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Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Digital cinematography |
Founded | 2005; 20 years ago (2005) |
Founder | Jim Jannard |
Fate | Acquired by Nikon on April 8th, 2024 |
Headquarters | , United States |
Key people | Jarred Land (president) |
Products | Red One, Epic, Scarlet, DSMC2, Scarlet-W & Red Raven cameras |
Parent |
|
Website | red |
Red Digital Cinema, LLC is an American camera manufacturer specializing indigital cinematography headquartered inFoothill Ranch, California, United States. It has been owned byNikon since April 2024.[1]
The company has studios inHollywood, Los Angeles, and has offices inLondon,Shanghai, andSingapore as well as retail stores in Hollywood,New York City, andMiami. In addition it has various authorized resellers and service centers around the world.[2]
Red Digital Cinema was founded byJim Jannard, who previously foundedOakley. As a self-described "camera fanatic" owning over 1,000 models, Jannard started the company with the intent to deliver a (relatively) affordable4K digital cinema camera.[3][4] Jannard dates the idea to a time when he bought aSony HDR-FX1 video camera and learned that the files had to be converted with software fromLumiere HD and were not viewable onMac OS.[3] Lumiere HD's owner Frederic Lumiere collaborated with Jannard on developing an alternative and introduced him to Ted Schilowitz who became Red's first employee.[5]
The early team members engaged inundisclosed research on how to make a digital camera feasible for Hollywood productions. Part of the process involved using 4K resolution instead of2K which was most common at the time. Another technical hurdle was to achieve the focusing quality ofDSLR cameras without sacrificing frame rate. Part of Red's solution to this problem was developing a sensor with a physical size comparable to that of analog film.[3] At the 2006NAB Show, Jannard announced that Red would build a 4K digital cinema camera, called the Red One and began taking pre-orders.
In March 2007, directorPeter Jackson completed a camera test of two prototype Red One cameras, which became the 12-minute World War I filmCrossing the Line.[6] On seeing the short film, directorSteven Soderbergh told Jannard: "I am all in. I have to shoot with this." Soderbergh took two prototype Red Ones into the jungle to shoot his filmChe.[3] A short documentary,Che and the Digital Revolution, was made about the Red camera technology that was used in the film's production.[7] The Red One first shipped in August 2007. One of the first television programs to shoot with it was the medical dramaER.[8]
In 2010, Red acquired the historicRen-Mar Studios in Hollywood, and renamed it "Red Studios Hollywood".[9] By 2011, it had over 400 employees.[5] 2011 was also the year in whichPanavision,Arri, andAaton announced that they would no longer be producing analog cameras. Red Digital Cinema and the Red One were widely credited with accelerating this transition in the industry.[8] Schilowitz responded by saying "It was never our goal to kill film. Instead, we wanted to evolve it."[5]
In 2010, 5% of the top 100 grossing domestic films that were shot on digital video used Red cameras as their primary system. Their share increased to over 25% by 2016, but has declined since then.[10]
On August 19, 2013, Jim Jannard announced his retirement from Red, leavingJarred Land as president.[11]
On March 7, 2024, Red Digital Cinema accepted a takeover of the company by Japanese camera equipment manufacturerNikon Corporation for an undisclosed amount;[12] this may be part of a growing interest of Nikon to expand into the digital cinema camera market.[13] On April 12, 2024, Nikon announced that it had acquired 100% of the outstanding membership interests of Red Digital Cinema. Keiji Oishi, of Nikon's imaging business unit, assumed the role of CEO and Tommy Rios, the executive vice president of Red Digital Cinema, became co-CEO. Red's former president, Jarred Land, andJames Jannard, Red's founder, remain as close advisors to the company.[14]
On May 9, 2024,Nikon Corporation released their financial results report of the year ended March 31, 2024[15] and disclosed the amount paid, reported as "the deal of the century" in the camera industry:[16] 13,167 million yen, approximately $87 million US dollars (the currency exchange rate on April 8, 2024[17]), which represents 1-2% within the Nikon Group Companies.[18][19]
The Red One first introduced in 2007 was Red Digital Cinema's first production camera.[20] It captures up to 120 frames per second at 2K resolution and 60 frames per second at 4K resolution.[21] Its "Mysterium" sensor was acquisitioned for use with the proprietaryRAW format called Redcode. By 2010, Red began selling upgrades to a 14 megapixel sensor called the "M-X".[22] The Red One has been reviewed as having effectively the same quality as35 mm film.[3][23] The Red One was made out of aluminum alloy, and the body alone weighs 10 pounds (4.5 kg).
