Bloody madness: Just for those who don't know - HARRY C. BOX (minute 8.47) is one of the most important gaffers of all time! He solely laid the groundwork for almost everything that concerns modern day gaffer and rigging work. His phenomenal - fun to read - book "Set Lightning's Technician Handbook" has been adopted by the whole of film and TV industry, including unions, as a standard work on how to use lightning and rigging equipment and safty on set! Salute.
@Paul_Wetor3 ай бұрын
This comment will probably get more notice than any gaffer ever received in the closing credits of a movie.
@Larrysung3 ай бұрын
I'm so lucky to have come across this comment 🎉🎉
@patrickmuia3 ай бұрын
I have read and applied what Harry set and it's great❤
@sojafilmx2 ай бұрын
Shout out to Harry 🎉
@mattdorsey2244Ай бұрын
I worked as a set lighting technician for 42 years beginning in 1980. Local 728 was handing out the Lighting Technicians Handbook for free for a while and that's how I got my copy. The funny thing is that I don't remember ever seeing Harry until this video. I no longer work in the industry because of the 4 year global scam that affected our industry so severely. Safe and effective, LOL.
@odarrien3 ай бұрын
Its crazy just how much work goes into some of the short 'simple' scenes that we watch!
@paulgerhard51703 ай бұрын
you don't even know the amount of work that goes into the editing room after the dailies are shot... it's an insane amount of work
@aldunlop46222 ай бұрын
I got to see many commercials and tv shows being filmed in Sydney, and yeah, seeing 50+ people standing around to film simple things was an eye opener.
@TheNameOfJesusАй бұрын
@@paulgerhard5170 It took me 50 hours to edit a 3 minute music video.
@MisterMister5893Ай бұрын
@@aldunlop4622 You don't "need" 50 people but the more specialized the role, the less there is for errors. IF you just have a skeleton crew wearing many hats, it can be done but the quality will suffer. That said, great cinema is a subjective topic at best. Just look at some of the greatest cult classics like Clerks, some of Tarantino's earlier work, etc. A huge crew isn't always necessary.
@amandasteven1400Ай бұрын
"crazy" by definition, means mentally deranged, and would seem to be the perfect choice of words to describe wat we jst watched :)
@xmarxthaspot3 ай бұрын
For all filmmakers watching…this is 1000% accurate. I’ve worked several Hollywood productions. Every detail mentioned here you can do even on a small / no budget. This is fundamental.
@omarabu25622 ай бұрын
Congrats!!
@dh11632 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. Although I haven't worked on H'wood productions yet, it's necessary for these concepts and practices to be well understood by everyone at every level. I've had a freshly minted director btch and moan because they simply could not understand why lighting and cam setups take so long-when the real issue was they blew the shooting schedule on day 1. :c/
@andregant9980Ай бұрын
@@dh1163 i’m new to the game. And I’m watching this video as a way to try to wrap my head around the entire process. It’s a relief to read comments that confirm this information is accurate. I can’t imagine blowing huge amounts of time due to a lack of experience coupled with a lack of knowledge about an efficient process.
@Blabbermouth-w5wАй бұрын
Verify that you did work in the industry. Your word alone has no meaning or weight.
@SpectraVision-f5oАй бұрын
mostly it's called unions
@FooledToaster4 ай бұрын
Best filmmaking content on youtube by far.
@goingwalkaboutnowАй бұрын
The process is so hard yet the end result looks so effortless, truly movie magic.
@yummm877521 сағат бұрын
Exactly right! That's why movie making is expensive.
@Mandelrot3 ай бұрын
This video is pure gold, it's amazing how so much valuable information can be condensed in here. And just as a detail, what an opportunity lost to call the boom operator "boomer".
@aldunlop46222 ай бұрын
I worked at the casino in Sydney in IT for about 5 years and across the street was a cafe all the staff used to go to for coffees, sometimes lunch, I even had most of my business meetings with external suppliers and what not there. Next to it was this plaza I guess you'd call it and they filmed a lot of tv commercials there. That whole area was like a mini Hollywood with a lot of tv and advertising production companies, so they used to film locally. I got sit outside the cafe and watch them film maybe 100 productions, sometimes tv shows, or ads and I found it very fascinating. There were usually 50 of more crew, camera and production vehicles etc. I really enjoyed watching the process, got to meet many of the production people and actors and have a chat about what their jobs were, what they did etc. They in turn used to ask me about managing all the behind-the-scenes IT that went into making a large casino function.
