@@temitayoismewhy did you pause the comments on your plagiarism of Ebiri’s Megalopolis review and delete comments pointing out said plagiarism? Your viewers have a right to know that you’re a dishonest hack! Did you steal the script for this video as well?
There is actually a misconception that rehousing Lenses designed for photography is a new concept. Take the legendary c series and e series by Panavision. Both obviously anamorphic lenses but the spherical base of these lenses are Cooke s2/s3 (c series) and Nikon Nikkors (e series). The Nikkors were no special Cine Versions but straight up photography lenses. Another example are the B speeds by Zeiss aka Super Speeds. The 35, 50 and 85 are the exact same lenses in a different housing.
Nice video , Man. Want collab video with that dop guy you work a lot with
Very soon!😂
@@temitayoismewhy did you pause the comments on your plagiarism of Ebiri’s Megalopolis review and delete comments pointing out said plagiarism? Your viewers have a right to know that you’re a dishonest hack!
Did you steal the script for this video as well?
There is actually a misconception that rehousing Lenses designed for photography is a new concept. Take the legendary c series and e series by Panavision. Both obviously anamorphic lenses but the spherical base of these lenses are Cooke s2/s3 (c series) and Nikon Nikkors (e series). The Nikkors were no special Cine Versions but straight up photography lenses. Another example are the B speeds by Zeiss aka Super Speeds. The 35, 50 and 85 are the exact same lenses in a different housing.
Ah! Didn’t know that about the e-series, I thought it was only the C. Thanks for sharing.