The King’s Man shot and graded using affordable Blackmagic gear

The King's Man
(Image credit: Marv Studios)

The spectacular ‘Kingsman’ prequel used Davinci Resolve Studio for the whole digital production process. It’s a pro-level video editor from Blackmagic Design, but no more expensive than rivals like Premiere Pro and Final Cut Pro and also available as a very effective free edition direct from Blackmagic.

Resolve was used to ‘grade’ the footage by production company Goldcrest using a bespoke film emulation LUT developed in-house, and adapted during production to give scenes in the World War 1 trenches a more somber, desaturated look, while adding a “dusty yellowish” look to scenes of the Boer War to contrast with the greenness of England. Another scene in the Russian royal palace was given extra opulence using Resolve’s curves and HSL keyer tools to increase the richness of the gold and decoration.

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Rod Lawton
Contributor

Rod is an independent photography journalist and editor, and a long-standing Digital Camera World contributor, having previously worked as DCW's Group Reviews editor. Before that he has been technique editor on N-Photo, Head of Testing for the photography division and Camera Channel editor on TechRadar, as well as contributing to many other publications. He has been writing about photography technique, photo editing and digital cameras since they first appeared, and before that began his career writing about film photography. He has used and reviewed practically every interchangeable lens camera launched in the past 20 years, from entry-level DSLRs to medium format cameras, together with lenses, tripods, gimbals, light meters, camera bags and more. Rod has his own camera gear blog at fotovolo.com but also writes about photo-editing applications and techniques at lifeafterphotoshop.com