It reminded me of the shots that they got in the yes theory documentary about the pyramid in the middle of a jungle. They flew a fpv drone through the canopy, following monkeys as they swing from branch to branch. I've never seen a more impressive Shot in a documentary ever since Edit: typo
Pros find a way to make everything a tax writeoff! Matpat gets to write off films, food and games that he uses for videos/live streams, as well as his house! (Since he works from home)
@@jakobleijnegard4621 My thoughts exactly man. When it went through the tree I thought of the scene in Mirkwood with Legolas and the dwarfs and how sick it could of looked there.
i gotta say this is probably the best advertisement Insta360 could possibly have asked for. A genuinely cool product being used for a genuinely cool usecase while also demonstrating the remarkable durability of the camera. Mad kudos, I would say I'm now about 3x more likely to buy one of these in the future. THIS is how you make a gosh-dang ad!
That last shot was unreal. The soaring past the branches the dramatic crash in the dirt. Chefs kiss. For you guys I’d use the arrow shot as a kill shot from the weapons POV. I think it would have to be done and incorporated in such a way as to make the entire sequence better as opposed just being a sick shot in stuck in there. You guys are gonna kill it either way.
Shoot the crossbow bolt camera through a fake body's torso. Movies are looking to add more weird ways to ramp up the action. How much more intense would it be to watch the hero have to take out the final boss or monster and to follow the bolt/arrow through the enemy? Looking at the way the camera cuts out part of the arrow it might be worth comping in a CGI arrow so the viewer has a point of reference and can easily tell what they are looking at.
I assume the camera does the stabalising itself. I know the gopro max does it using it's gyroscope and accelerometer data. And the post production is just. Aim the shot. Looks cool but is not so much work.
If you travel you will adore shooting in 360 and enjoying the videos on a VR headset. I had an original 360 One X for 4 years nd upgrated to the X3 for its ease of use with the screen.
I always had this crazy idea of a medieval battlefield with an archer shooting an arrow through a crowd of fighters narrowly missing all of them except the target opponent. All from the arrows POV
Wren, if you ever come back to this idea, consider integrating the camera at the back of the arrow to ensure the launching force is applied to the heaviest part of the projectile. Might be interesting to 3D print stabilizing vanes around it, if possible.
Or...learn how to fletch an unthreaded steel rod. I would have considered pouring resin down the shaft, but I don't think it would have had the rigidity to prevent flexing. But hollow quarrels were never going to survive. There's a reason for streamlining the head...
As a archer, this was terrifying to look when Wren was testing with different bolts. Also, after this that crossbow's lifespan was shorten quite a lot because it basically did dry fire each time when bolt jumped out of the guide groove.
Was gonna say, that kinda draw weight at 175 dry firing is a bit lethal to the crossbow. I too was worried about safety, especially when they were shooting in a public open field 😅. Kinda wished they just referred to an expert to be properly safe. Shots were cool, though.
He destroyed a camera case, tore a sheet, hurt a cactus, damaged a chair, ruined 3 pieces of threaded rod, put holes in grass in a public park, burned 1/2 gallon of gas, shortened the life of 4 car tires, and consumed oxygen, in addition to shortening the life of the crossbow.
@@Isa-154 Yes, I know, but what is the literal camera seeing? Not the battle scene, unless you're filming at a Ren Faire. The battle scene will be CGI and an arrow-cam won't see any of it. The camera won't be scanning/recording LIDAR, or have GPS installed (unless you sacrifice an iPhone for the shot) so you can't even use data about the shot to manipulate the CGI. You could use the quarrel-through-the-trees shot, but that won't give you the battle.
It would be cool to film a medieval battle like this. Have an archer shoot it and then you get a view of the battlefield. You could even add (in post) that the camera goes inside someone when the arrow hits the target.
It’s best practice to put a nut onto threaded material before cutting it. That way, backing the nut off afterwards will fix the threading at the end when it inevitably gets messed up from cutting it. Not the biggest deal with all-thread, but important for bolts because if you mess the thread up from cutting it then you can’t get a nut on at all.
@@andrewliberacki2674 but thats when you tilt the rod 45 degrees and spin it in circles on your fingertips while letting it kiss the belt that he used to screw on the nut
Unless their dirt is full of Homeless people Piss and Shit, the dirt is probably safer... Given "LA" I'm not sure I'd want to bet on it either way, that courtyard would make a good Homeless encampment.
