Red One The Red One debuted in 2007 was Red Digital Cinema's first production camera. It captures up to 30 frames per second at 4K resolution and 120 frames per second at 2K resolution. Its "Mysterium" sensor was acquisitioned for use with the proprietary
RAW format called Redcode. By 2010, Red began selling upgrades to a 14 megapixel sensor called the "Mysterium-X" or "M-X" for short. The Red One has been reviewed as having effectively the same quality as
35 mm film. The Red One was made out of aluminum alloy, and the body alone weighs . It was used to shoot
Che,
The Informant, and
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
DSMC system In 2009, Red began releasing new cameras with a much smaller form factor compared to the Red One. Designed to facilitate either still images or video, depending on the mounting setup, Red called the concept DSMC for "Digital Stills and Motion Capture". The first camera released for this system was the Epic-X, a professional digital stills and motion-capture camera with interchangeable lens mounts. The Scarlet-X was introduced later and provided lower end specifications at a more affordable price. Both cameras were initially equipped with a 5K imaging sensor, upgrades were later offered to a 6K sensor with higher dynamic range called the "". Other versions of the Scarlet with a
2/3"-sensor in 3K-resolution were planned, including one with a fixed 8-times zoom lens, but never sold. The low weight and size of these cameras compared to other solutions available at the time made them popular for shooting high-budget 3-D movies. The Red Epic was used to shoot
The Amazing Spider-Man,
The Hobbit,
Prometheus,
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides and
The Great Gatsby as well as many other feature films.
DSMC2 system Expo 2016 The DSMC2 family of cameras was introduced in 2015 as the new form factor for all cameras up to 2020. The Weapon 8K
VV and Weapon 6K were the first two cameras announced within this line. They were followed by the Red Raven 4.5K and Scarlet-W 5K. Third-party capture formats, namely
Apple ProRes and
Avid DNxHD, were made available for these cameras. In 2016, an 8K sensor called "Helium" was introduced with the two cameras Red Epic-W and Weapon 8K
S35. In early January 2017, this was given the highest sensor score ever, 108, by the
DxOMark website.
Marvel Studios'
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 was the first film to be released that was shot on the Weapon. The film was shot at the camera's full 8K resolution, and featured an equivalent workflow, supplanting director
David Fincher's
Gone Girl as the film with the highest-resolution post-production workflow.
DSMC3 System In 2019, Jarred Land from Red announced the
Red Komodo camera. In 2020, Red started to ship the "beta" stormtrooper white models of the Red Komodo to customers on the waitlist. The price for the beta cameras was US$6,995, with the regular black shipping models for US$5,995, body only. The Komodo camera features 6K video,
super 35 sensor, a
Canon RF lens mount, a dual BP battery plate, and a global shutter. In 2021, Red announced the
Red V-Raptor camera, the first camera that officially belongs to the DSMC3 family of cameras. Like the Komodo, the Red V-Raptor also has an active Canon RF lens mount, but unlike the Komodo, the V-Raptor is capable of multi-format recording. The V-Raptor features a
VistaVision 8K sensor (40.96 mm x 21.60 mm) with the ability to crop to smaller formats like Super35. It is capable of recording full sensor 8K at 120 FPS (or 150 FPS cropped to 2.4:1), and
high frame rates of up to 600 FPS in 2K. With an advertised dynamic range of 17 stops. It was launched priced at US$24,500, body only. Red would later release the V-Raptor XL in 2022, featuring a larger body with an expanded range of ports, internal ND filter, additional aux power, interchangeable lens mount, among other features. In November 2022, Red announced the V-Raptor Rhino, a limited-edition version of the V-Raptor, but featuring an 8K Super35 sensor and a light grey color scheme. It was launched priced at US$19,500. In March 2023, the V-Raptor and V-Raptor XL S35 was launched. These cameras were identical to the previous V-Raptor and XL models and, like the V-Raptor Rhino, have Super35 sensors instead of the original VistaVision sensor. In January 2024, the company launched the V-Raptor [X] and V-Raptor XL [X] cameras featuring a global shutter compared to the original V-Raptor and V-Raptor XL. In February 2025, the company released
Nikon Z-mount versions of the V-Raptor [X] and the Komodo-X cameras. On 9 September 2025, Red announced the V‑Raptor XE, also offering a Z-mount version besides the RF-mount variant. films aboard the
International Space Station with a Helium 8K camera. |alt=ISS-56 Ricky Arnold films on the ISS with a Helium 8K camera. The station was designed between 1984 and 1993. Elements of the station were in construction throughout the US, Canada, Japan, and Europe beginning in the late 1980s.|thumb ==Other products==