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Aug 2, 2024, 7:08:44 AM8/2/24
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We understand that limited use of non-approved cameras may be necessary in certain situations. Netflix is available to navigate those specific image capture decisions. Please reach out to your Netflix point of contact with any questions or concerns specific to your production. For information on using Non-Approved Cameras see: Non-Approved Cameras: Recommended Settings & Best Practices.

Note: Not all cameras that meet these capture requirements are approved. These requirements are the minimum specifications necessary for a camera system to be considered for approval. Other attributes must be taken into account such as dynamic range, form factor, stability, workflow compatibility, and more.

Cameras that have been approved for Netflix productions are listed below. We will continue to maintain and update this list as new camera systems become available and are evaluated by our technologists.

While not required for Netflix productions, the following best practices will help productions avoid common pitfalls and workflow errors that can lead to added costs, lost time, or creative compromises.

To ensure on-set framing meets the creative and technical needs of your production, a framing chart should be shot before principal photography begins and processed through the dailies, editorial, and VFX pipelines.

When using anamorphic lenses, extra resolution may be required for capture. Camera selection should take this additional need into account. Cameras that meet this resolution requirement and are approved for anamorphic capture are designated in the list above. If you are unsure if your desired camera system has the necessary resolution or have questions about anamorphic capture, Netflix is here to help. Please contact your Netflix project lead to discuss implications or concerns.

In some instances, productions may require the use of approved cameras with external recorders. The recording format should be in line with minimum requirements outlined at the head of this document, and should be discussed with your Netflix point of contact.

Netflix brought the movies to you, and with the mailed rentals came a whole other culture. It was a pressure, getting your queue in line. (Yes, I know that means getting your line in line.). The way the service worked was that you could only keep out so many movies at a time. You had to watch or send back a movie before getting the next one, and you might have been in a different mood when you listed it than when it arrived. How many of us had aspirational queues? How many of us watched intense, artistic or experimental films that we might not have finished otherwise just to be able to send them back and get the next disc of "The L Word"?

It isn't just the end of a culture that the ceasing of the Netflix DVD represents. It's also a lack of access. As behemoth as Netflix's streaming service is, it doesn't have everything. As soon as the shuttering of the DVD service was announced, fans took to social media to bemoan the movies about to be lost to us. The Daily Mail ran a list of movies that aren't available on streaming anywhere. One DVD fan told CNN, "He's determined to finish seeing every film listed in the book '1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die' with the help of Netflix. 'I absolutely would not have been able to find all of those movies if not for the Netflix DVD service,' Colin McEvoy said. 'I only have four movies left to go.'"

I will never forget when "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" left Netflix.com. My comfort watch, the show that was always there, was suddenly not always there, not easily. You can't count on streaming to have the shows and films you want. You can't count on streaming at all, to be affordable, to work. Slate wrote in a piece earlier this year, "What if streaming goes away?"

There's a reason why adult Van (Lauren Ambrose) owns a video store in Showtime's "Yellowjackets." The cozy store is called While You Were Streaming, a pun on one of Van's beloved Sandra Bullock films, "While You Were Sleeping," whose story she tells to the girls in a pivotal moment when they're in the woods. The video store and its tangible medium is a way to hold to the actual good parts of her youth, before trauma. It's a way to hold on, period.

Alison Stine is a former staff writer at Salon. She is the author of the novels "Trashlands" and "Road Out of Winter," winner of the 2021 Philip K. Dick Award. A recipient of an Individual Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), she has written for The New York Times, The Guardian, and others.

Copyright 2024 Salon.com, LLC. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. SALON is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon.com, LLC. Associated Press articles: Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Parenting isn't easy. People always say it changes your life, but it seems no one ever knows how much until they've had a child. Still, everyone dreams about being a parent at some point. To raise a child to have a good life is very rewarding but difficult. Indeed, not every parent gets to get it right. Despite their best intentions, mistakes are bound to get made. In The Lost Daughter, Olivia Colman's character Leda knows first-hand that being a mother can be an overwhelming task. We learn in the film that she abandoned her family when motherhood became too much for her. Overwhelmed with the day-to-day responsibility, she left her family behind and took off. Her daughter's care fell to her husband, who eventually divorced her.

