Fujifilm just announced that they are creating a GFX Eterna cinema camera to be released sometime in 2025.
When I was at Fujifilm’s Create With Us event in Austin back in September, they had a Fujinon Duvo HZK 25-1000mm f/2.8-5.0 Box Lens on display. For those who don’t know, this is a quarter-million-dollar broadcast lens, used for sporting events. The camera attached to the lens was a Sony.
Fujinon lenses are renown in the cinema and broadcast world, but Fujifilm doesn’t have a filmmaking camera. Actually, Harlem Fragments was filmed on an X-H2s. A number of short films and mini documentaries have been filmed on an X-H2s, too. But, setting that aside, a true pro cinema camera—something ESPN would use, or Universal Pictures—was missing. I recognized this in Austin, and mentioned to the sales rep that Fujifilm should develop a camera to go with the lens, instead of using a competitor’s model. I guess they were already pretty far along in development, but I had no idea.
I don’t anticipate many, if any, reading this will ever buy the GFX Eterna. Maybe a couple of you. I’m sure it will be very expensive. But if you are a broadcaster or filmmaker, perhaps this is something you’re excited for. I can imagine some IMAX pictures being filmed on this.
One last thing: kudos to whoever at Fujifilm named the camera. It’s brilliant. A monochrome-only X100 Acros or X-Pro Acros would be really cool, too. Just throwing that out there.