Camera used in this pictures?

Hi everybody, I recently saw this photos from the shooting of a movie.
I would say they have an Hasselblad look.
And I would love to be wrong since that cameras cost as much as planes.
Anyway I want to know, here them are:
http://www.foroazkenarock.com/t42957p100-noticias-cinematograficas-el-topic#4237144
Thanks!

Do you mean the pics from Insidious3?

Really, without looking at the EXIFs or finding out who took the pictures, there’s no way of telling. Especially because the pictures are re-sized for the web. To me, they look like someone put a software vignetting filter on them, but they could have been taken with just about any modern DSLR. I don’t know enough about the film industry to know if they’d bother taking this kind of picture with a medium format camera, but it seems like overkill.

Could those rather crappy/artistic looking photos be the work of a Holga?

Was it the square format that you were looking for? That’s one cheap camera that will do it in spades.

ETA: Here’s another page with a few Holga examples

Those are Instagram pics. The square format, filters, and hashtag at the top pretty much make it obvious. Those can be taken with any decent cell phone or data enabled digital camera.

You can see the full sized pics on their Twitter feed.

You don’t need a square-format camera to take square pictures. Just use pictures taken with any camera, and crop them to a square format.

Could this be stealth spam?

With the latest version of iOS, my phone takes square pictures now. No cropping or messing around required. I’m underwhelmed by it.

Isn’t that just a setting that can be changed? Only Instagram (afaik) forces those 1:1 pics.

There are several apps available for iPhone that will allow you to take pics like that.

Thanks everybody for your time and consideration

Well, they may have Instagram-like filters on them or are cropped to Instagram square specifications, but those are not, for the most part from what I see, cell phone photos (observe the apparent focal lengths and the depth of field). I don’t even think most of those are processed in Instagram, just posted to it (and a lot of my photographer friends do that themselves–they post their own photos on Instagram with their own look. I personally only post cell phone photos on my Instagram feed, but I don’t necessarily use Instagram for processing.) Anyhow, most of these photos just look like normal processed dSLR photos. You might need to have some nice f/2.8 or faster glass for some of them, but there’s nothing particularly Hasselblad-y about these. (Although it’d be difficult to tell at the size they are displayed.)

Thanks pulykamell.
I asked because I found curious something in the focus, and the light. The cameras I know doesn´t act like that.
Yeah, it may be the lens.