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    Canon EOS C50 review: the Sony-rivalling compact cinema camera we needed


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    Canon EOS C50: two-minute review

    Throughout its four years on the market Sony’s FX3 has sat largely unchallenged in the compact cinema camera space, but that’s changed with the arrival of the new Canon EOS C50.

    For the money, you’ll struggle to find a more complete cinema camera than the EOS C50. It boasts 7K open gate internal Raw video recording (and simultaneous proxy recording), dual base ISO for clean clips day or night, Super 35 and Super 16 crop modes, Canon Log color profiles with more than 15EV dynamic range, slow-motion recording, reliable autofocus… the list goes on, and I haven’t even touched on the camera’s photo capabilities or its video-first design.

    For photographers, the 32MP full-frame sensor can shoot in RAW+JPEG with subject-tracking autofocus at burst speeds up to 40fps, with the option for pre-burst capture – not bad for a cinema camera. Handily, the EOS C50 features a dual menu system, making it quicker to navigate the menus than if photography and video were combined under a single menu.

    Canon EOS C50 with top handle, held by a filmmaker

    The Canon EOS C50 with new RF 85mm F1.4L VCM lens attached, plus Canon’s own top handle. (Image credit: Tim Coleman)

    The EOS C50 sits closest to the Canon EOS R5C, a version of the EOS R5 with active cooling for unlimited 8K record times where the latter overheated, but which still had a photo-centric design; in fact it’s perhaps a little too close for that camera’s comfort, because I see the new model easily being the more compelling choice of the two.

    https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/VSJdgGauBGkgRXDVvCCrMP.jpg



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