You should encase the camera into a torpedo-like casing and have it blasting through the water. As the speed increases, the water vortex forming behind and around it would look sick.
Genuinely so impressed with that camera surviving those shots and Wren's ingenuity for making it work out, especially after the results of the testing.
Tod from Tod's workshop really needs one of these cameras, totally stable camera shot even while it's flipping through the air! Getting a solid bit of metal for the shaft was the way to go, super stronk.
Okay I have an idea. The utility of this build is really, really interesting. I'd love to see it fired through some things that make best use of it--like through fire, or fireworks, or rain. Maybe exploding dry paint as well could be super cool!
What if you tied a rope to it and the other side to a pole. Then fired the crossbow around the pole while something cool happened in the middle. Multiple perspectives of something happening in the middle
First Corridor video I ever saw was Wren shooting 360 cam with a bow. About 7-8 years ago. I loved it so much, that you have became my most watched YT channel. Nice to come back full circle to where it all started for me, but with a fresh twist. I think I want a crossbow now. Lol.
I assume Corridor has perhaps hundreds of hours working with live weapons and is so good with weapon safety, but I gotta show Wren appreciation for his trigger discipline with the crossbow around 2:40
@@SpaaacceCore It isn't like they had an explosive attached to it. It's a crossbow bolt with a metal rod inside of it and a camera on the end. It isn't like it's going to fly 3 miles in a direction. You can definitely go 100 yards down field and give an ok. Plus if you looked, it didn't appear that there was another person in that park aside from them.
Oh man! Really glad no one got hurt on this one. I've actually been hit by a bent aluminum arrow, luckily I wasn't hurt. Personally I would have gone down in draw weight to keep the arrows intact. ALSO, watch a few videos on arrow accidents, they'll terrify you.
I love Corridor but this was reckless. Should've done this including the testing at a gun range or some other place where there's practically zero chance of hitting anything. Crossbows are fucking dangerous, in the same league with firearms. If the camera tip snaps off from the rest of the bolt (as happened during their testing) the rest of the bolt can fly very far and/or in unexpected directions. Not sure about law in the US or California but in my country if you pull something like this off somewhere other than the middle of nowhere you'd likely get arrested.
@@astroturd yeah, this wasn't the best thought out video. 175 is way too much, I get the idea is cool, but as you say, it was reckless and frankly dangerous.
I was waiting for something to happen where they shot above the fence/border in the backyard. Just as yourself, as an archer or others with shooting experience, I was worried that something would happen throughout the video.
This video is both the best advertisement insta360 could hope for, and yet, it never feels like watching an ad. The camera itself was tested in the experiment, so i didn't even realize i was watching the sponsor segment when wren started to describe it. That's how well incorporated it is.
For movies: a sick shot of an arrow frying through a narrow hole. Th part of the arrow that is not captured by the camera can be edited in later. The last shot was so amazing (with the sound effects, of course, it's just much better) it looked like something out of a movie. You should use this in a robot hood movie or something
Through the tree shot was the best, it has that "going through the tunnel" type of thing. Hard to explain it, basically all the nice bright colors you get from the sun and the camera just passes them through, it looks like a dense forest, yet bright with green.
As someone who has that exact same crossbow, watching Wren pull it back effortlessly with the pully system blew my mind Wren is a very strong boi, new respect for him
@@SirWrender You seriously impressed me with not just the strength but the aim this shoot. As for what do to with this, how much foam can you put at the leading end? And how well padded can you make a stuntman's clothing? Is there any way to effectively create a kill cam, without, you know, killing anyone for real?
@@thetalantonx With the weight of the camera, it would not be possible to aim that accurately, I think. Shooting through the tree was easy: start of flight, telescopic sight, minimum deviation. Also, don't shoot things at people, mmkay?
Would love to see this used in a rain of arrows scene. Something like The Battle at Helms Deep when there is the massive rain of arrows. I know that was with bows but still it would look epic seeing all the arrows being fired from the middle the pack
Started looking up medieval crossbows because of this, wooden crossbows could have had a draw weight of around 400 lbs max and the steel crossbows from the times was up to 1500. I can't say anything for reliability or how practical they were just very interesting that based on pure numbers alone they really outmatched the modern equivalents that are easily available.