@leokimvideo2 ай бұрын
It's always interesting to see the person they use for Tom Cruise's lighting stand in. Very much about the scene being lit to hide and show off features of the face. The dolly grip is so often the unsung hero of the camera doing the big moves and their timing has to be perfect. In big filmmaking there are so many unsung heroes
@TerryWindell3 ай бұрын
Nicely done! Unless you're actually in the business, most people have no idea of how many scenes/shots it takes just to show a person simply walking through a door and into another room or office.
@parasympatholytic4 ай бұрын
This channel is severely underrated. Well produced, solid information.
@ericcox6764Ай бұрын
I'm currently working security for a movie set for a production that Kevin Costner is doing here in Southern Utah for the movie Horizon An American Saga. This is my first experience with the motion picture industry outside of going to the theater to watch a movie. It's been very educational, to say the least. I was positioned on a hill overlooking the set during the first day of shooting to guard a motorcycle trail from people riding onto the set. For over 2 hours that morning, it looked like ants on an anthill with everyone doing their different jobs. Then I heard someone yell, "background," and the action began. A minute and 3 seconds later, I heard, "cut," and the ants came out of hiding again. One of the drivers told me that they were spending over $70,000 an hour when production was going full steam ahead. I've always been fascinated by the behind the scenes of the making of a big production like this. I feel very blessed to have been a small part of this project!!
@Drunkensailorgaming3 ай бұрын
This brought back so many memories. I've worked on over 200 shows as a principle actor, second team, photo double and even stunts and bg actor.. every job is important. I remember working on American Reunion in Covington Georgia. Allison Hannigan sprained her ankle and me and some of the other bg actors prepared a way to cross out of camera to get a chair off camera for her to sit in so she could rest her ankle. I've seen the director use bg to even cover or block view of things in the background that shouldn't be seen for instance we were shooting a period piece for The Vampire Diaries and they used a couple of bg actors stand in front of a modern phone box or a car they couldn't get moved. It's so fascinating
@halloweenfriday4 ай бұрын
As a young filmmaker trying to get into Hollywood, these tips are extremely helpful. Thank you so much for sharing all this information with us, and helping us learn to become more professional with our own productions.
@MyNameJeff..3 ай бұрын
Run the opposite way.
@hamiltoncox76514 ай бұрын
I had to stop watching after five minutes because it was so accurate it started to stress me out. Maybe you cover this, but the reason there are so many people there apparently lurking is because the director or DP can change everything in an instant and then you better be prepared to change direction on a dime - instantaneously. No excuses allowed and failure is not an option.
@FilmSkills4 ай бұрын
Keep watching :-)
@-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-3 ай бұрын
8:30
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
Every new job is overwhelming in the beginning.
@hamiltoncox7651Ай бұрын
@@Atilla-m9i 30 years pal, 30 years. Same nonsense year in, year out.
@georgecoletraintv4 ай бұрын
This has to be one of the best-kept filmmaking secrets channels on KZbin. this channel is so helpful and educational! I truly look forward to whatever you guys post. such a help to young filmmakers like me out A TON!
@A0A4ful4 ай бұрын
Awesome!- Most in the audience have very little knowledge, let alone awareness, of all the relentless hard work, that film makers put in during each film shoot! Thank you!
@thevisualedge93463 ай бұрын
This is so fun! I was a 2nd AD on four seasons of Castle--seeing all my old co-workers in these shots was a happy surprise. What was the connection that got you guys all this great BTS footage?
@tomarnold72843 ай бұрын
Castle is one of my all-time favorites! It's too bad the stories shifted from episodic comedy to series drama, eventually killing the show.
@Drunkensailorgaming3 ай бұрын
Nathan Fillion is such a stand up guy. I stood in for him once in a shoot in Atlanta for another show..
