Ability to Change Focal Lengths without Switching Lenses, Optical Quality and Size Top List of FUJINON Zoom Advantages
Filmmaking is first and foremost about storytelling. My role as a cinematographer is to capture the best performances with the least intrusion. For me, it’s less about the technology, and more about the story.
My primary lens choice is the FUJINON 19-90mm Cabrio zoom. Weighing only 5.6 lbs/2.54kg, I was first attracted to the lens simply because of its size and weight. But its optical quality was an unexpected surprise. I conducted blind tests between the 19-90mm and other lenses, and it holds up against anything on the market.
The most important thing to me is for a lens to be completely transparent, meaning it doesn’t impart color. It doesn’t impart anything artificial. I want it to be as clean a palate as possible so that I can change those things with lighting, filtration or color.
The ability to change focal length without changing lenses as another point in the Cabrio’s favor, Since the 19-90 came out and I’ve started using it, I’ve not used any other zoom. It’s changed the way I shoot because of the ease of operation, the ease of not having to change lenses all the time. I just reach down and change a focal length. That’s made things go a lot faster, not only in feature films, but also in commercials and in TV series.
Not having to endure lens change breaks while filming “The Forgiven” was something the film’s stars told me they appreciated. When the actors are doing an intense scene, being able to reach down and zoom in 5mm to reframe and do another take can keep them in the performance. Therefore, when you cut it together, you see it. There’s no fluctuation from shot to shot or angle to angle, and that’s significant because ultimately, it’s about the actors. It’s about the story. That’s the reason I want to make movies. I want to tell stories, and this is a great lens for doing just that.
About William Wages, ASC
The winner of three ASC Awards, including ASC Career in Television honors in 2012, and two Emmy nominations, Wages is known for his sumptuous landscape and intimate photography in features such as Maya Angelou’s “Down in the Delta,” Roland Joffe’s “The Forgiven,” and Steven Spielberg’s TV mini-series “Into the West,” as well as his development of filmmaking tools that create more efficiency and transparency on set.