If you haven't already figured this out, it sucked to be Rob. During the
next few months, I would call Rob in NYC constantly to have conversations like the
following:
Rob - You will probably want to get some. Me - Yes, what kind should I get? Rob - Well, what kind of lighting do you want? Me - You know,... lighting that looks good. |
An equipment list, I realize now, is not a given but rather the result of a very extensive series of questions. But, before you can |
another thing that
experience would school me about, but that is definitely another story. The point is, I had no time to end
up with the wrong camera.
What Rob did for me was explain that when looking for a camera, certain models might have better image stability, mobility, reliablity, etc. then other models, but this will likely have to be balanced against cost. Even on the bigger budgets, unless you are James Cameron, no one is going to build a special camera just to realize your personal vision. To decide what will be sacrificed, you must ask questions about your production, and more importantly, know which questions will get you answers that are relevant. Let's take lighting, for example. If you are mostly shooting outdoors during mid-day, you will likely be able to get away without any lights. If you are shooting indoors or at night, even once, you will |
questions for every aspect of
of the film and then present it to a reasonably knowledgable person who
can turn this into an equipment list. But if you are like me, you'll find
yourself wandering around the set going,
"More light there and there. What about that light, can
we use that?"
And if you were smart enough to get someone like Rob, you might get a response like, "That's an incandescent, it won't work." or "That's a light meter, not a light." and though it may be embarassing, at least your film will look good. |