@loufaolla3 ай бұрын
It’s not a rehearsal if you shoot the rehearsal 😂 Like someone else said, this video is so on the money it brings back PTSD. Well done. Nailed it.
@Fankiveli3 ай бұрын
Huh I went to a film school and it covered maybe 20% of this! WOW!
@angelface89022 ай бұрын
Same!
@lallyamanteofficial4 ай бұрын
Very well done and this is a master class in short time. !!! Please do another version but smaller sets . For indie films ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉 thank you so much for this .
@ShawnTBell4 ай бұрын
I love the detals in the video. I think you missed an opportunity to talk about sound. Often the boom operator needs to know the blocking and even the dialogue to follow with the boom. The boom op also has to be very careful where he stands not to block light, yet still be able to whip that pole from one actor to the other and not cause shadows.The boom op can also have his own blocking marked so he knows where he needs to/can stand. He's almost like another actor on selt who has to avoid being seen and stay out of everyone's way.
@babsbarry70424 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@travisdaki3 ай бұрын
25:18 they do talk about the boom operator for a bit...
@johntnguyen19763 ай бұрын
I thought the exact same thing. I also thought about other sound related items on a set. A good example is the comms going on (most likely on headsets these days) between team members within a department.
@sjsielen3 ай бұрын
Boom op protocols discussed starting at 25:25
@michaelleader80253 ай бұрын
The boom operator will also know the focal length of the prime lenses and distance to the talent in order to keep the mic and boom out of the shot.
@roberthoople4 ай бұрын
I also used to think you didn't need all that, and spent years making and helping others (with the same mindset) make utter garbage, then briefly got into Hollywood North, working on Supergirl and The Flash as a PA, and that opened my eyes to how ignorant I was about filmmaking; despite decades watching BTS of my favorite movies/show, religiously watching every filmmaking KZbin channel I could get my eyes on and lessons from my own indie experiences.
@FilmSkills4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing that. The film industry is one of the few that spends billions of dollars to create a façade of how it actually works to make it appear glamorous. It’s a disservice to aspiring filmmakers because it’s not glamorous- it’s a very complex, methodical, almost militaristic process. Hollywood filmmaking is an assembly line that stamps out content. Everybody plays a role and in order for the system to run smoothly, there has to be a process. This is that process.
@space_10733 ай бұрын
I mean you definitely don't need all that. Are we pretending like there is no value in indie movies?
@psysword3 ай бұрын
@@FilmSkillssoul destroying and I feel more indies need to break the mould of Hollywood nonsense. Have yet to see any decent content this year from Hollywood except for Oppenheimer. Polishing turds as we editors call it.
@robertruffo21343 ай бұрын
@@FilmSkills Very well said!
@davidbush1313 ай бұрын
Oh, did you work on The Flash?
@TalmidAndy3 ай бұрын
The power of unions at its best. Working time directives, division of labor, and a whole bunch of other rules and contractual obligations that do little to improve the working environment but certainly do raise the cost and ensure plenty of jobs for union members.
@crawford3234 ай бұрын
I achieved a degree in Photography in 1976. The lens lead me all over the world and I obediently followed. I wrapped up my career as a scientific photographer on a research vessel. An ideal life but my dream was to be part of a creative effort such as this. Life is much too short to achieve all one wishes.
@psysword3 ай бұрын
Awwww. Get out there and shoot a movie. Screw the science.
@dannydetonator3 ай бұрын
Ibwish i knewvhow it feels to follow one's calling and get surprised by places it takes you, while earning your living from it (i'd guess not bare minimum). You're a very lucky and well-positioned photography master, many would seriously envy (including myself, an unemployed, failed musician - turned - machinist).
