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  • Marvel Studios is really, really good at what they do.

  • Over the past eight years, they've created a tightly interconnected cinematic universe

  • spanning across fourteen films and counting,

  • which is unheard of in the history of cinema.

  • Not only that, but the majority of the movies are

  • actually good.

  • Some are even genuinely great.

  • They've consistently made really smart choices

  • in terms of who they hire in front of and behind the camera,

  • giving us nerds the huge, spectacular superhero movies we've dreamed of for decades.

  • I only really have 2 major issues with their approach.

  • One-- the generic, unmemorable scores --has already been

  • covered in some really good video essays.

  • So I want to talk about the other one.

  • Marvel's color grading. Or in other words:

  • Why do Marvel's movies all look like muddy concrete?

  • Like, look at that. It's a great scene, but that's really ugly.

  • Now, in case you're not a filmmaker

  • or person who's into technical terminology,

  • let me briefly explain what I mean.

  • Color grading is the digital manipulation of the colors

  • and tones of the image you see on screen.

  • This was first used in 2000, on "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"

  • and since then has become an essential part of literally

  • every motion picture you see.

  • From movies to TV to commercials to YouTube videos.

  • The rise of color grading connects directly with the rise of

  • digital cinematography, as in, shooting with digital

  • cameras as opposed to traditional film cameras.

  • High-end digital cameras shoot an extremely flat image,

  • meaning there's very low contrast and saturation.

  • It looks really gray and dull, but that's specifically

  • so you have the most information there to use

  • when color grading. So you can take footage

  • that looks like this and make it look like this.

  • So, what does this have to do with Marvel?

  • Well, Marvel's first three movies ("Iron Man" 1 & 2, and "Thor")

  • were shot on film. After that, they switched

  • to digital, using the Genesis on "Captain America: The First Avenger"

  • and then the ARRI Alexa on every one of their subsequent films,

  • from "The Avengers" up through "Doctor Strange."

  • So, what's the issue here? Well, Marvel's best-looking movies

  • also happen to be the ones shot on film, but

  • there's more to it than that.

  • My issue isn't that the other movies are shot digitally.

  • It's that they consistently use the same style of color grading

  • on all their digital footage,

  • creating an image that's flat and dull when it should be

  • vibrant and exciting.

  • Digital cinematography can look amazing

  • but it has to be graded properly.

  • The root of the problem is the lack of proper black values,

  • as in, the spots in the image that should be black,

  • like the deepest parts of the shadows, aren't.

  • Look: when I use the eyedropper tool in Adobe After Effects,

  • this is what it tells me it is.

  • Dark gray.

  • And looking at the shot, you would think that spot

  • should be black.

  • Having a pure black value in a shot

  • makes the other colors stand out more,

  • and since the Marvel movies don't have proper black

  • the colors don't pop.

  • Since we're talking about superhero movies,

  • I want to illustrate this point using superhero comics.

  • In traditional comics artwork, there is a

  • penciler, who draws the pictures with, y'know, a pencil,

  • and then an inker, who uses black ink to go over

  • the pencils and give contrast and definition to

  • the image.

  • Then the colorist, obviously, colors it.

  • Superhero comics are generally pretty colorful,

  • and a big part of what makes the colors stand out is

  • the contrast between them and the pure black of the inks.

  • There was a brief fad in the early 2000s of skipping the inks

  • and going straight from pencils to colors.

  • The most well-known example of this would probably be Salvador Larroca's

  • art in X-Treme X-Men.

  • See how there are no actual blacks there, and it all looks kind of

  • flat and washed-out?

  • That's basically the problem with how Marvel's movies look.

  • Also in the comics, everyone realized this didn't look good, and stopped doing it.

  • Let's look at "Guardians of the Galaxy," which I think has the best

  • cinematography of any of Marvel's digitally-shot movies.

  • (although some of that gets lost in the color grading.)

  • I'm going to do 10 seconds' worth of adjustments

  • really just tweaking the levels and boosting the saturation

  • a little bit, and let's look at how

  • they fare side-by-side.

  • I know these are aesthetics, and thus are totally subjective,

  • but I think that's a much more vibrant image.

  • It's more dynamic, it has more definition, and it looks like what I think

  • a superhero movie should look like.

  • Let's do the same thing for "Civil War," a movie I love despite the fact

  • that it looks like an empty parking lot.