Modern crossbows are much more efficient at delivering the load to the projectile. Lighter strings and bow arms reduce the inertia to overcome,. allowing more force to be delivered to the bolt.
Iirc, they had to have way higher draw forces because they were way less efficient at converting that energy into velocity. So they had heavier draws, but didn't really have that much more power.
@@jogadorjnc true, even with modern crossbow technology, they can only reach about half of the power of a longbow with the same poundage. so in this case, wren's 175 pounds crossbow would equal to about a 90 pound longbow in terms of range and power, mostly because of its shorter power stroke.
im in love with both the tree shot and the second shot. you could easily see that as a nice shot of an arrow into an army would be beautiful. great job
These are the videos that introduced me to corridor. I still remember my first video was putting an arrow on a bow. Only thing is why didn't Wren cut the steel thread before putting on the nut. It wouldn't have required the nut tightener lol.
Here are some ideas: Megaman, and it can be a practical shot from his blaster instead of CG. Football, and it can be used to show the different runs and plays of a team. Two crossbows firing at each other and having the arrows collide mid-air would be insane.
You tend to see a lot of shots in movies following an arrow or bullet when the shot is extremely difficult or critical to make. You could do something similar practically (e.g., following the arrow the light a beacon, takeout a guard, break a rope, etc.). It would also be interesting to see the practical shot compared to a CGI version (wins, losses, learnings).
What might be cool is seeing a "bullet time" sort of shot from the bullets perspective. Like first person from the bullet in the barrel being fired, traveling through obstacles and impacting whatever. Great concept here with the bow. It'll be exciting to see what you all come up with
I like the bullet time idea. How about shooting the crossbow bolt camera through a fake body's torso. Movies are looking to add more weird ways to ramp up the action. How much more intense would it be to watch the hero have to take out the final boss or monster and to follow the bolt/arrow through the enemy? Looking at the way the camera cuts out part of the arrow it might be worth comping in a CGI arrow so the viewer has a point of reference and can easily tell what they are looking at.
@@maxximumb My thinking was bullet time is always shown externally, third person, following the bullet through space; what would bullet time look like from the bullets perspective? I like the idea of being able to see it go through objects or obstacles from the "inside" instead of a change of camera position. It would be cool to see an arrow blow through armor and stick in a target behind it
I think a easy but effective shot would be to mesh this with a hero landing, or a character reveal shot. Something about the initial arc shot looked so tuned for something like this. Also, dude, LA hose water? The fruit might have been safer without it ahaha!
Instantly clicked when I saw another arrow-camera video. I love Wren and his engineering ways Edit: I also come from a hunting background and am well versed with crossbows and I was nervous. A lot could go wrong here lmao
A cool idea that came up for an interesting use of this is the bolt POV as it flies all over a battlefield till it finally hits the target. Being a 360° camera you can get both the shooter, the battlefield from above, and the target getting struck all in a single continuous shot.
So, it went in the air for 6 seconds : initial velocity is approx. 30 meters per second....max range = 90 meters approx (assuming g = 10) 19:43 to 19:49 used v = u + at range = u^2 sin (2 theta)/g...and for max range, sin 2 theta = 1 ie. theta = 45 deg or pi/4
Recreating the Odysseus shot through the 12 axe heads would be pretty sick, or maybe something sports related (ball in a goal, through a basketball hoop, or a quidditch ring, etc.)
that shot through the tree was by far my favorite. It looked like a movie when the camera follows a bullet or in this case an arrow. Sort of reminded me of Avatar. I don't know why.
My personal assumption was just that you'd need a crossbow with less power if it keeps snapping the bolts but I'm happy to see that there is an option for just brute forcing the high power one.
Wren build videos are my favorite on the channel. Here's a bad idea for a cool shot, stand a little ways from some train tracks and fire it parallel to the tracks as the train passes. There should be a couple cool moments as it accelerates and travels farther up the train, and then slows down and the train passes it again
God, I literally just stopped the video to appreciate how great this channel is. You guys are, hands down, one of the highest quality and entertaining channel on the internet, I'm blown away every time.
