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Formats
A rough guide to cameras

Before we start this let me just say that any camera is better than no camera. Checking out camera magazines you can easily catch some equipment fetish, where you only wanna shoot with the coolist equipment. Its a waste of your time (and money) and gets in the way of making movies so forget it.
Its what's on the film/video that's important. You never know, that grainy, crappy image you get might be just what your film needs to give it some energy.

OK camera formats really means tape formats. The gubbins up front - the lens, the buttons etc. don't vary much from camera to camera, but what the camera records onto alters what film you see at the end of the day.

So lets look at the pros and cons of each of the formats (oh yeah, and the price range is the recommended retail price, if you buy mail orders you will probably get it cheaper, and obviously the camera is going to cost less if you buy second-hand).

8mm
Price Range £350 - £500

Pros
Cons
  • Reasonable picture quality
  • Good sound quality (mono or stereo depending on model)
  • Compact tapes (about the size of an audio cassette) giving 60 - 90 minutes recording
  • Cheapest camcorders available
  • Popular format so lots of choice
  • Lightweight cameras
  • Can't be played on normal VCR - Although you can transfer to other formats for editing
  • Very few 8mm editing VCRs

Hi8

Price Range - £450 - £800

Pros
Cons
  • Good picture quality (near broadcast standard - 400 horizontal lines, your TV does 525)
  • Top notch stereo sound
  • Tape a bit more expensive than 8mm but still compact and you can record up to 90 minutes on standard play.
  • Can use 8mm tape as well (although the picture won't be as good as with proper Hi8 tape).
  • Lightweight cameras
  • Like 8mm it can't be played on normal VCR - Although you can transfer to other formats for editing
  • To retain picture quality you will really need a Hi8 editing deck
  • Costs more than 8mm - boo!

VHS

Price Range £850 - £1400 RRP.

Pros
Cons
  • Same tape as you put in your normal VCR, so its cheap, easily available and you can edit easier.
  • Because the tape is bigger than 8mm, the cameras are also bigger. This means you look like a proper film-maker and you can shove it on your shoulder which means more stable shots.
  • Picture quality about 8mm standard - which means its not that bad.
  • Long recording time (3 to 4 hours)
  • Extra Punk Points! Robert Rodriguez (Director of Desperado and From Dusk Till Dawn) cut his teeth on a VHS camcorder. Using his camera and the family VCR he edited his first short films.
  • Only has a mono soundtrack
  • Bulkier cameras also mean lugging around something which is heavier - nurg!
  • Very few cameras available.

VHS - C (like VHS only smaller, so I guess the C is for compact)

Price Range - £280 - £500

Pros
Cons
  • Essentially VHS-C is smaller VHS tapes, meaning the tapes are more compact.
  • Like VHS picture quality about 8mm standard - which means its not that bad.
  • Compact, lighweight cameras.
  • All the advantages of VHS as far as editing goes as you use an adaptor (which looks like a VHS tape) that allows your VCR to play VHS-C tapes like normal videotapes.
  • Cheap cameras!!
  • Only has a mono soundtrack
  • Because of the decrease in size the tapes are shorter (30 - 45 mins).

S-VHS
Price Range £900

Pros
Cons
  • Excellent picture quality
  • Stereo soundtrack
  • Can also record onto VHS tapes (although the quality isn't as good as using proper VHS tapes) or S-VHS-C tapes with an adaptor.
  • S-VHS VCRs are top notch - a wide choice with excellent control over editing of sound and pictures.
  • Despite being the same size as VHS tape, tapes can only be played back on S-VHS VCRs.
  • Expensive.
  • Bulky machines - although this isn't necessarily that bad it makes for steadier shots
  • Few cameras to choose from.

S-VHS-C (another compact format - like S-VHS only smaller)
Price Range £370 - £450

Pros
Cons
  • Like S-VHS excellent picture quality (near broadcast standard)
  • Stereo soundtrack
  • S-VHS VCRs are top notch - a wide choice with excellent control over editing of sound and pictures.
  • Compact little cameras
  • Because of the decrease in size the tapes are shorter (30 - 45 mins).
  • Needs a S-VHS VCR to playback tapes.
  • Not cheap.

