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This article originally appeared in the Videomaker
Magazine February, 2000 issue.
Reprinted with permission from Videomaker Magazine,
Chico CA., Videomaker Inc. All Rights Reserved
Call: (800) 284-3226 for subscription information
For this and other articles visit us at www.videomaker.com
©2005 Videomaker Magazine. Reproduction of
this article for any use other than personal is prohibited.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Video
Warm-ups
by
Stephen Muratore
The
old story has it: in a New York City subway station,
a man stepped off a train and heard a violinist playing
from a distance. As he walked toward his exit, he was
disappointed to hear a scratchy, screeching rendition
of a barely-recognizable tune. When he drew nearer to
the violinist, he was relieved to see that the latter
was packing his instrument, preparing to leave the station.
The violinist asked the man, "Sir, could you tell
me how to get to Carnegie Hall?
"Practice,
son, practice," was what the man had for an answer.
Musicians
hone their skills by running their instruments through
various exercises. They play scales up and down, backwards
and forwards, slow and fast. They play various "studies"
or "etudes" of increasing complexity to develop
the techniques, muscles and reflexes necessary to master
their art. They work through a series of warm-up exercises
before each performance. None of these exercises is
meant to be heard during a performance-except the rare
exercises that turn out to be good music, like Bach's
Well Tempered Clavier. Normally, this playing all takes
place before the real music starts. Musicians call this
"shedding wood" and "building chops.”
Why
should videographers expect to master the craft of video
without shedding some wood of our own? Yet, where are
our scales, exercises and studies? Where are the books
of challenging videographic stunts that can sharpen
our skills? Toward filling this hole in our education,
here are a few exercises. Read these, then create your
own. If you do, share them with us in the Your Tips
column.
Etude
I: The Walking Truck
Improves:
smoothness of hand-held trucking
Stand
5 feet from your subject with lens set to widest view.
Bend knees, but keep back erect. Press "record."
Walk smoothly past the subject, keeping the subject's
eyes on the upper "rule of thirds" horizontal
line. Let the subject move from outside the frame through
the frame from right to left, then out of the frame
again. Press "record" again to stop recording.
Repeat until the shot looks as smooth as though it were
shot from a wheeled dolly, keeping the subject's eyes
on the "rule of thirds" line. Practice this
same move in reverse direction.
Advanced:
practice the same move with the subject facing the right
side of the frame and walking along with you. Frame
the subject's eyes on the point where the upper and
left-most "rule of thirds" lines cross. Practice
until the shot is smooth and the subject never loses
that position in the frame.
Etude
II: The Walking Dolly
Improves:
smoothness of hand-held dolly moves
Stand
15 feet from subject with lens set to widest view. Bend
knees, but keep back erect. Press "record."
Walk smoothly toward subject, keeping the subject's
eyes on the upper "rule of thirds" horizontal
line. Stop two feet in front of subject. Press "record"
again to stop recording. Repeat until the shot looks
as smooth as though it were shot from a wheeled dolly,
and the subject's eyes never veer from the "rule
of thirds” line.
Advanced:
practice the same move with the lens zoomed halfway
in, then all the way in.
Etude
III: Eyeless Shooting
Improves:
focusing, framing and interviewing skills
Stand
five feet from subject and have subject speak as though
she is being interviewed. Frame the shot. Then move
the camcorder to one shoulder next to your ear and press
"record." Shoot the whole "interview"
from that position, without ever looking into the viewfinder
again. Repeat until you can shoot a three-minute interview,
keeping your subject in the frame the whole time. In
addition to sharpening your camera skills, this technique
is handy in relieving interview subjects of some of
the camera's intimidation. The camcorder doesn't separate
you from your subject.
Advanced:
Hold the camcorder at waist level. Do not use the viewfinder
at all, even to frame the shot initially. Shoot the
"interview" from there until you can keep
the subject in frame the whole time.
More
advanced still: Place the subject 15 feet away on the
other side of a high wall or other obstacle. Do not
use the viewfinder to frame the shot. Shoot over the
obstacle, holding the camcorder over your head. Repeat
until you never lose your subject.
Tip:
With any of these exercises, it helps to use your ears
to estimate the location of the subject. Wearing headphones
is best, as it allows you to estimate position from
the camcorder's "point of view."
These
first exercises are certainly not Bach, but they can
enliven your shots with camera motion, or enable to
quickly grab those once-in-a-lifetime shots when they
unexpectedly come your way.
Stephen
Muratore is Videomaker's Executive Editor.
| This
article originally appeared in the Videomaker
Magazine February, 2000 issue.
Reprinted with permission from Videomaker Magazine,
Chico CA., Videomaker Inc. All Rights Reserved
Call: (800) 284-3226 for subscription information
For this and other articles visit us at www.videomaker.com
©2005 Videomaker Magazine. Reproduction
of this article for any use other than personal
is prohibited.
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