

The first in the Pocket Cinema Camera line with the ability to shoot 4K video, this model included a 4/3 image sensor and mount. Īt the NAB Show in April 2018, Blackmagic Design announced and demonstrated the Pocket Cinema Camera 4K at a price of US$1,295.

In March 2015, another update added lossless raw capability. On October, a firmware update allowed the cameras to format solid-state drives within the camera. It was then given an Arri PL model, as well as the Production Camera 4K, in September 2014. Īlongside the announcement of the Pocket Cinema Camera and Production Camera 4K at NAB in April 2013, the price was dropped from its initial value to US$1,995 on August. A passive Micro Four Thirds model was then announced at IBC in September for release in December, along with a collaboration with Arri for a set of kits exclusively for the camera. However, in August, the release date was delayed for "final stages of Thunderbolt certification and internal testing".


It is part of the Cinema Camera family of digital movie cameras and shoots 2.5K video in raw, Apple ProRes, CinemaDNG and Avid DNxHD formats.Īt the NAB Show in April 2012, Blackmagic Design announced and demonstrated the Cinema Camera and slated for its release on July with an initial price of US$2,995. The Blackmagic Cinema Camera (often simply the Cinema Camera or BMCC) is a digital movie camera developed and manufactured by Blackmagic Design and released on September 4, 2012. SDXC cards can be read by laptops with an SD slot, or via a Professional SD card (USB3.0) reader.įor copying your valuable recorded material we always recommend to use software like YoYottaID or ShotPut Pro that will help copy files to one or several destinations and perform a checksum calculation, comparing the material on the original media to the copies, to provide a minimum effort safety check of data integrity.4.9 in × 6.5 in × 4.46 in (12.4 cm × 16.5 cm × 11.3 cm) The Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera features a build in SD card recorder that captures lossless compressed CinemaDNG and ProRes 422 (HQ) on to fast Sandisk 64GB Extreme Pro SDXC cards.īare in mind that you always have to format your SDXC card in the HFS+ or exFAT format on an computer before you put them in the camera for recording use.
