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If anything, getting the iPhone to do what Boyle needed on “28 Years Later” required an even more skilled and experienced cameraperson than if he’d used a modern professional camera.
28 Years Later certainly isn’t the first major production to use consumer cameras, with Mad Max: Fury Road employing the use of the Nikon D800 and more recently, sci-fi epic The Creator being ...
28 Years Later director Danny Boyle has opened up about his decision to shoot much of the film using an iPhone camera. The horror sequel was released last week, and has already proven to be a big ...
The upcoming Danny Boyle horror sequel "28 Years Later" was shot on the iPhone 15 Pro Max, marking another movie that took advantage of Apple's product lines.
The 28 Years Later film crew used various iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Maxes, according to Wired. The devices can "shoot Apple ProRes video in log color profile at 4K resolution," per the outlet.
28 Years Later is the third in the post-zombie trilogy, although this may be the first in a new series of films. What’s incredible is that Boyle (Trainspotting, Slumdog Millionaire) and Mantle decided ...
According to Wired, 28 Years Later was filmed using an iPhone 15 Pro Max, following in the footsteps of 28 Days Later in that it was also filmed on unexpected and somewhat nonstandard technology.
Danny Boyle, the director of "28 Days Later" and "28 Years Later." Tim P. Whitby / Getty Images Sean Baker's award-winning 2015 film "Tangerine" became the poster child for iPhone-shot movies.
Boyle told IndieWire that despite the iPhone having image quality and resolution that is now suitable for a major motion picture, there is a misnomer that that means anyone can make a movie with it.
The 28 Years Later film crew used various iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Maxes, according to Wired. The devices can "shoot Apple ProRes video in log color profile at 4K resolution," per the outlet.