@crawford3233 ай бұрын
@@dannydetonator A machinist? One who is comfortable with math and geometry? Now I'm jealous. I just bought a second hand round column mill. I am trying to satisfy my curiosity about your trade. I have had a life long curiosity and appreciation of mechanical things. I believe photographers must be comfortable in many areas. We must be accurate in our concepts and the use of our tools of the trade as well as being creative in our vision. A successful combination of the geek and the artist is sometimes hard to find manifested in many people. Just look at the contraptions a commercial photographer will have to create to solve the problems of lighting a product. Maybe you need to satisfy your innate desire for accuracy with something like macro- photography and image stacking. Conceive, create and machine items to solve those problems. Combine your creative juices and have fun. There is a lot of people in other industries who use elements of imaging in their occupations and they believe they know about photography but are mislead in the concepts of the reality of photography in general. It has to be easy, just push the button right? Light dissipates to the square of the distance and when the distance is great this is not much of a problem. When this distance is small, ohhh geeze getting light even on a microscopic level requires understanding and precision. When the light is close lighting becomes difficult. Also we live in a world where technology is changing rapidly. We had to wait on sensor technology and inkjet printers to mature enough for grandma could have a photo in her purse. When that happened digital in general exploded and another chapter in photography was written. What an exciting time to be a photographer! Pick your niche and interest and go for it. You have to learn why and your mind, I know requires this anyway. Dive deep into the why. You know why your lathe chatters. Learn why the sensors crushes the lower tones and clips the highlights. Without that knowledge it's hard to imagine what the sensors sees vs what your eyes see. Learn about color management. So much from the well in which to drink. And by golly KZbin and the wonderful people who have the skill and are willing to share what they know is an asset as we have never seen before. Time to tinker, satisfy curiosity and learn. Photography is addictive. Beware!
@johnwatson39482 ай бұрын
I recall Roger Corman once said he had only two rules for directors: 1) get lots of coverage 2) sit down as often as you can to avoid exhaustion.
@pilli8524 ай бұрын
I'm so happy about the new video on this channel! Incredible info and behind the scenes!
@CragsidebazАй бұрын
This is by a country mile the best explanation of how this is done professionally, and for everyone ou see here there are many more behind the production. Thank you.
@johnnyw5252 ай бұрын
I've never worked on a big production, but I can tell this is absolutely solid information. Incredible. Thanks for making it!
@FilmSkillsАй бұрын
You're welcome!
@wolfman32952 ай бұрын
I am not a film maker or an actor at all but I have watched many movies (and a few t.v shows many years ago when I watched t.v.) and I have had a curiosity of how they were made and watched some interviews with actors and directors and they mentioned blocking so I wanted to know more about that and how movies were made and I sort of knew about lighting and all that so this was very helpful. Thank you
@tww200227 күн бұрын
Very interesting. So much good information. WELL DONE👍
@sherbournesubwaymess3 ай бұрын
If you've ever wondered why the first films of indie filmmakers were so wildly original/memorable..but then afterwards when they went 'Hollywood' their films became completely soulless/no originality? Now you know why. This video shows the 'sausage factory' at it's worst. The only thing you really need to learn is at 4:50 Getting the 'Bing' logo as product placement...because as we all know: Everyone uses Bing.
@johnwatson39482 ай бұрын
Absolutely correct - but doesn’t have time to touch on all the problems that can crop up in this and any other field. Ron Howard in his “Master Class” points out “Everything goes wrong” - you just have to ride with it.
@johncrisoctaviano4 ай бұрын
one of the best explanation on filmaking production!
@jetfreshair4 ай бұрын
This intro to movie making is an excellent presentation into the complexity and challenges of video productions. It makes you appreciate the work and dedication of the writers, crew and actors. Well done, look forward to watching more.
@mr.chocolaterobot2 ай бұрын
THANK YOU A MILLION TIMES OVER FOR THIS CHANNEL...PLEASE KEEP GOING.... YOU'RE DOING GREAT WORK 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾🔥🔥🔥🔥✌🏾
@calinlaurfilmmaker4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! Best video so far on the practical knowledge for a filmmaker how the real set works!
@terryrazor4959Ай бұрын
Had a chance to make training videos for the USAF. Went to bed tired every night. Lots of effort and time goes into production.
@thomask1424Ай бұрын
Fascinating look at the complexity of film/tv production, including little details like how product placement is worked in. What's really mind-blowing is the thought that this is happening for the hundreds of thousands of hours of content that fills TV and movie theaters. Of course, since taking the Universal tour in the early '80's, all this stuff is in the back of my mind when I watch shows/movies. Even if this is really just to plug your online school. ;)
@GoodSir-i7y4 ай бұрын
Even a simple scene seems mind bogglingly complicated.
