Arriflex 765

The Arriflex 765 is a 65mm movie camera created by Arri in 1989.

Arriflex 765
Released in 1989
Variant modelsArriflex 765
ManufacturerArri
Introduced1989
Gauge65 mm
Weight32 kg/70 lbs with loaded 500'magazine
Movementdual registration pins and pulldown claws, 3-perf pulldown
Speed2–100 frames per second
Aperture plateremovable
MotorDC with quartz crystal control
Operating noise levelMOS
Indicatorsspeed, run, counter (ft or m), shutter angle, time code (user bit and sensitivity level), voltage, incorrect movement, asynchronous speed, low battery, film end
Lens mountMax PL Mount, 64mm
Lens controlArri-style follow focus
Shutterreflex mirror; manual model stops at 15°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 75°, 90°, 105°, 120°, 135°, 144°, 172.8° and 180°
Viewfindercovers 65mm
Video assistIntegrated Video System (IVS) or IVS-2; Standard 0.5 inch CCD camera mountable through C-mount
Ground glassInterchangeable. Arriglow module available.
Magazinestop-mounted, available in 500 ft (150 m), 1000 ft (300 m)
Film coresstandard cores
Matte boxesArriflex MB or LMB models, 19 mm rods
Electronic accessories24 V
Other accessorieslightweight follow focus (LFF), lightweight support rods, third party accessories
Batteries24V
Camera supportArrihead, bridge plate, handgrip, shoulder set, shoulder cushion, underslung bracket for Steadicam

History

The camera was conceptualized by Otto Blaschek, who had already engineered the Arriflex 35BL and the 35 III, for which he won the "Scientific and Engineering Award" of the Academy of Motion Pictures. The development of this camera started in 1983. The goal was to design a 65mm movie camera, which was quiet enough to fit sync sound productions and had a similar ergonomy to 35mm cameras, to answer the growing demand for 65mm cameras. Other 65mm cameras had noise production of up to 50dBA, which made sound recording impossible.[1]

The final Arri 765 uses four crystal sound motors, two in the body and two in the magazine, due to the wider and thus heavier film stock. This way it achieves less than 25 dBA at 24fps.

The Arri 765 was used for special effects shots on Alien 3 and certain scenes of Far and Away (both 1992).[2] Films shot on the Arri 765 include Shutter Island (2010), Gravity (2013) and The Hateful Eight (2015).[3]

Technical data

The Arri 765 is a 65mm camera with a 5-perforation pull down mechanism. The mirror reflex shutter is manually adjustable between 180° and 15° and has a diameter of 200mm. The camera can record between 2 and 100 fps, the motors can run both in forward and reverse mode. Its power is 24V, and multiple accessories can be powered through the camera, like Arriglow and Video Assist. The camera takes both 500 ft and 1000 ft magazines. Due to its compact build, it is adaptable to most 35mm filmmaking workflows.[4]

The camera with a loaded 500 ft magazine weighs 70 lbs (32 kg).

gollark: - no tracking stuff - entirely based on the content of the latest request I make or static- static images/text only - no animations, video, scripting- clearly distinguished from main content
gollark: I turn off adblocking on the... two websites I use with non-evil ads, though.
gollark: This also means I don't see ads, which is pretty nice.
gollark: I have uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger.
gollark: I think Firefox includes tracking protection stuff, and there are definitely addons for it, so meh.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.