The Cameras of SXSW 2026: Highlights and Insights From This Year’s Filmmaker Selections
With SXSW celebrating the 33rd edition of the SXSW Film & TV Festival in Austin, Texas, we’ve once again put the word out to filmmakers to learn which cameras they used to shoot their selected film and television projects.
As we’ve seen in past years, some familiar names remain the top choices for larger narrative projects and features, with the ARRI ALEXA 35 among the most popular. However, filmmakers are also continuing to explore a wider range of tools—from Canon, Sony, and Blackmagic Design cameras to, yes, even Apple iPhone devices.
So, without further ado, let’s hear from the filmmakers themselves as we highlight some of the most interesting responses from this year’s SXSW camera survey.
THE PIRATE KING (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: We photographed the film on the ARRI ALEXA 35 with the built-in Nostalgia Texture, capturing 4.6K ARRIRAW through 1.8x Legacy Anamorphic lenses by Lensworks.
Reason why : The Alexa 35 felt like the natural foundation for the film. Its dynamic range and color science are well documented, but what matters to me is how faithfully it receives light. I like to develop the look of the film in-camera as much as possible. To me, the camera is a surface where light can be shaped rather than corrected later, and the Alexa 35 remains the most precise instrument I know for that kind of work. The wonderful folks at Pine Bay Pictures fully supported us by buying two Alexa 35s, which allowed us to spend prep exploring texture and running as many tests as we needed until the image felt right. That process led us to the Legacy 1.8x anamorphic lenses. They offered a rare combination of qualities that felt right for this world. I wanted character, distortion, falloff, expressive flares; all to emphasize the main character’s loneliness and to echo the theatrical spirit of the pirate reenactments. Their compact size and close focus also allowed us to remain nimble inside of our hero’s sailboat and stay close to the actors without resorting to diopters.
- DP John Rosario, Director/Co-Writer Josh Plasse, Producer/Co-Writer Brev Moss, and Executive Producer Nidal Kahl (Pine Bay Pictures)
A NEW INFERNO (Documentary Short)
Camera(s) used: Sony FX9
Reason why : We used the Sony FX9 as our A-cam, filming a majority of our verité with it. Ease of solo operating + reliability were our main two considerations — we shot during the hottest days of Phoenix’s summer heatwave, so we needed something that’d have low risk of overheating, even on 117° days. We also wanted to capture the intensity of our firefighters responding to emergency calls in real-time — to that end, we mounted Sony FX3s to the fire truck for a variety of high-speed driving shots as they raced to the scene. Ryan brought on his set of Atlas Mercury anamorphic lenses. For a verité doc, we were excited by the idea of anamorphics elevating the visual language and imbuing the footage with heightened intensity / urgency.
- Jonathan Picket
ERUCTATION (Documentary Short)
Camera(s) used: Sony 9000
Reason why : Our DP Max Henderson had bought a refurbished Sony 9000 with a B4 mount, and PL mount option, on eBay, and was waiting for the right project to try it out. When he showed me the camera in his office, he caveated with "I don't know if it'll work." So, of course I said yes. We shot our doc ERUCTATION during Portland winter, and the subject Kaylee has a 70s, retro vibe to her wardrobe and apartment, so I wanted to create a palette which leaned into the woods, reds, greens, and golds. We thought the Sony 9000 would bring that out nicely, which it really did—it added so much texture to the shots, making them feel rich and intimate. Even though it's digital, we recorded on these big tapes that look like VHS. They've been out of production for two-ish decades, so those were refurbished, too. We had the Alexa Mini as back-up on set, and used it for one slow-mo shot, but the Sony 9000 worked like magic.
- Victoria Trow
And Her Body Was Never Found (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Arri Alexa Mini, iPhone, Canon EOS 70D
Reason why : This movie was made mostly by just two people. My wife and I served as both cast and crew, and most or our locations required hours of hiking to get to. So the normal expectation would be to make this as easy on ourselves as possible, but we did the opposite. We went threesies on buying a used Alexa Mini with my brother and rented a three lens set of Master Primes. Those added with the gimbal, batteries, sound, and tripod made for a punishingly heavy pair of backpacks, but we wanted to push what a team of two could accomplish. Plus if you're limited to only locked off two shots and moving singles with no focus pulling, you want a lens/camera combo that looks fantastic just sitting on a tripod pointing at whatever. The quality images help the audience forget the film's limitations and accept what they're watching as a "real" movie.
Halfway through the story, the characters switch to recording each other with iPhones, which was a dream to shoot after lugging around all that gear and being pinned to strict marks. The iPhones never lost focus or captured unusable sound. We could literally forget about anything technical and just play in the scenes, whipping around the phones as an extension of our performances.
