The world is flat, if
you look at it from
the right perspective.
Home entertainment
is also mostly 2D,
if you view it from our
U. S. perspective. But
according to Al Caudullo,
who is known as the
“3D Evangelist,” the rest
of the world is roundly formed with lots
of interest in 3D in all media, becoming a
market of which many domestic producers
aren’t even aware.
As founder of 3DGuy Productions,
Caudullo had just flown into Los Angeles
from his home base in Bangkok, in August
to conduct the “3Days of 3D” workshop.
He was backed up by a roster of Hollywood-
based 3D luminaries in front of a
sold-out crowd at Michael Page’s 3D Stereolab.
Although Caudullo demonstrated his
theories about 3D production using cutting-
edge equipment like Panasonic’s new
twin lens AG-3DP1 camcorder recording
to an Atomos Ninja in Pro Rez HQ, much
of the workshop’s “How to be Profitable
with 3D” theme was fulfilled with his
demonstration of the new 3D capabilities
of Grass Valley’s v. 6.5 Edius Pro NLE software
just released last June.
“Edius loves the Panasonic cameras,”
Caudullo beams. “We were able to attach
the P2 cards from the AG-3DP1 directly to
it and begin editing their 3D material on
the EDIUS timeline even before the transfer
was completed. I’m convinced that
this kind of 3D technology enables you
to produce quality 3D on an indie budget
without spending a million dollars.”
With his international perspective obtained,
in part, by having instigated Asia’s
first 3D filmmaking curriculum at Mahidol
University in Bangkok, Caudullo is convinced
that the biggest market for 3DTV
is not in America right now.
“In Europe and Asia, 3D productions
are selling like hotcakes,” he tells us. “My
distributor, Torsten Hoffman of 3Dcontenthub.com, just closed a 3D deal with Virgin
Media in the United Kingdom [and]
another with CCTV in China. We’ve got 3D
stuff on MTV in Hungary and on August
29, Amazon U.K. released an independent
Blu-ray disk called “The Best of 3D” from 13 different filmmakers that debuted in
presales in the No. 3 position, beating even
the pre-sales of ‘Avatar” and ‘Spiderman.’”
Caudullo’s current 3D production is
an adventure documentary, “Of Hunters
and Eagles: The Golden Eagle Festival of
Western Mongolia.” It’s about the Kazakh
tribes reviving the ancient art of training
wild eagles to be hunting companions.
Caudullo shot it with the help of his
wife Sompao, a native of Thailand; his fellow
lecturer at Mahidol University, Dorn
Ratanathasanee; and one very lucky Thai
intern nicknamed “Tommie.”
Edius 6.5’s 3D capabilities were crucial
to finishing “Of Hunters and Eagles.”
“That’s because its 3D workflow is so
complete,” Caudullo said, “and you can use
it even on a moderately powered PC to
get real-time 3D playback without needing
special graphics cards. For example,
I’m using Nvidia’s GeForce GTX580; others
are using AMD cards, off an Intel Core
i7 processor.”
 |
A presentation during the “3Days of 3D” workshop |
Linking the left and right eyes is automatic.
“Edius has an Auto Pairing button,
which recognizes the dual channels in the
proper order and sets them up so all you
have to do is a quick check, hit ‘OK,’ and
you are on your way,” he said. “It will even
do 4K and Red files in 8- and 10-bit color
space, and works with so many codecs, it
boggles the mind.”
Caudullo also recommends third-party
software such as Titler Pro from NewBlue-
FX to facilitate the unexpectedly tricky
challenge of creating and positioning 3D
titles in Z-space, and Stereoscopic Suite
X1 from emotion3D that can control the
depth script in a 3D shot and even adjust
the position of objects within that depth
area.
As a practical edit-bay configuration,
Caudullo spreads his Edius user interface
across two computer monitors—one
generally for data and the other for bins—
next to an LG or Panasonic monitor on
which to view the 3D video. He’ll often
switch from full-color passive 3D display
mode to simple anaglyph so he can check
the convergence.
“I tell my editing students all the time
that what you are selling is your ability
and your speed,” Caudullo said. “Edius
gives you the power to be able to maximize
your earnings. I’m not at all involved
with its development, but I’ve used this
NLE since it was called Canopus and now
I’m singing the praises of Edius as a freelancer
who has seen what it can do.”
 |
| Screenshot of Grass Valley’s Edius Pro 6.5 NLE software |
Like his eagles, Caudullo urges stateside
3D content creators to look past the
horizon.
“It’s true the United States is the biggest
single box office for 3D films, but actually
60 percent of the revenue on most
of the big movies is coming from the international
market,” he says. “People have
a much higher
acceptance
rate for 3D
overseas. It’s
all about getting
your content
out where
it is going to be
seen.”
That may
be one reason
Grass Valley
handed out
full licenses of
Edius 6.5 to
everyone who
attended “3Days of 3D.” But there is meaning
to their madness.
With the ripples of one major NLE’s
exit from the shared workflow-oriented
level of professional editing still churning
the waters, Grass Valley is well aware that
the nature of post production abhors a
vacuum.
“There is no doubt that an opening
was created,” said Ed Casaccia, senior director
segment marketing at Grass Valley,
“and with Edius 6.5 we have absolutely
looked for ways to exploit that opportunity.
More choices makes for better editing.”
Jay Ankeney is a freelance editor and
post-production consultant based in Los
Angeles. Write him at JayAnkeney@mac.com.