The majority of the film follows Leda as she bonds with a young mother named Nina, who has a three-year-old daughter and is experiencing the same trials and tribulations. She's married, just as Leda was, but is having an affair with another man. Leda tries to help Nina not make the same mistakes she did, but the results fail to have the desired effects. At the very least, the film ends with Leda having a chance to make things right again in her own life.

Nothing can prepare anyone for the role of being a parent, a fact that seems to get lost to many people who unwittingly take on the responsibility. But, as Leda's story has shown, it's not something one quickly escapes either. A parent's actions and inactions are something that can haunt them forever. The following five films portray the darker side of being a parent.

The Wagners have never thought about having kids, but due to some familial competition, they begin looking into adoption. They take in a set of siblings: a 15 year-old teen, her 10 year-old brother, and their 6 year-old sister. The challenges of raising three kids are daunting, but the Wagners step up to the plate and give their all to providing the siblings a good life.

Of course, the Wagners aren't the topic of discussion here. Adopting three kids is a brave thing to do. It's a tall task, but they became heroes to the three children by the end of Instant Family. The children's mother is a pivotal character that put this film on this list. Her drug addiction nearly led to other children's demise in a burning house. She attempts to reconcile with her kids later in the film, but quickly relapses, leaving her oldest heartbroken as these siblings were about to return to her care. This is a harsh reality for many kids who go into foster care. Drug addiction is a serious issue. It was reported in 2019 that about 39% of children in foster care were removed from their parent's care due to drug abuse. Thanks to foster parents like the Wagners, displaced children still have a chance to lead a semblance of a normal life.

Honey Boy is a biopic of sorts by film star Shia LaBeouf as it's based on the events of his own life. The film follows an alcoholic actor named Otis, who struggles to reconcile with his abusive father through dreams and memories. LaBeouf played his own father, James, which may have been a therapeutic challenge for him. Sent to court-ordered rehab for drunken incidents, Otis is diagnosed with PTSD, something he denies profusely. His therapist advises he try exposure therapy to reconcile with his past. He flashes back to a childhood where he was in the grips of James's turmoil while the two lived in a cheap motel.

James is seen as overly aggressive and constantly on edge due to his struggles with alcoholism. He lashes out at others, has a very hostile argument with Otis's mother through the phone, which Otis is forced to relay both parents' responses back to each other. James becomes jealous when Otis makes a friend and tosses said friend in a pool, violently threatening him. He is also seen sharing marijuana with his son at the movie's end. His worse offense comes when he strikes his son for calling him out on his terrible behavior as a father. Who children are in adulthood tends to be shaped by their parents. An angry father is likely to shape an angry man later on, but this film shows that it is possible to move past that trauma.

Waves is an example of parents pushing their kids too hard. Tyler is a popular high school amateur wrestler from a well-off Black family, but his well-intentioned yet domineering father, Ronald, pushes him to be better. The pressure becomes such that Tyler hides a severe shoulder injury to compete, resulting in a tear that ends his wrestling career. Tyler's life spirals even further after a fateful argument with his girlfriend that ends in her accidental death.

While Ronald only wanted the best for Tyler, he inadvertently streamlined the negativity that formed the basis of his rising tension with Tyler. It's common in some families that parents put incredible amounts of pressure on their children to succeed. In the case of the high school sports stars, they sometimes carry the weight and responsibility of the parent's approval and potential for success in their field. Their identities become about the sport so much that when everything is said and done, many are left with nothing afterward, assuming they don't get sports scholarships. Waves is an example of the complexities of parenting, for when a parent does their best but pushes their children away in the process.

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