@toddwarnke77193 ай бұрын
Not really ... everybody has a role, and everybody knows the limits of their role and when and where it bumps up against the other roles. This makes a simple thing, simple in the end.
@paulgerhard51703 ай бұрын
imagine a big feature film
@minkymott3 ай бұрын
Holy crap. So much more invovled than just putting people in a scene and hollering "Action!". Who knew.
@grahamhill63403 ай бұрын
Having spent some 46-years in the business, forty of which were in HOLLYWOOD, I have to say that filming a movie or TV episodic today has become too complex with too much staging... it's because of the ultra fast-paced commercials, that has trained audiences to accept the fast editing style that has become the "New Normal" of telling a story. Scenes have way too much coverage, one and two second shots, it's all about the imagery rather than good writing and acting. The photography aspect of production has been reduced to just get everything in focus, and anything else can be added or corrected in post by someone with a mouse and a laptop! I've worked on TV shows where the DP is setting up the shots, whilst the director just wants to deal with the actors and nothing else. Unlike many of the young crews today who have never worked or even seen a roll of film, I've seen the changes in both technology and on-set production. Too many people huddled around video village, too much rehearshal that severely limits any spontanaity... the camera with all the latest crane configurations just keeps moving all the time... "Less is more" -the best shots are reaction shots, no dialogue just good tight close-ups. I'm third generation now retired, and I've worked on so many iconic movies and TV shows both in England and the US, have met so many iconic legends both behind-the-camera and in front of it, in short I was blessed and so lucky. I saw what was coming, mediocrity and style over substance. I don't envy crews today, especially with the ever-growing threat of AI, and the studios getting cheaper and meaner with all those that work so hard to make them richer!
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
Does some of that post production work look less authentic?
@dannydaw59Ай бұрын
I've noticed that the camera guys on tv shows shake the camera on purpose to make it look realistic but it looks like crap. "The Office" is a classic example. I see it on unscripted shows too. Why haven't professional cameras gotten smaller like consumer cameras? I mean the main body of the camera, not the manual focus section.They shoot in the same resolution.
@KartsHuseonica3 күн бұрын
Fascinating. I learned so much Jason. I'm subscribed now and am looking forward to watching more of your videos.
@MarttiSuomivuori3 ай бұрын
Thank you. So much planning, adapting, memorizing, mastering to make it look -natural. something you rarely think about sitting in your couch. Very well illustrated and organized. Excellent content.
@UShistorymatters2 ай бұрын
It's like a commercial building project. You see people standing around, waiting. A process just as costly as filming a scene and is many cases much more expensive. The BIM engineer created the structure or "script" which is used to create the materials list and schedule that break out each and every step. Framers, pipefitters, electricians, and inspectors and engineers who all work in unison while others are working, some are waiting and planning.
@FilmSkillsАй бұрын
That's a great analogy - you've got it exactly right.
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
From the comments this video is spot on. I would suggest to bring intelligent outside the industry people to study the production for process improvements.
@FilmSkillsАй бұрын
The film industry has been around for decades and has evolved into what it is now. No outside expert will be able to improve the process, especially since a movie set doesn't work like a standard company in a way that could utilize the resources of a consultant.
@cichy83864 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for a year. At last you're back!
@kevincozens68372 ай бұрын
Amazing how complicated it is to shoot a scene and the number of people and disciplines involved. It as also fun seeing the crew working on a scene for the TV series Castle. :)
@sergeantcrowАй бұрын
Well this is very informative... More appreciation for all the work involved by everyone is due.
@Hoffpauirdds4 ай бұрын
One of the best videos I’ve seen for people trying to make a short film! ❤
@hwcentertainment3 ай бұрын
Pure Masterclass. Thank you for this!
@CameraNewsDeals3 ай бұрын
I know of fellow Professors that still show this exact video as part of production curriculum in CA. Modern productions obviously don't have the same level of passionate people involved, a significant reason for overall lower production quality in today's content. As for the size of the crew involved, modern technology has helped decrease the crew quantity necessary, so yes depending on the shot, one doesn't need as large of a crew as before.