For the end interview, we rented five Canon 70Ds off ShareGrid to mimic the look of modern YouTube entertainment content. We again didn't have a crew. So I ran around cutting all five cameras and re-rolling between takes, but it was worth it for the convenience of all that simultaneous coverage. When shooting single cam, your best acting is often frustratingly off screen while feeding lines to your scene partner, but this time every good delivery made it into the film.
- Polaris Banks
THE SNAKE (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Arri Alexa 35
Reason why : To shoot The Snake, we choose an Alexa 35 for the common reasons; incredible dynamic range, flexible sensitivity and proven reliability. I wanted to monitor an image on set that would be as close as possible to the final look of the film. We used one of the image textures built into the Alexa 35 to allow us to see some grit in real time. My friend, Scott Thorne, made a custom monitor LUT for the project which brought down exposure overall by -1 stop in order to trick me into slightly overexposing the LOG. This allowed us to view a darker image on set with the knowledge that we would have lots of shadow detail if we wanted to pull anything out of the murk during the grade. Despite the overexposed LOG I rarely worried about losing highlight detail because of the 35’s astounding dynamic range.
- Kevin A. Fraser, cinematographer
THE DADS (Documentary Feature)
Camera(s) used: Sony FS7, Canon C300
Reason why : The DP owns a Canon and started shooting with it, so we mostly shot with that. But because we were filming in multiple locations with local cinematographers, we sometimes used the Sony FS7, which a number of the cinematographers owned.
-Luchina Fisher
SUMMER 2000: THE X-CETRA STORY (Documentary Feature)
Camera(s) used: Sony FX3 and various old handicams
Reason why : We chose to use the Sony FX3 camera for its quality and versatility. At the same time, we incorporated various old handicams to lean into the nostalgia of the early 2000s and capture the look and texture of that era. Combining the two allowed us to evoke that homemade, Y2K feel while still maintaining the flexibility and visual quality of a modern cinema camera.
NORMAL (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Raptor XL [X]
Reason why : We chose the Raptor XL [X] paired with Tribe 7 primes and Arri Signature Zooms. The camera has many incredible features but the deciding factor was the global shutter. The majority of the action takes place during a blizzard which meant flashing lights from police cruisers and the many hundreds of muzzle flashes were going to illuminate the haze and snow. Broken frames from a rolling shutter camera would have been aesthetically undesirable and hugely expensive to fix. We rigorously tested the camera for these conditions as well as low light sensitivity and color rendition with mixed skin tones. My advice to up-and-coming filmmakers is to test everything you can. Seeing the results helps clarify your approach without the chaos and pressure of the shoot day.
-DP Armando Salas, ASC
KILL ME (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used : Alexa 35
Reason why : My cinematographer, Conor Murphy, felt it was the best way to get the look I was after, which played with a lot of deep shadows and high contrast. I trust Conor implicitly, if he wanted to shoot on a T-Mobile Sidekick I would have done it.
- Peter Warren, director
ERUPCJA (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Canon 5D Mark III with the Magic Lantern Raw Hack
Reason why : This is the 6th feature I've shot on this camera. It's got a bunch of dead pixels but I own it and I like it.
-Pete Ohs, director
MY NDA (Documentary Feature)
Camera(s) used: Canon C70
Reason why : My NDA is a character-based observational documentary. I chose the Canon C70 because it's compact and lightweight and can record great audio. I often work as a crew of one, recording picture and sound myself, handheld. The other cinematographers (Hanna Gray Organschi, Adria Malcolm, Stephanie Rose Figgins, Clare Major, Shelli Witt, and Shaandiin Tome) also used cameras that are well suited for handheld, vérité shooting as a crew of one. In a few cases, we collaborated with a sound recordist, usually when there were more than two people being filmed. In addition, Hanna shot on her iPhone - jumping at an impromptu opportunity to capture the exact moment that Ifeoma Ozoma broke her NDA. Ashley Kostial also used an iPhone to record her video diaries, which are a critical element of the film.
- Juliane Dressner, Director/Producer/Director of Photography/Sound Recorder
TIME AND WATER (Documentary Feature)
Camera(s) used: LEXA Mini, Bolex SBM S16 (Kodak 50D Vision 3 stock), Panasonic HVX200 (recording DVCPro), Iphone
Reason why : For “Time and Water,” we chose to shoot digital and film. The digital camera was the Arri Alexa Mini as we wanted a robust camera with a very organic feel and a high tolerance to highlights, as we were mainly shooting on glaciers with a very high dynamic range. Alongside digital, we shot with a Bolex SBM Super16, a hand-wound camera, with the intention to settle down in each location and make the cinematographic process intentional, slow, and considerate of the surroundings. Having a hand-wound camera allowed us to not worry about batteries and instead spend long periods of time feeling each place, connecting to its rhythms and essence. The film comprises archives from a wide range of times, so our bolex footage was not meant to replace or create archives that don’t exist but instead meant to prompt the experience of both memory and myth, which are key themes in the film. As a format strongly associated with a specific historic era, this choice was a gesture towards the idea that we live in times within times; the past is always present, and the future is within our reach.
