Small camera, wide world: Cinematic storytelling with the Canon EOS C50

From Patagonia to Iceland, discover how Daniel Ernst and Luã Araújo used Canon's most compact Cinema EOS camera to stay agile without compromising on image quality.
Filmmaker Daniel Ernst sits on a rock in front of a mountainous landscape, filming with the Canon EOS C50 that is fitted with 70-200mm lens and microphone.

Filmmaker Daniel Ernst used the Canon EOS C50 to tell the story of his return to Patagonia in a new way, nearly a decade after his first visit.

How do you capture your story in a place that refuses to stand still?

This was the challenge two filmmakers set out to tackle, as they put the Canon EOS C50 to work in unpredictable environments thousands of miles apart.

Daniel Ernst was shooting among the windswept peaks of Patagonia, a location he first visited in 2017 with a Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. Returning years later, he wanted to explore how his creative approach had evolved, from "chasing single still frames" to a more atmospheric and evocative film-led style. Daniel's film – Same Wind, New Story – is personal, reflective and immersive. Rooted in documentary storytelling, it uses sound and cinematic imagery to capture a real sense of place.

Iceland was the backdrop for Luã Araújo's fictional short film, which follows two siblings travelling across the volcanic island. As their journey takes an unexpected turn, Luã draws on the EOS C50’s Open Gate sensor to signal a pivotal moment in the story. Capturing that transition meant working in a location known for its restless weather and ever-shifting light, conditions that can be unforgiving for productions requiring continuity.

As a destination wedding filmmaker and cinematographer. however, Luã is no stranger to telling intimate stories in dynamic, expansive landscapes. Here, he combines choreography, slow motion and FPV (First Person View) drone footage to bring the story to life.

Although their projects took place in some of the world's most dramatic landscapes, neither filmmaker is defined by a single genre. Daniel's work spans documentary storytelling in video and stills, while Luã moves between the worlds of short-form content, corporate productions and wedding films. As YouTube audiences increasingly watch content on larger screens, creators across genres are being challenged to deliver cinematic results while remaining agile enough to work solo or with smaller crews in fast-moving environments.

These weren't projects that simply required a reliable camera for remote locations. They demanded a creative tool that could keep pace with changing conditions, capture fleeting moments and allow the filmmakers to stay focused on their stories.

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A man pulls himself along a line suspended over a river in Patagonia.

The compact size of the Canon EOS C50 made it easier for Daniel Ernst to hike to remote areas in Patagonia. "Much as I love the EOS C80, I want to be able to take stills and I don’t want to have to carry a second body," he says. "The EOS C50 just combines everything I need right now and it's my favourite camera I've used in recent years – it's just so much fun to use."

Filmmaker Luã Araújo stands in front of a waterfall in Iceland, holding a Canon EOS C50 by his side.

Luã Araújo says the Canon EOS C50’s 7K sensor provided plenty of detail when shooting in Iceland. "The highlight roll-off is incredibly smooth," he says. "I would describe the image quality as rich and organic, with that unique Canon colour science. The 7K sensor provides a level of detail that looks clean but never clinical or overly digital – I absolutely hate that over-sharpened digital look."

Cinema EOS performance in a compact body

As Canon's lightest and most compact Cinema EOS camera, the EOS C50 is the ideal partner for filmmakers who want to travel light and react at speed without sacrificing quality or control.

Despite its compact dimensions, the EOS C50 delivers a detailed full-frame image and a feature set typically associated with much larger cinema A-camera setups. It lets you capture the entire area of the sensor with Open Gate recording, use full-size XLR mics via its detachable handle, and shoot unlimited RAW video thanks to active cooling. You can move easily from video to photos too, allowing you to capture 32MP production stills that ensure you cover a location comprehensively.

Luã describes it as the "perfect tool" for his Iceland shoot.

"Usually, when you shoot in a harsh place like Iceland, you have to compromise," he says. "You either bring a heavy cinema rig for maximum quality, or a lightweight mirrorless camera to stay mobile. The EOS C50 gives me everything a massive cinema camera has – 12-bit RAW, incredible dynamic range, and Open Gate – but in a compact body that can handle the harshest environments."

Daniel Ernst in a frozen Patagonian landscape, looking at the rear screen of his Canon EOS C50 which has a Canon RF 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM Z attached.

