Filmlexikon.
Support
Blackmagic URSA
Camera · Equipment

Blackmagic URSA

Murnau AI illustration
blackmagic blackmagic pocket braw raw davinci resolve edit davinci resolve flow red v raptor

Professional 12K cinema camera featuring a Super 35 sensor, 14 stops of dynamic range, and built-in BRAW encoding for a cost-effective RAW workflow.

History & Development

Blackmagic Design announced the first URSA in April 2014 for $5,995 – a fraction of comparable cinema cameras. The more compact URSA Mini followed in 2015, and the URSA Mini Pro in 2017 with improved ergonomics and dual-ISO technology. In 2020, the 12K version revolutionized the market as the first affordable camera of this resolution. In parallel, Blackmagic developed DaVinci Resolve software as a free, comprehensive package for editing, color grading, and audio post-production.

Practical Use in Film

The URSA Mini Pro was used in feature films like "The Mandalorian" (Season 1) for specific sequences, as well as in "Avengers: Endgame" for VFX plates. Documentary filmmakers appreciate its compact form factor and long battery life of up to 2 hours. The 12K sensor enables extreme reframing in post-production and 8K delivery from a full sensor readout. Typical workflows utilize Blackmagic RAW in Constant Quality or Constant Bitrate, with direct integration into DaVinci Resolve without transcoding.

Comparison & Alternatives

Competing cameras like the RED Komodo or Sony FX9 offer similar specifications at significantly higher prices. The ARRI Alexa Mini LF surpasses the URSA in dynamic range and low-light performance but costs ten times as much. The Canon C70 or Sony FX6 are positioned as documentary-suitable alternatives with better autofocus. The URSA excels in its price-performance ratio and complete integration into the Blackmagic pipeline from camera to post-production.

Technical Specifications

Sensor & Resolution

ParameterValue
Sensor TypeSuper35 CMOS
Resolution12,288 x 6,480 pixels (12K)
Sensor Size80 Megapixels
Pixel Size3.8 µm
Sensor Architecture12-bit ADC

Dynamic Range & ISO

Dynamic Range: 14 stops

Native ISO: 800 ASA

Extended ISO: 100 – 25,600 ASA (with gain compensation)

Dual-ISO Mode: 400/3200 ASA (equivalent noise characteristics)

Recording Formats & Resolutions

ResolutionMaximum Frame RateCodec Options
12K (12,288 x 6,480)60 fpsBRAW (Q0-Q5), ProRes, DNxHD
8K (8,192 x 4,320)120 fpsBRAW, ProRes, DNxHD
6K (6,144 x 3,456)120 fpsBRAW, ProRes, DNxHD
4K (4,096 x 2,160)240 fpsBRAW, ProRes, DNxHD

Recording Codecs

Blackmagic RAW (BRAW): Q0, Q1, Q3, Q5, 5:1, 8:1, 12:1, 18:1 compression (12-bit non-linear)

Apple ProRes: ProRes 422 HQ, 422, 422 LT, 422 Proxy

Avid DNx: DNxHR HQX, HQ, SQ, LB

Storage Media: CFast 2.0, SD/UHS-II, USB-C external SSD

Shutter & Frame Rates

Available Frame Rates: 23.98 | 24 | 25 | 29.97 | 30 | 50 | 59.94 | 60 fps

Rolling Shutter: ~12 ms at 24 fps

Shutter Type: Electronic Global Shutter

Optics & Mount

Lens Mount: Canon EF or PL (model dependent)

ND Filters (Internal): 2 stops, 4 stops, 6 stops

Filter Mechanism: Motorized, remote controllable

Body & Weight

Form Factor: Compact block with handle

Weight: 2.4 kg (camera body without lens)

Dimensions: 266 x 168 x 177 mm

Material: Magnesium alloy, rubberized grips

Power & Audio

Battery: Canon LP-E6 / LP-E6N (1-2 hours runtime)

External Power: 12V DC via XLR or USB-C

Audio Inputs: 2x XLR (3-pin, switchable 48V Phantom Power)

Audio Output: 3.5mm headphone jack monitor

Monitoring & LCD

Viewfinder: HDMI Out for external monitors (Full HD)

LCD: 5-inch touchscreen (on Pro models), 1,500 cd/m² brightness

Timecode: Internal generator, Timecode In (BNC)

News

Blackmagic has introduced the URSA Cine 17K 65, a new high-end variant featuring a 17K Large Format sensor and 8K 120fps output for $28,000, positioning it significantly above the original 12K version. Tests confirm strong noise performance up to ISO 25,600. The camera is aimed at high-end productions requiring specialized large format lenses.

News

With the URSA 17K, Blackmagic Design is expanding its camera series in 2024 with its most powerful model to date. The camera achieves 17K resolution at 120fps and features improved high-ISO noise reduction. The price of $28,000 positions it in the professional segment, between established cinema cameras and prosumer-oriented models.

More in the lexikon

Related terms

Report an error
From the Filmfarm ecosystem

Understand visual language, budget productions, connect crew.

The Lexikon is part of the Filmfarm ecosystem — alongside budgeting (FilmBalance), an industry magazine (FilmCircus) and crew networking (FilmCall, CrewMesh). One shared vocabulary for the whole production.

FilmFarm FilmRadarComing soonFilmPulseComing soonFilmNumbersComing soonFilmCapitalComing soonFilmLabComing soonFilmBalanceComing soonFilmCircusComing soon