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Panasonic Pro AG-DVX100A 3-CCD MiniDV Proline Camcorder w/10x Optical Zoom
Panasonic Pro AG-DVX100A 3-CCD MiniDV Proline Camcorder w/10x Optical Zoom
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Brand: Panasonic
Category: Photography

This item is no longer available

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(12 reviews)
Sales Rank: 42998

Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Floppy Disk Drive: None
Optical Zoom: 10
Display Size: 3.5
Maximum Focal Length: 45
Minimum Focal Length: 4.5
Shipping Weight (lbs): 8
Dimensions (in): 14.3 x 6.3 x 5.5

MPN: AGDVX100A
Model: AGDVX100A
UPC: 791871302378
EAN: 0791871302378
ASIN: B00024YOGU


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 12
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5 out of 5 stars CineTech22 is right, but...   January 10, 2005
  34 out of 34 found this review helpful

CineTech22's information is correct regarding effective resolution, exposure latitude, etc. Film is a chemical process, and the amount of detail that can be delineated on essentially a molecular level on celluloid is staggering, even with 16mm. BTW, DV resolution is 720x480, not 640x480, but your point still is made--WAY less info than film. As far as the focus operation is concerned, there is an aftermarket "follow-focus" rig available to address this, but yes, the stock camera doesn't let you set your focus-pulling marks.


I would contend, however, that you've lost the forest for the trees. This camera DOES spell the end of 16mm as the preferred medium for indie filmmakers. Premium Panasonic DV tapes are about $5/cassette (63 minutes). And are reusable. What does 16mm cost in stock and processing for an hour of footage?

The path to indie glory is no longer only "shoot in 16mm, blow it up to 35mm for festivals or limited release, get discovered". Now we have "shoot in anamorphic DV, release on DVD, get discovered" as the new, much more cost effective option. Another note: DV footage shot on a DVX100a looks great uprezzed to HD, even better than some low-end prosumer HD cams out there, mostly due to its great color abilities.

I have used both the DVX100 & 100a, and have run up against their limitations. Exposure and depth of field are the biggest and require a lot of production compensation to get around--lots of zoomed, wide open aperture shots with heavy ND filtering to get that truly cinematic look.

Still, if you know what you're doing, this camera is fantastic. Audio is superb (phantom-powered XLR's--yeah, baby!!), 24p is beautiful to work with, color is very "film-like", and although it is easy to "bloom" the whites and "crush" the blacks, the range is better than most DV cams, and both can be avoided by indie filmmakers who pay attention to settings and lighting.

Would-be filmmakers who want to go this route need two important accessories: the 16x9 anamorphic adapter by Panasonic (AG-LA7200g), and Barry Green's book/DVD package http://www.dvxuser.com/articles/dvxbook . By understanding the camera's strengths and weaknesses, you can get fantastic results from the DVX100a. If you are an independent fillmaker with a limited budget, buy this camera, the anamorpic adapter, Barry's book, and do some test shots to figure it all out, Then spend the $$$THOUSANDS$$$ you've saved by shooting with the DVX100a and use it for better lighting, production, script doctors, better actors, and more time in post. The result will be far more impressive than 16mm done on a shoestring--a turd that could more easily be blown up to 35mm, but is far less likely to be worth it.

That's my take, anyway. This camera does for independent filmmaking what the Alesis ADAT did for digital audio recording in the 90's--completely "democracizes" the field so that young, up-and-coming creative people can produce work of incredible quality for very little money and absolutely no "studio" control.

So buy this camera, indulge your creative freedom, make your prize-winning indie film, and "stick it to da MAN!"



5 out of 5 stars This is the ONLY option for low budget filmmakers   November 18, 2004
  31 out of 33 found this review helpful

If you are an aspiring filmmaker, or even an experienced one, DV is a wonderful option! And other than the $100,000 HDDV cameras, you can't find anything that beats this camera, especially when you add on the anamorphic lens, which allows you to shoot in 16:9 without losing any resolution.

Whoever said Sundance doesn't accept DV hasn't paid attention. Last year, over 1/3 of all accepted FEATURE films at Sundance were DV. And the two the sold for the most $$$...both shot on DV. The cinematographer award went to a DV filmmaker (who shot Spkike Lee's Bamboozled, also shot on DV), and was yet a different film than the two big money winners.

My advice is to take a very close look at this camera if you have filmmaking aspirations. DV is the only sensible format. My other advice is to NEVER waste money on film school. Spend that money on making 3 or 4 DV films. You'll learn way more, and may even make something worthy of a great festival like Sundance.