Daniel was able to work quickly and react to fleeting moments thanks to the Canon EOS C50’s intelligent autofocus. "Most shots are spontaneous, and if you recreate them, sometimes they get this certain feeling that it's staged," he says. "So, I love that I can focus on the first attempt. When I was shooting behind-the-scenes clips, I had the face tracking and the eye tracking on me, and that worked well."

Luã Araújo holds a Canon EOS C50 by the top handle, filming in wet conditions in Iceland.

Luã used a mix of Canon RF lenses and anamorphic lenses to mirror the psychology of the film, he explains. "We used Open Gate as part of the storytelling: the entire introduction was shot with spherical lenses in a 3:2 aspect ratio, but when reality breaks and an anomaly happens, we switch to anamorphic to show a completely different world."

Pairing the EOS C50 with the right lenses for his mountainous environment was equally important for Daniel. Compromises in size and weight are a consideration when you're carrying all your kit in a backpack and negotiating wild, rugged terrain.

Daniel settled on two hybrid RF lenses – the Canon RF 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM Z and RF 20mm F1.4L VCM – and an RF 24-70mm F2.8L IS USM. He sometimes used a 2x extender attached to the Canon RF 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM Z for greater reach.

It was the 24-70mm lens which proved to be the workhorse lens on the trip. "About 70% of the film is shot with that lens," Daniel says. "You can get anything from wide angle to close shots in one lens, and f/2.8 is also usually enough to get clear background separation."

Dramatic mountain peaks in dim light, shrouded in mist, captured in Daniel Ernst’s cinematic documentary film Same Wind, New Story, shot on a Canon EOS C50 in Patagonia.

Same Wind, New Story

Filmed and edited by Daniel Ernst on the Canon EOS C50 with the RF 20mm F1.4L VCM, RF 24-70mm F2.8L IS USM and RF 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM Z.

Working fast in changing conditions

Daniel says he usually doesn't plan his films extensively, but Patagonia was different. He had mapped out the entire film from start to finish. Then the weather turned bad.

"I'd say that 90% of what I planned didn't work out," he says. "So, I had to find ways around it."

Fortunately, he'd left room for spontaneity in his production. With the EOS C50 attached to his backpack via a carabiner, he was able to react in seconds whenever opportunities emerged.

"It meant I could just grab it, switch it on and take some footage," he says. "It really helped me to capture spontaneous scenes – like the one where my friend was walking along a ridge and I was two or three metres below him. I could see the mountain range behind him and the wind passing by. I didn't even tell him I was going to shoot, I just grabbed the camera, recorded for five seconds and then put it down.

"If it was heavier, I would rather carry it inside my backpack, but it's so small and light that you barely notice it compared to bigger cinema cameras."

Daniel Ernst in front of a mountain in Patagonia, a Canon EOS C50 attached to his backpack strap.

The Canon EOS C50’s lightweight design meant that Daniel could keep it conveniently attached to his backpack strap, ready to go in seconds.

A Canon EOS C50 being used to film an icy Iceland view.

"We tested the Canon EOS C50 in extreme environments, like shooting a white glacier under harsh, direct midday sun," Luã says. "The image still looked deeply cinematic. Our priority is always to protect the highlights, and with this dynamic range, it was very easy."

While Daniel was taking advantage of the EOS C50's lightweight performance in the mountains, Luã was taking it to even greater heights, into cool Icelandic skies.

"On a fast-moving shoot in Iceland, the weather changes in seconds and every single minute counts," he says. "Having a true cinema camera that fits into a small backpack meant we could hike up glaciers and run on black sand beaches without heavy rigging. It made me say 'yes' to unique perspectives and extreme locations – like launching a full cinema package into the sky on an FPV drone – that I would normally avoid due to weight and setup time."

For Luã, having cinema camera capabilities in such a small form factor "changed everything" and allowed him to "create in a completely different way".

"The EOS C50 defines the sweet spot for drone work," he says. "Traditionally, FPV drone filming means using small action cameras, which means sacrificing dynamic range, depth of field, and colour depth. Putting the EOS C50 with the RF 20mm F/1.4 VCM lens on an FPV drone completely changed my approach.

"I wasn’t just getting a typical, standard action camera look – I was getting true cinema images from the sky that seamlessly matched our ground footage in 12-bit RAW. And doing everything in Open Gate was a no-brainer for us. It meant we could get all formats – horizontal and vertical – from a single flight."

