Please tell me sir kindly,whose shot is refer to only person any object like eye shot.i mean any person talk to camera i see this person eyes only showing in a T.V SCREEN i mean the man tell a interview but camera angles focus only his or her eyes.Please sir tell me or mention me that kind of shot.i saw many T.v program, documentaries so i am interested and please tell what kind of shot or camera angle is a only person to capture his or her eyes moment. Thank u sir
Not a filmmaker but this is literally one of the best educational videos I’ve ever seen. I want to take podcast interviews to another level. This is a game changer. Thank you
I have watched hundreds if not thousands of filmmaking tutorial videos.This is without doubt the best tutorial I’ve ever seen on TH-cam. I’m jumping back into my TH-cam studio setup, armed with the knowledge you’ve gifted me. Thank you. (Obvs subbed)
This is a fabulous tutorial. And the bonus is the full written text with stills. I will be recommending this for my students.. Your on-camera presence is excellent too. Bravo.
That was one of the best videos on various shots for interviews I’ve seen. Great tips, simply explained with down to earth, inviting personality. Thank you!
The behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-scenes shot's purpose is none but for the cinematographer to feel good about their purchases.
Really big help. From time to time we are checking this video to absorb the ideas you are giving. This is useful for us who just make videos for work twice or so a year for our company. Thank you so much for this.
A good one to watch to get great results! The problem is with up angles sometimes generally makes the talent look not so flattering and client often rips it from edit know matter what story your trying to tell. Love to hear any simple ways to light such a shot - lens perhaps…
I really like the underside angle but a couple of women I've interviewed didn't like it and preferred the camera angle being pointed down so it's not looking up their nose or if they're conscientious about their chin.
Thank you so much as this was super helpful. I have a shoot in a few days and had a total loss in confidence. After watching your video I felt a lot better and even if I made a few mistakes, I'm confident that I'll have enough footage to work with.
Really great Video! The only thing i see kinda different is the way you talk to the camera in golden ratio way. I‘d center my subject because my head tells me that everything else looks weird.
This was incredibly helpful for defining the shots in easy-to-understand terms, had great examples, and made my interview with a new friend tomorrow so much easier to plan! Thank you @DIYPhotography!
00:07 Improve your interview skills through creative framing 01:34 The long-sided shot is a common angle in cinematography 02:50 Talking to a person behind the camera makes the speaker more comfortable. 04:02 Taking advantage of the 180 degree rule in camera positioning. 05:19 Shooting wide spaces can have its own unique touch 06:30 Shoot slightly lower than eye level for interviews 07:45 Capturing emotions through close-up shots 08:59 Different camera angles to enhance your shots Summarize of video
nice one with good tips! one thing to add could be the famous over the shoulder angle? This lets you see that two people are really taking to each other?
So many great tips! I think they would work even in other scenarios. For example, I'll use some of these for boyfriend's introduction video for his YT channel. If he lets me experiment. :D
The same side two cameras tip is really useful. But how wrong is it to use a b cam on the other side of the imaginary line? I did this for a documentary and indeed, it is a bit distracting, but I can't flip the image cause we have some written content in the background. I can't fix it this time, but I wonder, if it's THAT bad of a mistake. What do you think?
Glad to know that 180 degree rule, and i have done it too! But i still remember my friend didn't agree with me and asked me to put the second camera in the other side. Glad i insisted against him 😁
The whole 180° thing supposedly confusing people when it's violated, I don't think that's always true. My friend and I argue about this a lot. I think it might matter more if you see the person they're talking to otherwise why would it confuse the person? it would just give them another creative angle. Nonetheless I tend to abide by it...
Is non static shots generally a no-no for interviews? ( Besides the fluid flow closeups from the hands). I was going to try and add more slow flows from a wide room to a long side shot. But slowly so viewer doesn't motion sick.
check out the full written text here: bit.ly/32WSL3A
Please tell me sir kindly,whose shot is refer to only person any object like eye shot.i mean any person talk to camera i see this person eyes only showing in a T.V SCREEN i mean the man tell a interview but camera angles focus only his or her eyes.Please sir tell me or mention me that kind of shot.i saw many T.v program, documentaries so i am interested and please tell what kind of shot or camera angle is a only person to capture his or her eyes moment. Thank u sir
Not a filmmaker but this is literally one of the best educational videos I’ve ever seen. I want to take podcast interviews to another level.