But isn't this supposed to be a review about the AG-DVX100a? This camera blows me away. Blown up on the big screen, it looks slightly fuzzy compared to 35mm, but on a big screen TV, it looks wonderful, and MOST films made by indie filmmakers have a very short and limited release theatrically (if at all). Most are seen on cable or rented at the video store. The DVX 100a shoots in progressive scan. That gives it incredible resolution on a prog. scan DVD player and HDTV. It shoots a 24 frames per second (the same as film) if you have aspirations of transferring to 35mm at some point. And transferring to 35mm is about 10% of the cost of shooting on it, granted it's not the same quality. But if you shoot at 24P, editing software will automatically convert it to NTSC for you if transferring to film doesn't become an option. No issues at all.

This camera will truly blow you away if you compare its quality to that of past Sundance DV successes like Blair Witch, Tadpole, Pieces of April (which won an Oscar for best supporting actress), and Open Water.

Nobody I've ever met that wasn't brainwased from their wasted time and money at film school was ever disastisfied with the quality of this camera. Buy the camera, make a business card that says filmmaker, and go make a great looking film with this camera. You'll be amazed.



5 out of 5 stars Shooting 16mm is like pulling teeth if you have this.   October 24, 2004
  9 out of 30 found this review helpful

Cine cameras are expensive because they are controlled by monopoly groups that have a monopoly on the industry. So do Cinematographers with their ASC credits. Saying that you want to shoot on 16mm or 35mm is like saying I want one of the 50,000 cine camera crawling the planet today. Some are rusted and need money to repair, most are noisy, and the few that you need are too expensive or unavailable for rent until you get expensive insurance. Filmmakers do get their own cine gear, but only once they get there after success. Everything before that is borrowed from the rental department... if you can get it but who cares about the festivals? If you want to see your DV production destroyed because you choose to show it on a big screen via 35mm projection (God forbid you have the inclination to do that without a film history) then be my guest. As we all know the vast percentage of new and up and coming directors who shoot DV go the DVD route avoiding all costs of any celluloid being introduced into the process. The result - what a 16mm film student or movie maker wanted. A film on DVD.

If you want to shoot 16mm then just go buy a Konvas 2M, a Russian 35mm camera and avoid shooting 16mm altogether by going 35mm with a camera that costs the same price as this one. Besides we hear the same rhetoric than DV costs so much money to touch up and get right for 35mm print as if motion picture doesn't go through the exact same process at the exact same price. How many big buget, cinematographer paycheck and all, productions on 35mm have we seen that look truly ghastly? Plenty, because we have lots of experience seeing exactly this.

Besides in the closing statement you already admitted as much with both ARRI and Aaton producing new lines of digital cinema cameras.

Shoot 16mm is a joke because if you have the funds for this cam you have the funds for a Konvas 2M. Eitherway 16mm is nowhere middle format film that is going to go the way of 9.5mm (yeah that existed one time also... until 16mm out sold it.)



4 out of 5 stars That's Why You Rent   October 24, 2004
  5 out of 38 found this review helpful

Cine cameras are expensive because they are intended for rental use by professionals, not private ownership by "filmmakers" that finance their "productions" by growing and selling drugs. Yes, telecine drops the resolution down to NTSC if that's your destination medium, but there's more to image quality than resolution. If cost is your only concern then by all means shoot DV. If you do get into any festival that counts (Sundance, Cannes, etc.), which you won't with DV anyway, see how good your DV footage looks when blown up for theatrical projection. I am a DP and personally my primary concern is image quality. I shoot whatever the producer tells me we can afford, though I'll always argue for film because at the end of the day it just looks better. Yes it's more expensive, but when it isn't my money paying for it (and it never is) I'd rather have a better picture than worse. I don't care about the cost... as long as I get paid I'm happy, and film keeps me employed and the paychecks coming because it provides better results. While it's true that some decent features have been made with DV (28 Days Later most notably), those productions required lots of expensive post work to make them even minimally presentable for commercial distribution. DV's fine for low-budget hacks, but personally I'll stick with film until video shows me something comparable in quality. We'll see what the Arri D-20 and Panavision Genesis have to offer...


5 out of 5 stars Yeah right Kubrick   October 23, 2004
  16 out of 27 found this review helpful

This is the same old waffle in order to say that you would be better off shooting on 16mm stock. Fine - go shoot on 16mm, buy your $10,000 below par noisy 16mm from Ebay that was made in 1980s, unless you have $50,000 to get a spanking new Aaton, but slightly noisy, your DAT recorder extra and of course the film stock and your cost of development and transfer to telecine and then where does it end up? Being projected on 35mm in local Odean?

Grow up and mix down to DVD if you think your work might see the light of day. If you think a 8GB DVD can hold the resolution of 16mm or 35mm then please go and be the Kubrick with a minimum budget of $100,000 to get your show on the road...

... or shoot with this and mix to DVD... like everyone else is doing... and quit supporting the cine camera monopoly that sets the $50,000 price tag that you lap up.

LOL.

This cam KILLS 16mm production, period.


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