@AkivaPotok3 ай бұрын
First off, you could have saved me $100K in film school debt had these come out 25 years ago! But, that said, I've done microbudgets where the philosophy was , all you need was 4 film school graduates and 2 PA's. Instead of people hanging around, the DP was also the Gaffer, The Focus puller was also the Best Boy, The Boom operator was also a grip/electric. The director did the hair and makeup and was one of the leads. The PA's did what was asked or were the stand ins. It worked fine for most shots. After the director DP and Focus Puller and Boom Operator all blocked the shot, we would all change jobs, and light, as the director did hair and makeup and checked in on the lighting. Then the actors would come back, and the Gaffer and Best Boy would go back to being DP and focus puller. If the scene had a dolly grip, then that person was another Grip/electric during set up. Four film school grads and two PA's and no one sitting around. :)
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
Only eager newbies would agree to work in the type of environment you described.
@trainlover16Ай бұрын
As someone who wants to become a professional filmmaker, this'll be extremely helpful, thank you.
@vonmotions15963 ай бұрын
This has opened my eyes Thank you!!!!
@miguelsuarez801011 күн бұрын
I have always been fascinated with the art of making movies. I would have loved to be director of photography.
@live365daysOfficial4 ай бұрын
Wow, what an incredible video! The content was engaging! well-produced, and truly captivating from start to finish. I was thoroughly impressed by the quality and effort put into this. It added so much value and made the video even more enjoyable. I'm eagerly looking forward to more interesting and exciting content in the upcoming days. Keep up the fantastic work! Your passion and creativity are truly inspiring. Much love and support to you and the team 🎉
@dougstroudphotography4 ай бұрын
Such great stuff! Thank you for sharing!!! I really liked all the different voices who contributed to this bts video.
@WritewheelUK2 ай бұрын
I was once the tow-car driver for a well-known TV series. It took four days to record a scene that was 36-seconds. It consisted of the two main characters having an argument, one getting in the car (a brand-new BMW - 495 miles on the clock when I picked it up) and telling a third person what was said. The ‘star’ kept forgetting his lines. No one was surprised. I got the BMW on the Tuesday, drove the route with the stand-in (who knew all his lines) on Wednesday, and the following day there were eight takes before the star decided he’d had enough. Friday required just three takes before we all realised the star’s tone of voice made the takes unusable. I argued with the star on the Friday. I was replaced the following week, so I have no idea if the scene was repeated.
@tilersun2 ай бұрын
Ah ye can leave out who it was and what show. Clues if you can't say.
@WritewheelUK2 ай бұрын
@@tilersun I wrote a book which included this experience. The slushpile reader said I couldn't mention the name of the show, or even hint at it as I would be liable to be sued, the star being famous for his willingness to brief a solicitor. One bit she was especially shocked by was the pathetic conduct of the star. I went through a bit about what he mustn't do when in motion, one bit of which was not to brake. He asked what would happen if he did brake. I said I don't know. He undid his seatbelt, sort of threw the buckle at me, although it was pulled away and, into my face said, "I'm used to working with professionals." I wasn't to take that from this bloke, and said, "Perhaps it because I don't know what happens if someone is stupid enough to stamp on the brakes is because I'm used to working with professionals." That went down about as well as you'd expect. He stomped off. One of the sound guys said, "That's filming over for the day." The chef said later, "Good. He deserves it," so I assume he was just as abrupt with others.
@terri6854Ай бұрын
@@WritewheelUK Surely you could have at least guessed what would happen if you braked? eg "It's never been done, but I assume if you braked then object A would verb B, and object C would verb D....." etc etc
@lesbrown80994 ай бұрын
Very enjoyable to watch... and informative! ( the impact of product placement interesting )... Thank you ...
@markjones1273 ай бұрын
I'm a photographer not a film maker but I've commented a lot on KZbin videos giving technical advice when I see really poor camera work and lighting by amateur KZbinrs, and quite often get told where to go and that they're happy with their crappy set up and lighting, in future I'll just send them here! 🤣 Great video!
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
They might get overwhelmed by your advice. Some might appreciate your advice as long as they understand what you are explaining.