This is a game changer. Thank you
I have watched hundreds if not thousands of filmmaking tutorial videos.This is without doubt the best tutorial I’ve ever seen on TH-cam. I’m jumping back into my TH-cam studio setup, armed with the knowledge you’ve gifted me. Thank you. (Obvs subbed)
bro you need to get out more...this video is awful
This is a fabulous tutorial. And the bonus is the full written text with stills. I will be recommending this for my students.. Your on-camera presence is excellent too. Bravo.
Hi @Christopher, it's stuff like this that keeps us going! Thanks for the warm-hearted words
That was one of the best videos on various shots for interviews I’ve seen. Great tips, simply explained with down to earth, inviting personality. Thank you!
Thanks!
Thank you
The behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-behind-the-scenes shot's purpose is none but for the cinematographer to feel good about their purchases.
Fantastic video. I'm shooting a client interview later today and this gives me new ideas to consider. Great content!
Really big help. From time to time we are checking this video to absorb the ideas you are giving. This is useful for us who just make videos for work twice or so a year for our company. Thank you so much for this.
*Brilliant* . Value-packed. Exactly 2 years and 200K views. Will be 2M views because every film-maker needs to watch this twice or more ...
Great tip and when to use the shots. Thank you! I'm prepping for an interview filming tomorrow, this helps with my storyboard.
Mind blown, there is so much here I need to start working with. Next level stuff.
Very helpful thanks. I way too often jump at using the same two camera set ups and that's it.
A good one to watch to get great results! The problem is with up angles sometimes generally makes the talent look not so flattering and client often rips it from edit know matter what story your trying to tell. Love to hear any simple ways to light such a shot - lens perhaps…
thank you for the tutorial... really useful... I am gonna implement these on my next interview and mention to them you taught me...
I was about to record a video of myself for a company interview and your video helped a lot. Thanks for sharing.
I really like the underside angle but a couple of women I've interviewed didn't like it and preferred the camera angle being pointed down so it's not looking up their nose or if they're conscientious about their chin.
I learned a lot from this!! Thank you guys for the quality content.
These tips are wonderful! They would be very useful in my next project
This is good timing as I'm just prepping to shoot some interviews soon and it's been a while!
Happy to help man
Thank you for all that effort :). Maybe the best videos about interview-angles :).
i agree
This was really informative! Thank you for putting it together.
Yes, stepping up your skills but keeping it creative. Along with a ton of next level skills to bring to your next interview! Keep it up DIY
Thank you so much as this was super helpful. I have a shoot in a few days and had a total loss in confidence. After watching your video I felt a lot better and even if I made a few mistakes, I'm confident that I'll have enough footage to work with.
This was so informative and brief. Thanks for this!
I think I've been going about second angles wrong for my independent work- Thanks for this!
Really great Video! The only thing i see kinda different is the way you talk to the camera in golden ratio way. I‘d center my subject because my head tells me that everything else looks weird.
Very helpful tutorial!
And the model is absolutely gorgeous by the way ))
I wish all the shot type examples followed the 180° rule line you set up for yourself, but otherwise very helpful video and love the examples
This was incredibly helpful for defining the shots in easy-to-understand terms, had great examples, and made my interview with a new friend tomorrow so much easier to plan! Thank you @DIYPhotography!
This video is gold. How did I only find it now. Thanks.
00:07 Improve your interview skills through creative framing
01:34 The long-sided shot is a common angle in cinematography
02:50 Talking to a person behind the camera makes the speaker more comfortable.
04:02 Taking advantage of the 180 degree rule in camera positioning.
05:19 Shooting wide spaces can have its own unique touch
06:30 Shoot slightly lower than eye level for interviews
07:45 Capturing emotions through close-up shots
08:59 Different camera angles to enhance your shots
Summarize of video
AMAZING!! Master Class!