That flexibility proved useful beyond drone work. With their cameras set to Open Gate, both Luã and Daniel could reframe footage for widescreen YouTube videos and vertical clips for social media. The ability to reframe and change aspect ratios without losing image quality also became a storytelling device. "I wanted to start the story with a 3:2 image, then in the middle of the story change to an aspect ratio of 2.35:1 for a more cinematic feel," Luã says. "Open Gate allowed me to do that."

Luã was also working with anamorphic lenses on this project. "Open Gate lets you use the entire sensor, so you can get the true view of an anamorphic lens," he says. "Without it, the view is cropped and you lose a lot of room in the image."

He used 45mm and 65mm 1.5x anamorphic lenses by BLAZAR – ideal for producing a 2.35:1 aspect ratio from the 3:2 Open Gate sensor. The EOS C50 can de-squeeze anamorphic footage in-camera for 2x, 1.8x, 1.5x and 1.3x anamorphic lenses, allowing Luã to monitor footage at the correct aspect ratio on the LCD screen or via external outputs. The camera's Digital 5-Axis IS also supports anamorphic shooting, providing a more stable image when needed.

The benefits of a single-camera workflow

A single-camera setup can save hours of production time, particularly when it's as easy to rig up and down as the EOS C50. Versatility is everything when you're chasing the light or making the most of changeable weather.

"Iceland can go from bright sun to a dark storm in five minutes," Luã says. During the 'glitch' scene on the road in his film, the light shifted drastically right when the choreographers were in the zone. "Because of the Dual Base ISO and the quick-access buttons, I adjusted my exposure instantly without interrupting the momentum of the performance."

The ability to capture high-resolution stills without having to carry a separate stills-focused camera also helps you to work productively without interrupting the moment. Almost ten years separate Daniel's first trip to document Patagonia with an EOS 5D Mark IV and his return journey with the EOS C50. A decade is a long time in the evolution of camera technology, and his approach to capturing the story of the place in stills as well as video has also evolved.

"I now shoot much more in general," he says, putting it down to the lighter weight of a stripped back EOS C50 body. "I used to put the EOS 5D Mark IV in my backpack, but the EOS C50 was hanging around my neck the whole time.

"Years ago, I was only taking hero shots, when everything was perfect, with the mountain peaks glowing red or a reflection in a lake and so on. But now I'd also take images around that shot. So preparing breakfast or having a coffee, or just a shot that captures more emotion."

In other words, more B-roll-style content to help build a story. "It's one thing that video has taught me."

Daniel Ernst operates his Canon EOS C50, a snowy mountain view visible on the rear display.

In addition to 7K Open Gate, Daniel sometimes shot in 4K: "I had to manage storage carefully, because I didn't bring a computer," he explains. "As we were hiking, I had to watch the weight – I was also carrying a tent, gas stove, food, medical kit, and more. It was also safer in case of a fall."

Icelandic puffins captured on a Canon EOS C50 in warm twilight above a cool blue sea.

"At this time of year in Iceland, it never gets fully dark," Luã says. "Dual Base ISO allowed us to shoot late into the night during the twilight hours without worrying about noise, and the camera handled it perfectly. We were shooting puffins at 10pm and the camera absorbed the low light beautifully with virtually no noise."

Capturing the sound of the surroundings also helps to bring a story alive. While it's possible to lean on a soundtrack and a voiceover to impart emotion, in-camera audio recording helps create a sense of place. Daniel wired a Rode microphone to his camera using one of the XLR inputs, giving him more a more robust connection.

"I preferred it much more to my normal microphone that I put in the 3.5mm mic jack because it gave me this much cleaner cable setup," he says. "It meant I didn't have a cable running down to the side of the camera. Instead, it was attached in the top handle and it was out of my way when I was touching the camera with my right and left arm."

Having the volume and gain controls on the left side of the top panel made things easier too. "I could easily just change the volume of the microphone or the sensitivity instead of going through the menu and changing it there.

"And the audio was perfect – most of the sounds you can hear in the video are original captures from the scene."

Today's audiences have high expectations. They demand compelling stories and high production values, making the choice of camera and lenses more important than ever.

"Your kit is the bridge between your imagination and the audience," acknowledges Luã. "Choosing a camera like the EOS C50 allows independent filmmakers with a small crew to capture unique cinema quality in the most remote corners of the world.

"Today, viewers expect high-end, Hollywood-level visuals, but they also want to see authentic, extreme, and hard-to-reach locations. The most important thing for us is to transmit a message to the world.

"You simply can't bring a massive crew and giant camera rigs up a frozen volcano or a glacier. Your gear must be powerful but invisible to the process."

Marcus Hawkins

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