Just the danger of shooting this past someone and having a 3 times slow mo fly by gives me chills. Can you imagine doing that with like a fight scene with the camera flying between two characters standing 15 feet apart?😮😮
Amazing shots. Oh my god. I love when Corridor explores undiscovered areas of cinematography. My idea for a shot using this method would be to have a character point in a direction and the camera travels to exactly where they're pointing basically from their finger to point B. But it would require some VFX.
I love these random videos outside of the norm of what you guys usually do. You have great people on the crew and to me it doesn’t matter what kind of content you put out, I’m gunna watch it. And as a casual viewer who doesn’t do cinematography (which I imagine a lot of your viewers are) I really enjoy these kind of videos. Hoping for more!
I think for a way to make this into a production shot, would be to have a medieval crossbowman sieging a castle, and these are all shots of him taking out the defenders on the castle wall while running through a forest dodging archers/arrows/catapults from the castle.
I’m imagining a medieval/fantasy (maybe lotr themed?) battle scene where the arrow 360 cam goes across the battlefield and we can focus on the intense action around it! If it’s safe enough tho. Hope you guys try this!
This is one of your best videos yet. I had an ear to ear grin during the entire video 🤣. Best one was through the tree. Now I need to buy an Insta360 🤦🏻♂️
I'd have a "Battle of the bastards" kind of scene (medieval, an archer hunting his prey). You shoot the super crossbow rig, then you remake the shot, but with an archer and with a drone (no arrow, it's just to get the pose / action), and you comp in the archer at the beginning of the shot. Maybe redoing the shot through the tree that looked spectacular.
Yeah, the obvious cool shots are things like that. Or just an archer volley for a mass battle. Getting to see the arrow leave the archers, sail through the air with other arrows, and then aim forward for coming down into the enemy force.
I believe whenever wren sees something that is obviously not meant for eating his brain immediately goes in autopilot mode forcing him to eat that thing
Offer the director of the House of the Dragon series to shoot such a crazy shot in one of the battles of the second season. It's going to be damn impressive.
I got an insta 360 camera for my birthday, which I learned about from you, and it really is a game changer!!! I attached it to some of my Lego trains and it looks pretty cool.
It really doesn’t matter what strength your bolts are, it matters what spine rating it has. An aluminum bolt with a 600 spine is always gonna flex more than a carbon one with a 200 spine
@@SirWrender think its a .300 of an inch deflection with a 2 lb weight , so actually a smaller number is a stiffer bolt , however hanging a camera of the tip will change the spine
@@SirWrender it’s the amount of flex your arrow or bolt will have in the air. Usually the high the poundage of the bow, the lower spine you need. There should be a chart available from each of the manufactures you used (for sure Easton should have one) that show the length and poundage recommend for each spine. The heavier your arrowhead, the weaker it’s going to make the spine of the shaft, meaning it will deflect and bend more. When the guy at the shop told you the weight of the camera would make the bolt “weaker” he really means it’s going lower the spine of your bolt to the point it’s unusable and potentially dangerous (a bolt that’s too weak for a 175lbs draw has the potential to just explode in the arrow rest once fired) Don’t forget to convert the weight of your camera to grains (not grams), then for every 25 grains over 100 you’ll add 3lbs to the draw weight side of whatever chart you’re looking at. Personally I’d try and find some 100 spine bolts and cut them as short as possible while still letting the camera fit. 175lbs is a TON of draw weight, so you might also want to find something a bit less powerful Edit, for reference I use a 600 spine with 120 grain tips out of a 25lbs barebow. If I tried to use the same arrow, with stronger limbs, it’d be the same as your testing Oh, and that through the tree shot was awesome 😮
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the reason the arrow was bending in the first few tests was because of how heavy the camera was in comparison to the rest of the arrow, when the force was being applied to the arrow from the back, the inertia of the camera was resisting movement while the back of the arrow was trying to move, thus causing the entire arrow to bend and warp around.
Yep. It's usually it's a balancing act with the weight of the bow, weight of the point and the spine of the arrow. I'll bet a fiberglass bolt would've had enough flex to make it through. But they tend to fail in spectacular fashion.
