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Motion Control Cameras Ltd
Operator: Ben Goldschmied
Sony Bravia ‘Extreme detail’ commercial
Director: Baillie Walsh
DoP: Damian Morrisot
Production Company: HOME.corp

Motion Control Cameras were approached to film this commercial with
a short brief that it was a simple move – a track and zoom out
from Daniel Craig followed by a track and zoom in … oh and
a couple of effects to be triggered as well.
As preproduction progressed small details were added…. Actually
we need 32 effects triggers… Some of the explosions will
be too big to do for real, (unless we blow the walls of the studio
out as well) so we want to shoot on a 1/3 scale of the set for
those… Speed ramping would be good to slow his reaction to
being shot and being hit by flying debris… Seeing as
we can’t do the explosions for real can we trigger the lighting
desk to provide the correct lighting on DC…. OH YES and just
for good measure we want to use an anamorphic zoom lens.

First of all, a few days prior to the shoot, we tested scaling a
move with 2 zoom lenses, one a spherical 18-100mm Angenieux and an
anamorphic cooke 36-200mm zoom. I wasn’t holding my breath
as the nodal point on the Angeneux shifted by 7cm through the travel
of the zoom and the Cooke by a whopping 12cm. However, putting
the NP to be midrange and using FLAIR’s powerful ‘1
point’ scaling allied to careful measurement and positioning
I achieved surprisingly good results. Enough for Bill McNamara
from MPC to give the go ahead to use the Cooke Anamorphic lens. Oh
joy!

The number of effects triggers was achieved in conjunction with Mark
Mason at Asylum SFX. They had an MRMC turntable onto which they
mounted an MDF disc with 16 grooves rather like a record. I
would rotate the disc 180 degrees during the shot and triggers would
be positioned to suit. The beauty of this was that it didn’t
matter where the speed ramps were or how fast we were shooting the
plates as the turntable would always be locked to the camera move.
The lighting desk operator, Andy Walton, was very helpful.. usually
we provide timecode for these things when we are shooting at a fixed
speed, but not so useful when speed ramping! Andy had a trigger
switch in his desk which could fire a different event every time it
received a closed contact.. Perfect, I could set a relay on the 2nd
MRMC Output channel and fire each trigger at the correct framecount
of the move. Then it didn’t matter where the director
wanted to speed ramp the shot, everything would always be synchronised.
MPC had provided a very detailed animatic which I asked to be supplied
with a burnt in frame count. Using the new RT10’s frame
overlay feature, I was able to program the move and show the director
how closely we were matching the animatic as they both had framecounts. This
was extremely helpful for the video operator as he could use this
to match different takes (even part runs) effortlessly. We were
also able to see immediately, using video playback, if an effect was
happening at the correct point in the move.

As the move started and ended with a close up of Daniel Craig’s
eyes on a 180mm zoom, it was also necessary to mimic the focus to
give the focus puller half a chance to keep him sharp! I must
pay tribute to DC at this point, despite the explosions and general
mayhem going on around him during these 70 second takes, he was able
to nail his final position every time!!
After 2 days of shooting Bond and the necessary plates, we had to
move to the 1/3rd scale set. Having carefully marked out accurate
physical relationships between the two sets with gaffer tape, I set
the height through measurement and then very carefully positioned
the camera in X and Y at the first position and ran the scaled down
move. They overlayed beautifully first time!
We used the same triggering turntable as we had on the life size
set so that the larger effects we were now shooting would tie in to
the smaller versions that we had fired when DC was there. We
needed to shoot faster in order to give the explosions the correct
amount of weight, and the VFX supervisor wanted to keep the ramps
as they were but to make them faster!! I found FLAIR’s
ability to shoot varispeed moves at a percentage of the original invaluable
in this. My original move was in the range of 25 – 50fps,
and setting the percentage to be 200, I could do the same move in
the 50 – 100fps range. Great… but the shutter
could not manage the compensation at this faster speed. I had
to motorise the iris as well and use FLAIR’s clever shutter
+ iris compensation to achieve it.
Despite the best attempts of the SFX department to burn it, hurl
fragmented breeze blocks at it, cake it with dust, glass and other
debris… the MILO came through with flying colours.

This was a fantastic job to be involved with and I have never made
a single shot film that has used so many of FLAIR’s capabilities. I
wasn’t really able to enjoy it until the last afternoon as there
was so much to concentrate on and keep on top of.
Target Tracking, Mimic, Turntable, relay output, Sync light, Varispeed
on Arri 435 Extreme, Shutter compensation and then Shutter and Iris
compensation, Framecount overlay, Scaling with an anamorphic zoom
lens.
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