presence of the Arri 35 in our charts. Head to head with the old (and mighty) Alexa Mini, the Arri 35 is climbing strong and may become the most preferred camera among storytellers.
Sundance 2024’s Narratives: Camera Manufacturers’ chart
As you can see in the chart, Super 35 is the dominant format. As we thought that large sensors would pull down the notable Super 35, it’s not as simple as that, since the Arri 35 kicks the Super 35 to the popularity line again. Additionally, this is the first time that we have seen a solid presence of the Arri 35 in our charts. Head to head with the old (and mighty) Alexa Mini, the Arri 35 is climbing strong and may become the most preferred camera among storytellers.
- 1/29/2024
- by Yossy Mendelovich
- YMCinema
The summer of 2020 shouldn’t project beautiful memories onto the brain maps of those who endured it, but Theda Hammel’s anxiety-addled screwball feature debut “Stress Positions,” set around that Covid Fourth of July in New York, asks you to relive the scary days of sheltering in place, banging pots and pans in solidarity with health care workers, and social distancing whenever it was convenient or made you look like you stood for something.
“Stress Positions” mines the gap between the dark bookend of events that shaped millennial lives — September 11 and the pandemic — and that between liberal-posturing millennials and a Gen Z with a less fussy, more hopeful worldview. Hammel’s muses and emissaries on either side of the dichotomy in a comedy swirling with ideas are comedian John Early as a gay soon-to-be-divorcee and Qaher Harhash as his nephew, a 19-year-old Moroccan model with identity-shifting questions of his own.
“Stress Positions” mines the gap between the dark bookend of events that shaped millennial lives — September 11 and the pandemic — and that between liberal-posturing millennials and a Gen Z with a less fussy, more hopeful worldview. Hammel’s muses and emissaries on either side of the dichotomy in a comedy swirling with ideas are comedian John Early as a gay soon-to-be-divorcee and Qaher Harhash as his nephew, a 19-year-old Moroccan model with identity-shifting questions of his own.
- 1/19/2024
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Indiewire
The universal inevitabilities of starting a new relationship are captured strikingly by Director Colby Day in his one-shot film Lead/Follow. Day’s short began life as a play he created as a graduate fresh out of NYU and when he moved to LA to pursue filmmaking, it made logical sense to translate it for his first creative venture on the West coast. What makes Lead/Follow so gripping is how Day differentiates it from the play, turning the story into a dance. The couple in question, played by Della Saba and Sam Nelson Harris, venture through the stages of a relationship beginning with infatuation and obsession before the inevitable reveal of personal baggage. It’s broad in concept but Day and his actors make it feel personal. Dn is proud to Premiere Lead/Follow on our pages today and are joined by Day for a conversation below where he...
- 2/3/2023
- by James Maitre
- Directors Notes
A rebellious Korean teenager, Hayoung, aims for a life greater than her upbringing in the working class. Going as far to pretend she lives elsewhere, helping her mom at her cleaning job is both a sense of embarrassment and a means to fantasize about living a life of luxury. However, when an accident happens at work, Hayoung realizes the amount of pressure put on her mother and the importance of family.
“Soft Sounds of Peeling Fruit” review is part of the Submit Your Film Initiative
The fixation on popularity, and the financial freedom that can come with it, is deeply ingrained in culture, in part, through glorification on social media. Arguably, we have entered an age of entitlement and envy unlike anything previously seen before, where fame seems closer with a world audience one computer away. Consequently, many people seem to push aside or forget life’s simplistic joys, whether...
“Soft Sounds of Peeling Fruit” review is part of the Submit Your Film Initiative
The fixation on popularity, and the financial freedom that can come with it, is deeply ingrained in culture, in part, through glorification on social media. Arguably, we have entered an age of entitlement and envy unlike anything previously seen before, where fame seems closer with a world audience one computer away. Consequently, many people seem to push aside or forget life’s simplistic joys, whether...
- 11/10/2021
- by Adam Symchuk
- AsianMoviePulse
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