Saw a youtube video showing that film cameras have far better dynamic range than today's digital cameras.
They still use high speed film cameras to capture rocket launches for engineering purposes because of that.
I was surprised. Is this the case in ordinary cameras too?
There are several fatal flaws in reasoning in that video. The big comparison between the old NASA film cameras and the current video camreas is also a comparison of a day launch and a night launch. It's bad enough that the engines are incredibly bright, but if you also impose a 20-22 stop difference in ambient light between the film shot in sunlight and the video shot at night, there will be some issues with either capture medium. How about compairing the two in identical situations? Duh.
Also, if you look at the way NASA mounted cameras, and used massive tracking camera rigs, it's clear that they're not going to that lenght (expense) today. Government money vs private industry? Hmm. But the installation, setup, and operation of any camera is what maximizes the end result. The video skips conveniently over that part, point at how much worse the modern footage is without actually noticing why.
No, film does not have better DR. But digital DR is more linear, film is not, which works slightly in films favor in the highlight end.
Then there this one, almost an elephant in the room: Film? Which film? Color reversal films were between 6 and 12 stops. Negative films range from 15 to 18 stops. ISO drives DR too, with higher ISO films having higher DR at the expense of grain.
And then, it gets worse. People throw DR numbers around easily, as if images with similar DR were somehow comparable. Simply not true. The definition of DR is the range from the brightest to the darkest usable tone. "Usable"...there's a subjective term, right? And what makes a dark tone unusuable is usually noise or grain. As we all know by now, there are some huge differences there, as well as significant differences in image quality between cameras with the same specified Dr.
So DR numbers are a nice start, but hardly worth much in determining image quality in a high DR shot.
Film is not, and never was, a free ride. The same exposure challenges exist in either medium. Like so many things of the past that seem better than their modern counterpart, the real secret lies in the skill of the users. Those NASA guys were brilliant, and there was emphasis put on getting everything exactly right. Not to say things are more slip-shod today, necessarily, but clearly in the videos shown, they didn't try nearly as hard to get it all right. That's not a film vs digital thing, that's a training and professionalism thing.
But it may not matter anyway. The fastest film cameras were limited to 50,000 frames per second, and that over a very short interval (far less than a second). Digital high speed cameras have smashed that barrier, with 200,000fps being fairly routine, and 10M fps and higher now being possible, and with memory buffers that can take care of any practical shot lenght. Its just $$:Gb. Or is that $$=Gb? Sounds fun, right?
And, I suspect, it is.