👏👏👏👏👏👏
I like that slighting below eyeline trick. Definitely don't see it often.
nice one with good tips! one thing to add could be the famous over the shoulder angle? This lets you see that two people are really taking to each other?
I'll definitely apply some of these on my upcoming shoots. Cheers guys!
Wow, didn't expect that much meaty stuff. Thanks!
helpful AF for what I'm doing. thank you!
Fantastic tutorial - much appreciated thank you :)
Fantastic video! Really easy listening and very informative! Thanks for your kind soul and insight!
This is an excellent tutorial. I've learned a few good things here. Thanks for this.
Thanks guys, learned a ton for my next interview shoot!
My pleasure
Thank you for this i have learnt a lot for just the explanation of the effect each angle has on story telling
This video is mind blowing... totally awesome! Thanks
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Wow, that was packed with very useful info, thanks!
This is great content. Well done!
thanks this was super useful, great video. now to drag my tripod and a seat up those mountains and on those ultra runs with me...! ;)
Thanks so much Adam - that was so informative and clearly presented, Really appreciate it
Best lessons indeed, thanks
What about mixing tripod and handheld on interviews?
Impressed 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾thanks a lot. So much inspiration here!
Brilliant stuff, brother! Thanks for sharing! About to film my first online course so these are all solid tips!
def gonna try these
Thank you. Very useful.
Excellent tutorial dude. Looking forward to watching more videos.
that high angle shot will come in handy some day
Thank a lot, useful and really good info
Sweet video my friend! :)
Looking forward to more of these
amazing and very helpful video! thank you a lot
After understanding the techincs by viewing this video... It gives confident to make a interview.
Excellent video. Thank you for sharing this education with us.
This was dope man... Thank You!
Thank you for sharing this, Awesome piece!
Thanks for this.
Great info, I hadn't considered many of these techniques!
So many great tips! I think they would work even in other scenarios. For example, I'll use some of these for boyfriend's introduction video for his YT channel. If he lets me experiment. :D
Good luck. Do share the results
I just discovered your channel. You just made my day, your content is amazing!
The same side two cameras tip is really useful. But how wrong is it to use a b cam on the other side of the imaginary line? I did this for a documentary and indeed, it is a bit distracting, but I can't flip the image cause we have some written content in the background. I can't fix it this time, but I wonder, if it's THAT bad of a mistake. What do you think?
Glad to know that 180 degree rule, and i have done it too!
But i still remember my friend didn't agree with me and asked me to put the second camera in the other side. Glad i insisted against him 😁
most informative, thank you for the knowledge
Thank you, you are great!!
Thank you so much for this amazing video. :) :) :)
My favorite is from behind!
The whole 180° thing supposedly confusing people when it's violated, I don't think that's always true. My friend and I argue about this a lot. I think it might matter more if you see the person they're talking to otherwise why would it confuse the person? it would just give them another creative angle. Nonetheless I tend to abide by it...
Thanks for the tips,...
Thank you!
Great tips, thank you.
Brilliant! Thank you so much!
Glad you liked it
Thank you for this very helpful video!
Great information here - thank you.
Can you recreate some of these similar effects or interesting camera angles when the person you are interviewing is on a webcam?
Is non static shots generally a no-no for interviews? ( Besides the fluid flow closeups from the hands). I was going to try and add more slow flows from a wide room to a long side shot. But slowly so viewer doesn't motion sick.
Impressive video! I'll use it as a reference for my future work.👍
Great video!
This is going to improve my interviews!! Thanks man
Totally our pleasure. Now go shoot something
Great tutorial
this is gold thanks
Thanks for the great tips
Nice one! Subscribed!
I appreciate the tutorial and get that this is on angles and not lighting, but at 1:55 that is wildly unflattering light.
Which lense is better for interview for using sony a7iii
Great tutorial!
Amazing......well done Adam.
Great knowledge brother.i like your video.and work.
Great lesson. Tks !
i got one question. why "cut head" when filming interview? any special reason?
Hey Adam One question: can I use an iPhone 13 ProMax as my second camera? (the main camera is a Sony) Thanks for your advice :)
Even a nokia 3310 will work if it has a camera. Matching shots is different story
pretty cool video with a lot of knowledge! Thank you :)
Great information