It was used to shootChe,The Informant, andThe Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. In 2010, Red released the Red Epic, which was used to shootThe Amazing Spider-Man,The Hobbit,Prometheus,Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides andThe Great Gatsby as well as many other feature films.
In 2009, Red began releasing new cameras with an updated form factor compared to the Red One. Designed with the goal of facilitating either still images or video, depending on the mounting setup, Red called the concept DSMC for "Digital Stills and Motion Capture".[24] The first camera released for this system was Epic-X, a professional digital stills and motion capture camera with interchangeable lens mounts. After this a new camera line called Scarlet was introduced that provided lower end specifications at a more affordable price. Initially equipped with a 5K imaging sensor, upgrades were later offered to a 6K sensor with higher dynamic range called the "Red Dragon".[25]
The DSMC2 family of cameras was introduced in 2015 as the new form factor for all cameras up to 2020.[26] The Weapon 8KVV and Weapon 6K were the first two cameras announced within this line. They were followed by the Red Raven 4.5K and Scarlet-W 5K. Third-party capture formats, namelyApple ProRes andAvid DNxHD, were made available for these cameras.[27]
In 2016, an 8K sensor called "Helium" was introduced with the two cameras Red Epic-W and Weapon 8KS35. In early January 2017, this was given the highest sensor score ever, 108, by theDxOMark website.[28]Marvel Studios'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 was the first film to be released that was shot on the Weapon. The film was shot at the camera's full 8K resolution, and featured an equivalent workflow, supplanting directorDavid Fincher'sGone Girl as the film with the highest-resolution post-production workflow.
In 2019, Jared Land from Red announced theRed Komodo camera.[29] In 2020, Red started to ship the "beta" stormtrooper white models of the Red Komodo to customers on the waitlist. The price for the beta cameras is $6,995, with the regular black shipping models for $5,995 (body only). The Komodo camera features 6K video, super 35 sensor, a Canon RF lens mount, a dual BP battery plate, and a global shutter.[30]
In 2021, Red announced theRed V-Raptor camera, the current flagship model in Red's lineup of cameras, and the first camera that officially belongs to the DSMC3 family of cameras. Like the Komodo, the Red V-Raptor also has an active Canon RF lens mount, but unlike the Komodo, the V-Raptor is capable of multi-format recording.[31]
The V-Raptor features aVistaVision 8K sensor (40.96 mm x 21.60 mm) with the ability to crop to smaller formats like Super35. It is capable of recording full sensor 8K at 120 FPS (or 150 FPS cropped to 2.4:1), andhigh frame rates of up to 600 FPS in 2K. With an advertised dynamic range of 17 stops.[32] It was launched with a price tag of $24,500 (body only).[33] Red would later release the V-Raptor XL in 2022, featuring a larger body with an expanded range of ports, internal ND filter, additional aux power, interchangeable lens mount, among other features.[34]
In November 2022, Red announced the V-Raptor Rhino, a limited edition version of the V-Raptor, but featuring an 8K Super35 sensor and a light grey color scheme. It was launched with a price tag of $19,500.[35] In March 2023, the V-Raptor and V-Raptor XL S35 was launched. These cameras were identical to the previous V-Raptor and XL models and, like the V-Raptor Rhino, have Super35 sensors instead of the original VistaVision sensor.[36]
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Red has offered S35PL mount prime and zoom lenses for their cameras.