@roscosart1888Ай бұрын
It's like saying to an amateur photographer "hey that's an ok photo, please look at this professional one"😂. You need to make mistakes to get better just like everything in life. It's easy to critique when you never step in other people's shoes, you have to understand the resources and know the difference between them. One has less experience and the other has more experience. To get to this level you need a lot of money and time which beginner/amateurish filmmakers don't have.
@theresaclark61173 ай бұрын
Thank you for the breakdown!!!
@jcon6543 ай бұрын
Amazing great to have ya back
@rancosteel3 ай бұрын
Late Great Director William Friedkin never did blocks or had marks. He thought it was too restrictive and ruined the natural acting response flow. He would let the film roll on a rehearsal shot only for it to end up being used as the final.
@aliensoup2420Ай бұрын
He started in documentaries, so that affected his way of thinking and viewing a scene.
@impact20twenty27 күн бұрын
Great video. Knew most of that but great to go over it all. Was really wanting to get into film stills but there's no way to get into it without doing it for free to begin with and with paying all the bills for a home thats never going to happen. Any other tips for ways to get into it without paying for a film stills course would be great. I dont need lessons on how to be quiet on-set and shoot quietly - I've been a successful wedding photographer for 14years 😂. Also, where's the link to the 1 hour film making course? There's no link in thr description.
@PrettyWeddingStudios4 ай бұрын
What an awesome video, many thanks for the insights to a film set.
@iamartichok2 ай бұрын
I learned almost everything I know about filmmaking by working as a boom operator on 35mm porno features in the 1980's. Best film school ever...
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
This information makes me less uncomfortable with the sin I see on film.
@JonCampos-kh2bwАй бұрын
Porn needs boom operators?
@iPhone-Cinematograhy2 ай бұрын
Excellent tutorial... will pass on the URL to others.
@waverly24683 ай бұрын
On those rare occasions when you can watch movies or tv shows being shot for real, it's amazing how long it takes to prepare for a shot which will probably last less than a minute. I posted a video "CSI Miami filming in Pasadena" when I stumbled on filming near Allen Ave. Same experience when I saw a scene being shot in Occidental College for "Beverly Hills 90210".
@hundredfireify4 ай бұрын
Would love to see the process when VFX sequences are involved. How does the VFX supervisor blend into the workflow? Great video btw
@josephvanwyk20884 ай бұрын
I see you briefly mention storyboards and floorplans. This should've been nr 1 in the video. Everything else is on point - but storyboards on set saves so much time and everyone is one the same page immediately.
@FilmSkills4 ай бұрын
Please remember, this is one out of 330 videos we have produced on the filmmaking process. This one is just an overview. We get much deeper with individual lessons into shot lists, storyboards, breaking down the scripts, blocking and planning, developing coverage, etc in the paid course at FilmSkills.com.
@josephvanwyk20884 ай бұрын
@@FilmSkills Of course. It just always amazes me that this is left out, and I know millions of sets don't even incorporate the stroryboards at all. Speaking only from experience it makes life on set so much more easier when everyone already knows the "12 shots" before shooting the "12 shots" and yes things change, but at least 80% of the blocking and setups are familiar to everyone involved.
@deebsmigs3 ай бұрын
cool. I do storyboards for animation. I would love to break into live-action stuff too.
@KnightBr33d2 ай бұрын
The unsung heroes are Writers, Casting Directors, Costume Designers, Cinematographers, Sound Designers and Editors. If they do not make the right moves the production will never reach its full potential.
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
Is there something from a management perspective that can increase their success rate?
@KnightBr33dАй бұрын
@@Atilla-m9i Management should never inject or promote any personal bias, racism, sexism, political agenda or social commentary in any production. When this happens good stories become disjointed because of under-developed characters placed in un-natural situations with bizzare plot twists. Management interference causes productions to fail, movies & shows to flop, fan backlash is created and legacy is destroyed. Treat everyone with respect. Properly pay professionals without overworking them. Make the cast and crew as diverse as possible to appeal to as broad an audience as possible. Only hire union labor based on their talent not their connections, political leanings, sexuality or willingness to sleep their way to the top.