Mini DV
Price Range £700 - £2700

Pros
Cons
  • Offers bloody good pictures - nigh on TV quality (500 line horizontal resolution)
  • CD quality sound
  • Designers are experimenting with design of cameras so they are some nice machines out there eg. JVC's metal fag packet and Panasonic's Tube Cam (not the official names)
  • No loss of picture quality in editing provided it is all edited on DVC VCRs or non-linearly using a Firewire card.
  • The price is coming down.
  • Err...buy one of these and have to be nice to your bank manager for a long time.
  • Editing VCRs are available, but damn expensive.

 

Digital8
Price Range £??? - £???

Pros
Cons
  • DV quality pictures using compression ie. 500 lines resolution
  • CD quality sound
  • Uses cheap 8mm and Hi8 tape
  • Can play back old 8mm and Hi8 tapes
  • No loss of picture quality in editing provided it is edited via Firewire.
  • It's a Sony technology so you have to buy a Sony camera

Super8
Price Range £5 - £2000

Pros
Cons
  • Its film, so everything looks nicer and more, err...filmy. Y'know like home movies and pop videos.
  • On the whole they are well built - ie. metal etc.
  • Inexpensive - because everyone's Uncle Bob had one of these you might find someone in the family with one, or as everyone else is getting rid of their you can pick them up cheap in second hand shops - I got 3 for a tenner the other day. Wahey!
  • You can also pick up editing equipment cheap as well.
  • Full on retro stylee.
  • I saw a film shot on Super8 the other day and frankly you couldn't tell the difference between that and 16mm.
  • At the moment it costs about £12 for 4 minutes of film (including developing). This makes it pretty expensive to lark around with if you don't know what you're shooting.
  • Don't expect to find autofocus or any to other 'latest features' type stuff on them. Almost everything is manual - but this is no bad thing, at least you learn.
Super8 is punk - underground Super8 site courtesy of a smart New Yorker
small movies - well designed (but graphics intensive) Super8 site
Super8 for sale - 'cos I love you loads and I want you to get your films made here's a link I use every day just to check if there are any good cheap secondhands cine cameras in the UK (yep, its Loot Online - UK only I'm afraid).

Fisher Price Pixelvision
$400?? seems to be the going rate but there is talk of the inventor rereleasing the camera and talk has been of a $150 pricepoint for a B&W version and $250+ for a colour version although this has been very sketchy. Cool if they make it again though!

Pros
Cons
  • These cameras record 3 or 4 minutes of ghost-like black and white pictures onto a normal audio cassette, they were meant for kids but now they are being used by underground US film-makers.
  • Probably dead cheap if you could find one in a junk store.
  • Never released in the UK
  • No sound
  • About $400 if you buy one off someone who knows what they have got their hands on.
Cool
Pixelvision 2000 page
The
Pixelvision HomePage

Tyco Kidcam - is it the new Pixelvision?? (err. NO!)

Price : £50 or less

Pros
Cons
  • Under £50 for a video camera - bargain!!
  • Black and white pictures and sound!
  • No tape mechanism - instead it has a long cable that you can wire up to your VCR.
  • The pictures looks they are being filmed by a security camera.
  • It really struggles in low light - like, you can't see anything.

...and that's yer lot. There are other formats available (Betacam, D1, D2, Umatic, 16mm etc.) but for starting out they either too complicated, too expensive or difficult to get yer mitts on. What you choose is up to your budget and your film.

Also note that prices for cameras are always coming down. Each time I update this article I discover that the prices halve every 18 months. Isn't technology great!

For more info on individual cameras with reviews then try the excellent US magazine Videomaker and its equally good web site.

So what do you shoot on then?

I've rented mostly S-VHS and Hi8. The price was good, the quality was tip-top and you got stereo sound. I've bought a couple of battered Super8 cameras to experiment with and (bitten by the equipment bug- bad thing), oh yeah, and I picked up a Tyco Kidcam in the sales. At the moment I'm shooting on a MiniDV camcorder and whoah, are they smart. It pays to experiment, so play around with what you can get hold of and make up your own mind.

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