ABSTRACT

The Digital Intermediate process (DI), or conversion of film to digital bits and then back to film again, has great potential to revolutionize the postproduction process. The skill set to photochemically process a movie and pop it into a canister for the postal service to send around to all of the movie houses and the skill set to digitally master and create a file that is distributed globally via the Internet and satellites are completely different. One of these entirely new processes is that of the digital intermediate. The DI has tremendous advantages, ranging from improved quality (first "print" is as good as the last) to cost savings (no re-mastering) to digital distribution (bits and bytes: no film in canisters). The DI influences everything from on set production to the delivery of content to consumers and everything in between.

Digital Intermediates for Film and Video teaches the fundamental concepts and workflow of the digital intermediate process. Covers basics of film first, and then introduces the digital world--including a tutorial on digital images, asset management, online editing, color correction, restoration, film and video output, mastering and quality control.

Jack's clear and easy-to-follow explainiation of Hollywood buzz words and components facilitates the spill over to anyone who has a vested interest in the quality and cost of the movie.

chapter 2|23 pages

Video

chapter 3|18 pages

Photographic Film

chapter 4|26 pages

Digital Media

chapter 5|53 pages

Acquisition

chapter 6|68 pages

Asset Management

chapter 7|54 pages

Conforming

chapter 8|59 pages

Color Grading

chapter 9|40 pages

Retouching and Restoration

chapter 10|25 pages

Digital Effects and Titles

chapter 11|36 pages

Output

chapter 12|28 pages

Quality Control

chapter 13|20 pages

The Future of Digital Film

chapter 14|23 pages

Virtual Cinematography