Name | Focal length | Aperture | Minimum focal distance |
---|---|---|---|
Pro Prime | 18 mm | T1.8 | 4" |
25 mm | T1.8 | 4" | |
35 mm | T1.8 | 4" | |
50 mm | T1.8 | 6" | |
85 mm | T1.8 | 18" | |
100 mm | T1.8 | 24" | |
300 mm | T2.9 | 7.36 ft. |
Name | Focal length | Aperture | Minimum focal distance |
---|---|---|---|
Pro Zoom | 17–50 mm | T2.9 | 4" |
18–85 mm | T2.9 | 8" | |
50–150 mm | T2.8 | 8" |
In 2017, Red announced their intentions to enter the smartphone market including planned features such as a 5.7"holographic display and integration with existing camera products.[37] On May 18, 2018, Red announced theHydrogen One, with a release date in August 2018. Promised features included a holographic display, spatial sound, compatibility with the Red camera program, the launch of a streaming service, and modular add-ons similar to the "Moto Mods" feature of Motorola'sMoto Z.[38] Especially the announced camera sensor module received attention, with Red founder Jannard claiming: "If you were shooting an 8K Weapon on set as your A camera, this could certainly be your B camera."[39]
On release, the smartphone was a critical disappointment and was even cited as a contender for the worst technology product of 2018, arising from outdated hardware and a lack of capabilities.[40] Similarly, the phone was a commercial flop, and in 2019, promised modular add-ons vanished from Red's website, with Jannard announcing the company was "currently in the middle of radically changing the Hydrogen program".[41] In late 2019, the company discontinued the product line.[42]
Red began selling its Redcine-X package for post-production workflow in 2009.[43] The process of decompressing the sensor data can be sped up with a Red Rocket accelerator card.[44] There is a downloadableSDK for working directly with the Redcode images, and another for controlling the cameras remotely.[45]
Announced in 2012, the Redray Player was the first stand-alone device capable of providing 4K content to compatible 2D or 3D displays. Using a 1 TB internal drive for storage, the Redray plays 4K orHD media in the Redcode format. The player uses 12-bit4:2:2 precision.[46] A cinema laser projector in the same family was also announced in 2012 but never released.[47]
On August 18, 2008, Red filed a lawsuit against the electronics companyLG over its use of the nameScarlet.[48] Red accused LG "of taking the 'Scarlet' brand name from the camera company" after Red had denied LG's request to use it.[49]
On September 23, 2011, Jannard announced that his personal email account was compromised by formerArri executive Michael Bravin.[50] A lawsuit against Arri and Bravin was filed at the end of 2011; it was settled and dismissed in 2013.[51]
On June 27, 2012, Red sued Wooden Camera, a manufacturer of third party accessories, for patent infringement.[52]
In February 2013, Red filed for an injunction againstSony, claiming that several of its newCineAlta products, particularly the 4K-capable F65, infringed on patents the company held. They requested that Sony not only be forced to stop selling the cameras, but that they be destroyed as well.[53] Sony filed a countersuit against Red in April 2013, alleging that Red's entire product line infringed on Sony patents. In July 2013, both parties filed jointly for dismissal, and as of July 20, 2013, the case is closed.[54]
On March 2, 2017, Red filed a lawsuit against the maker of JinniMag, a third party copy of the Red Mini Mag.[55] Videos posted on theJinni.TechYouTube channel have accused Red Digital Cinema Cameras of lying to their customers and possibly obtaining their patents by deceiving theUSPTO.[56]
In May 2019,Apple Inc. filed a lawsuit against Red.com, LLC over several patents relating to digital cinema cameras and sensor processing.[57] Apple lost the case in November 2019. Apple argued that the patents related to Redcode Raw were "unpatentable", but a judge ruled that Apple's legal team had not provided sufficient evidence to back up their claims.[58]
Red's RAW video patent that has resulted in multiple companies being sued by Red isUS8872933. This US patent is scheduled to expire on April 11, 2028.
...making a commitment right now that the DSMC2 form factor will stay the same until at least 2020.