  • These adjustments obviously help more on scenes shot at night

  • or inside,

  • instead of in the middle of a sunny day,

  • but there's still a noticeable improvement.

  • It's a bummer, because Marvel hires some really good

  • cinematographers, and then does their work a disservice

  • with how they handle it in post-production.

  • Here's what John Toll's work looks like in Iron Man 3,

  • and here's what it looks like in Jupiter Ascending, which was his next film.

  • These were even shot on the same camera.

  • It's easy to jump straight to the camera and

  • and blame the Alexa, but that's

  • not really accurate.

  • This is the same camera that shot "Mad Max: Fury Road,"

  • and obviously that didn't have the same problem.

  • Look at this scene in "Skyfall". The blacks are actually black and

  • it looks AMAZING.

  • This is mainly a matter of color grading

  • and Marvel setting top-down requirements on their movies

  • that they all use the same camera and that they all go through the same

  • post-production process with the same colorist.

  • The issue is way more complex than I'm making it out to be.

  • There's the whole matter of how different cameras interpret different

  • types of light,

  • and why some look better than others.

  • For example, this is why the outdoor daylight scenes

  • in Marvel movies look the crappiest,

  • and the scenes lit with fluorescent lights tend to look the best.

  • Since the image that gets recorded into the Alexa

  • is so flat, with so much to work with, it

  • takes a ton of skill and work to get the perfect look.

  • It's often easier to stick with the flat style

  • and just embrace it, which is why every music video

  • these days looks like this.

  • (When they used to look like this.)

  • But you have to consider what works best for your movie.

  • That flatter look makes sense for, say, "Spotlight"

  • or "Sicario", where you might want

  • the visuals more muted and closer to reality.

  • But when you're dealing with a big, bombastic superhero movie,

  • don't you want the images to be bright, to pop off the screen?

  • Not to be a bunch of muddy gray tones?

  • The recent DC movies, for all their problems,

  • at least have this figured out.

  • Look, Marvel is a billion-dollar company with an insane record of

  • success, and I'm sure they've focus-group tested this to gain empirical

  • evidence that audiences like flat, dull-looking

  • superhero movies.

  • So this is just my opinion.

  • But looking across all their movies,

  • there's the appearance that they copied and pasted

  • the same color grading with the same

  • levels and same color palette on every one.

  • Now, is there hope for the future? Actually, yes, there is.

  • There's some change coming.

  • The upcoming "Guardians of the Galaxy, Volume 2" is the first Marvel Studios film

  • to switch from the ARRI Alexa to the new RED Weapon 8K camera

  • (Which is a really cool name.)

  • I'm excited about this move, because

  • from what I've seen, RED cameras are the way to go if you're shooting a blockbuster

  • on digital.

  • That's what Ridley Scott used for "The Martian,"

  • what Michael Bay used on the last few

  • "Transformers" movies,

  • and what Guillermo del Toro used for "Pacific Rim,"

  • the movie I would consider the gold standard for what

  • digitally-shot blockbusters can look like.

  • Across the board, these had the vibrant colors

  • and deep black values that Marvel's movies have lacked.

  • We recently saw the first footage, and in my opinion it looks like a

  • definite improvement over the first film.

  • The colors are more vibrant, the blacks are deeper,

  • and it just looks less... flat.

  • So I'm crossing my fingers that this isn't an outlier and more Marvel

  • movies follow its lead.

  • I wanted to make this video because

  • I genuinely really like the movies that Marvel

  • makes,

  • and every time they make a new one, I hope

  • that they'll fix this problem. It's small, but it matters.

  • But if we're being honest, Marvel-- just go back to shooting your movies

  • on film.

  • You're making enough money. You can

  • afford it.

  • (Yawns) So that does it for this video essay, which is also

  • my first video essay.

  • This is a bit of a departure for the channel, but if you liked it and want to see

  • more stuff like this, let me know in the comments.

  • Or if you think I'm a nitpicking nerd who should shut up

  • about this...

  • let me know in the comments.

  • Here's a bunch of social media links, so you can yell at me

  • on multiple platforms,

  • and I will see you guys here next week, with a new video

  • on Wednesday. Bye!

Marvel Studios is really, really good at what they do.

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為什麼漫威的電影看起來有點醜?(視頻文章) (Why Do Marvel's Movies Look Kind of Ugly? (video essay))

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    浚祺蘇 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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