For the film, we mainly used the Canon 8-64 lens for both cameras. We wanted to have an expressive image rich in character and the 8-64 doesn’t hide itself, adding aberrations to the image that resonate with the aberrations in time and memory, which are the film’s intention. Besides the Canon zoom, we shot with a Switar Poe 16-100 and Switar Primes – 10mm, 15mm and 25mm for the Bolex. These lenses created a nice aesthetic bridge between the 16mm archives and our current material. Besides the Mini and Bolex we also used a Panasonic HVX-200 recording DVC Pro on the p2 cards, and Andri used an iPhone for his personal material.
- director of photography Pablo Álvarez-Mesa
IMAGO (Narrative Short)
Camera(s) used: Sony Venice 2 8K
Reason why : Imago was shot exclusively on the 3200 ISO base on the Venice 2 which allows for a smaller footprint on set in terms of the amount of units we need for lighting, which is really beneficial when you’re working in small interiors on location. With such a sensitive camera, we would first set the ambience and then place in a small tungsten fresnel or a litemat to light our characters. Ariel and I are always trying to pull off really technical visual ideas to elevate the scene (fast compound camera moves on dolly/jib, split diopters, camera whips, snap zooms, you name it) so the less time we need to spend on lighting equals the more takes we can get to nail the energy we’re looking for.
- Tu Do, DP on IMAGO
EDIE ARNOLD IS A LOSER (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Sony FX6
Reason why : Our approach to Edie Arnold's cinematography was a loving embrace of scrappiness and speed. Principal photography was ten days with very limited resources and budget, which meant I sought out a camera that I'd normally bring onto a documentary project - the Sony FX6. Its versatility, featherweight body, and stellar performance in low light (dual ISO till I die!) fit our needs to a T. It was all about moving quickly without sacrificing style or comedic timing, which resulted in directors Kade and Megan and I designing many locked-off, scene-encompassing tableaus for the characters to romp around in, in lieu of relying on traditional coverage, which would've put too much pressure on our already challenging schedule. I think our choreographed wides really shine because of this planning. Some days there was little-to-no camera operating on my end - the directors and I talked more than once about this approach making some shots "painterly".
- Brenna Empey, DP
CHILI FINGER (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: Alexa 35
Reason why : It was important to us that the camera feel like a passive observer in our story. We wanted the look of the film to parallel Jess' relationship to her small-town life. We did camera tests with our DP, Cristina Dunlap, and felt the 35 sensor paired with spherical lenses best accomplished those goals. Also our producers said we couldn't shoot on film.
- Edd Benda (Co-Director, Executive Producer) and Stephen Helstad (Co-Director, Writer, Executive Producer)
BEST FRIENDS WITH THE DEVIL (Narrative Short)
Camera(s) used: Fujifilm GFX 100 II
Reason why : Director Hugo DeSousa and I planned a mix of big sweeping long takes, handheld moments, and looming static wides to both provide a pulse to the edit and to accentuate the tonal shifts in the film. Given that this film takes place over one day into night, we knew we would need to shoot each location chronologically in order to capture the changing light. To do this, and move quickly with a very small team, we opted for two small camera bodies, one setup for tripod and handheld, the other setup for gimbal - so we could ultimately just grab and go. I love the way Fujifilm cameras handle greens and yellows, something that we wanted to lean into as we aimed to envelop our characters in the lush colors of the forest. Further, the GFX 100 II’s small form factor and massive medium format sensor allowed us to use longer focal lengths on wider shots, making the forest feel larger and more daunting.
- Sarah Whelden
CEREMONY (Documentary Feature)
Camera(s) used: Z Cam E2-S6 and the Sony FX6
Reason why : The camera choices were largely driven by the equipment owned and regularly used by our main cinematographers, Luke Connor and Jean-Philippe. We were filming in a remote village in Bella Coola, Nuxalkulmc (Nuxalk Territory), so reliability was crucial. Both the Z Cam and Sonys are compact workhorses which is crucial for a documentary that often required flexibility in remote environments and long observational shooting.
- Cinematogrpahers Luke Connor and Jean-Philippe Marquis
SINNER SUPPER CLUB (Narrative Feature)
Camera(s) used: iPhone 15 Pro w/ 19mm moment lens
Reason why : We decided to shoot on an iPhone early in the development of Sinner Supper Club. We needed a cheap, readily available, adventurous camera to experiment with as a team.
The 19mm Moment lens was our way of embracing the camera's everydayness and letting it lead us through our six-day, breakneck shoot. We took the iPhone from the streets of Brooklyn to the waters of Rockaway, always on the move and up close. And we came out on the other side with a film you can feel in your gut.
- Daisy Rosato and Nora Kaye
Be sure to check out the rest of our SXSW 2026 coverage!
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