Camcorder
Techniques: How To Make Home Movies Your Family
And Friends Will Be Excited To Watch
by: Mark Sturge
Pre-Production:
It's all got to start somewhere, so before
you even charge your batteries, rewind those
tapes or pack the car, take a seat and have
a good think about what you are planning
to shoot with your camcorder. 'Planning
is the key' to a good production even if
you're just shooting a small home movie.
It may sound like overkill if you head
out the door to film your children at a
sporting event or a family birthday party,
but if you are planning to display the video
to family and friends or even review it
yourself for extended lengths of time, you
will want AND need it to be as compelling
as possible.
Now if you're filming a longer feature
or being paid for a project, pre-production
planning is essential. Both in streamlining
the production phase of the project and
displaying a professional image for your
business. This is done by using basic filming
techniques.
This may consist of sketching up a storyboard
(to download a sample go to
www.kmsvideo.com/Resources.htm), detailed
notes or an interview/information session
with the client.
"But I just want to shoot a home movie,
not a production of Ben Hur!" I hear
you say. OK then, let's bring it back to
basics shall we?
First of all any video you take needs to
have a beginning, a middle and an end. Simple
as that!
Now, say you were to tell people at work
on Monday morning an interesting event that
happened on the weekend. How would you go
about it? A bit of background information,
then the main 'body' of the event and close
it off with a punchline or resolution. You're
telling a STORY.
Now go out with your video camera and-
"Tell a Story on Film". Still
unclear?
Here's a practical example... Timmy's first
soccer final is on Saturday. It's a big
occasion so you are going to capture it
on video. Using our basic formula lets make
it into a compelling story-
Beginning:
Open with a shot of the alarm clock, Timmy
packing his bag, having breakfast then climbing
into the car. All less than 5 seconds duration
and if your camera has the function, set
it to fade in and out to black.
Middle:
The team runs onto the field. Shots of
Timmy chasing, dribbling and passing the
ball at warm-up. Get the opening whistle
and kick off, then move around the field
for various angles and shots of Timmy. Film
the coaches address to his players at half
time followed by more game footage.
End:
Ref blows the full-time whistle and you
video the teams shaking hands and walking
off the field. Finally, close the video
with a shot of our star and maybe a few
words.
That's it! A very simplified version so
here's a few tips to remember-
-Don't just keep the camera rolling in
the hope that something interesting will
happen
-move around so you're not always filming
from the one spot
-use close-ups and wide shots alternatively
-don't talk over the footage, let the pictures
tell the story
Now with a bit of pre-planning and good
camcorder and filming techniques, you'll
Have friends and family lining up to watch
your home movies!
About The Author
Mark Sturge is the owner of KMS Productions
and webmaster at
http://www.video-production-mastery.com,
a site where visitors can find digital
camcorder reviews such as the panasonic
pv-gs400 3 ccd camcorder as well as
useful hints and tips to better their
filming techniques. |
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