@ROKMO4 ай бұрын
Man! This is such good and true information! thanks so much for sharing this
@karliemorris73184 ай бұрын
and this is why i'm subscribed, Great Video Tutorial
@dreammix9430Ай бұрын
This video was awesome I learned a lot thank you!
@FilmSkillsАй бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@FatihVideographer4 ай бұрын
Master class 👏🏻 thanks a lot for sharing such valuable information
@JFras303 ай бұрын
I worked as a news cameraman for forty years and I understand how all this works but news is very down and dirty and quick. On occasion I would get an assignment to shoot behind the scenes of a movie and while waiting to shoot some action my thoughts in my head were “OMG! This so tedious and boring!” 😂
@glenmale17483 ай бұрын
Yep, covered a lot of film sets in my 42 years and was constantly amazed at how many appeared to be doing nothing. This clip has set me straight.
@MarsMuela2 ай бұрын
Former newspuke cameraman too. We can shoot anything, anywhere, anyplace and at any time. I still have my Sony D600 WS Betacam SP. I retired in 2020 and now play with a couple of Panasonic HPX 370s and a 300 left over from my days at Discovery. They're good enough for the personal shit that I do.
@dannydaw59Ай бұрын
Why are the set cameras always so much larger than consumer cameras? Consumer cameras are in the same 4k resolution, so that can't be the reason.
@aldunlop46222 ай бұрын
Really enjoyable video, thanks!
@ChrisAnt4 ай бұрын
Fantastic video and spot on.
@Sweden20233 ай бұрын
Finally.. somebody is shooting horizontally.
@danielog3 ай бұрын
your videos are amazing! Thanks!
@LelaForrest-w3f3 ай бұрын
I look forward to doing this for my movies.
@LightsCameraKonkle3 ай бұрын
I’m a director. This is a Terrific channel
@TrinityBethelSolicitors3 ай бұрын
The details are so detailed that I am worriedly scared and wondering "HOW DO I DO ALL THESE, WHEN ONE HAS LIMITED TIME TO SHOOT OR TIME IS A BIG FACTOR?" Great video ❤
@DarrinCarlson4 ай бұрын
This is great stuff! I’m just a fan of film production and this is fascinating.
@FilmSkills4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@andrewdavid9412Ай бұрын
I was an extra in a movie, playing a cab driver in three scenes with the lead. It took two days over two weeks and 20 hours total time on set. They cut one scene from the film and my total time on screen was 34 seconds.
@hungchoonghow585721 күн бұрын
Well, if it's any consolation to you, whenever a person watches the movie in the year 2104, there will be 34 seconds of you in that film. It is history.
@svenf13 ай бұрын
Super interesting stuff... thank you!
@KMJONAIR_22 күн бұрын
Great job!
@edbrotherton363 ай бұрын
So cool to watch this. I know 3 people in this video.
@caspiansfriend4 ай бұрын
@ 5:30 he really did have to block the scene driven by the need to get the Bing logo into the shot vs blocking driven by the story. I've seen parodies of that sort of thing, but now I'm watching IRL. wow....
@SoloTraceur3 ай бұрын
sponsor money, product placement man
4 ай бұрын
So i think the production design is before this right? i mean the set is not the same day at all. But what about some changes that may appear ? thanks! great video
@DFMorayАй бұрын
This is fantastic
@aroefilms3 ай бұрын
Ima need that Star Wars 3-Stripe track jacket
@EduardodeRegules3 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks 👍⭐
@BarryCountyLyfeАй бұрын
Give me the tape guy job and I'm set for life!
@crawford3234 ай бұрын
Outstanding!
@DropItStudio4 ай бұрын
7:50 Best tips (color tape on chest)
@omarabu25622 ай бұрын
God bless the one who allowed these big secrets to be revealed!
@Atilla-m9i2 ай бұрын
I don't think it was a secret. Film degrees are relatively new and the industry didn't have a need or want to explain their work formally.
@dejib.393014 күн бұрын
Beautiful.
@RodCornholioАй бұрын
Hallmark’s Christmas shows are probably the most efficiently made. Seems like they have a very well oiled machine.