La La Land (2016) | 2026 Trailer
▲ 12 r/lalaland+1 crossposts

La La Land (2016) | 2026 Trailer

Watch my Fan Trailer for La La Land

10 Years Later, Here’s My Modern Take on La La Land
all edited by myself, Hope you'll like it and hope it makes you want to see the movie again

youtube.com
u/PastSignificance2481 — 10 days ago
▲ 13 r/fightclub+1 crossposts

Fight Club ( 1999 ) | 2026 Modern Trailer

I 've made this David Fincher's Fight club Tribute trailer as an editing exercise and to build my portfolio,
since I’m aiming to work in film editing. I’d really love feedback on pacing, sound design, story clarity,

Any criticism, advice, or industry editors insight would be very appreciated.

youtube.com
u/PastSignificance2481 — 14 days ago
▲ 30 r/CultCinema+2 crossposts

Phantom Of the Paradise Fan Trailer

I've edited this trailer for Brian de Palma's Phantom of the paradise (1974). I hope you enjoy it, if you have any feedbacks i'm open !

youtube.com
u/PastSignificance2481 — 19 days ago

Technicolor in modern times

With a modern camera like the Sony FX6, what would be the best way to recreate the classic Technicolor 3-strip spherical look as closely as possible? ( i'm thinking about Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Singin' in the rain, mary poppins and many more... )

I’m talking about the really vibrant old Hollywood look with hard and soft lighting, rich colors, very controlled production design and huge studio sets. I know production design is probably one of the biggest parts of it, but I’m curious about the technical side too.

Could this look actually be recreated today with modern camera, even without a real Technicolor process

I’d love to know your thoughts about lenses, lighting, color grading, diffusion, film emulation, or any modern movies/commercials that got close to that look. ( especially lighting because there is not much info online )

u/PastSignificance2481 — 2 months ago

Technicolor in modern times

With a modern camera like the Sony FX6, what would be the best way to recreate the classic Technicolor 3-strip spherical look as closely as possible? ( i'm thinking about Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Singin' in the rain, mary poppins and many more... )

I’m talking about the really vibrant old Hollywood look with hard and soft lighting, rich colors, very controlled production design and huge studio sets. I know production design is probably one of the biggest parts of it, but I’m curious about the technical side too.

Could this look actually be recreated today with modern camera, even without a real Technicolor process

I’d love to know your thoughts about lenses, lighting, color grading, diffusion, film emulation, or any modern movies/commercials that got close to that look. ( especially lighting because there is not much info online )

https://preview.redd.it/3pvs2dqrpa0h1.jpg?width=967&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=99562f061425fd85bfafd5c714e9435006f023f8

https://preview.redd.it/iyaq5p4gpa0h1.jpg?width=967&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=385d717225ab430c3fcd8c8c63aed7ebf5f93934

https://preview.redd.it/fmw1vx4gpa0h1.jpg?width=967&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=150460895970118689a5a8b7fddbb1059f38ea11

https://preview.redd.it/hazns55gpa0h1.jpg?width=967&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=21097d248ea9f511955535bb228427d53c228177

reddit.com
u/PastSignificance2481 — 2 months ago