14:47 or you could cut the rod part and then screw it :D P.S. Idea for a scene: Arrow killing. It's dangerous to shoot a person, so you can shoot from where the person should be hit, just then do a scene reversal. And replace the shooter with the victim with CGI. It also makes sense that the victim would run away, so the shooter can stand on a moderately moving platform. With the reversal, you could really make some nice camera movement with hitting right where you want it.
id love to see you guys use some of the shots and see what vfx you guys can do with it. It be awesome to see a full bow to target shot into a battle scene or a really cool arrow deflect
it would be awesome if u guys used the shots from this into a video. for example a story about a person who managed to get the super jump abilities of a grasshopper but at the same time that person shrunk.
16:35 I know these dudes are smart asf but this breaches human intelect. these people legitimately deserve more attention no one else would ever be able to come up with this!!
That shot through the tree was so sick, flew right past those branches!
That was amazing. I'm over here smiling like a fool.
So good, that shot is usually done in cgi. It was a amazing shot
It reminded me of the shots that they got in the yes theory documentary about the pyramid in the middle of a jungle. They flew a fpv drone through the canopy, following monkeys as they swing from branch to branch. I've never seen a more impressive Shot in a documentary ever since
Edit: typo
It was immaculate
@@461weavile I wonder if they could attach a baby to an arrow and launch the baby the baby for science
Shoutout to Wren for figuring out how to make his crossbow a tax write off.
It's called HBO Maxing.
Pros find a way to make everything a tax writeoff! Matpat gets to write off films, food and games that he uses for videos/live streams, as well as his house! (Since he works from home)
@@mr_indie_fan damn, didn't even think about that, now all his channels make sense
@@alexjustalexyt1144 Fourth channel: Car Theory or Kid Theory?
@@Just_A_Dude Watch him call it conspiracy theory lmao
That shot through the tree was mind blowing.. imagine this type of shot in a movie in slow motion.. I'd love to see how creatively this could be used.
i thought about like lord of the rings/ any fantasy movie ever would be so fucking cool with these types of arrows
@@jakobleijnegard4621 My thoughts exactly man. When it went through the tree I thought of the scene in Mirkwood with Legolas and the dwarfs and how sick it could of looked there.
Golf movie with realistic trajectories for the balls. Just don’t hit the greens.
Nah they'd CGI it
reminded me of a cod throwing knife kill cam
20:45 Nick’s subtle headshake of disapproval gets me every time 🤣
😂
🤣 ...traumatized by memories of that drone retrieval.
Your product really cool but i don't have enough money to buy it yet
How do you feel about your product being launched forwards at high speeds
@@jimtamim1708 same but insta imo is leagues better than gopro
i gotta say this is probably the best advertisement Insta360 could possibly have asked for. A genuinely cool product being used for a genuinely cool usecase while also demonstrating the remarkable durability of the camera. Mad kudos, I would say I'm now about 3x more likely to buy one of these in the future. THIS is how you make a gosh-dang ad!
That tree shot has to be one of the coolest shots Wren has been able to create in these videos.
I agree
Thought so too
I could literally imagine a shot like this being used in like Lord of the Rings or something. Extremely impressive
I love how Wren is so proud of himself for using a belt sander to thread that nut, followed immediately by him cutting off 90% of the rod anyway.
Lmao so funny
NUT not screw 😄 it jived m,e every time he said screw
@@FleaMarketsWorldwide The correct terminology is a nut being threaded onto a bolt.
😭that what im saying
Why was a belt sander what he went for instead of like, just a cordless drill?
That last shot was unreal. The soaring past the branches the dramatic crash in the dirt. Chefs kiss. For you guys I’d use the arrow shot as a kill shot from the weapons POV. I think it would have to be done and incorporated in such a way as to make the entire sequence better as opposed just being a sick shot in stuck in there. You guys are gonna kill it either way.
Yes! And you'd see the exit wound as it comes out the other side
I was going to say that to, but as you pointed out: as sick as it would be, the practicality comes to mind.
I really enjoyed the straight up one, holy crap It felt like I was really up that high and falling back down, so fun, like Vr!
Shoot the crossbow bolt camera through a fake body's torso. Movies are looking to add more weird ways to ramp up the action. How much more intense would it be to watch the hero have to take out the final boss or monster and to follow the bolt/arrow through the enemy?
Looking at the way the camera cuts out part of the arrow it might be worth comping in a CGI arrow so the viewer has a point of reference and can easily tell what they are looking at.
Or a flying shot. Felt like superman taking off with the momentum it had.
The view of it falling gives me chills! I'm a paraglider pilot, and watching it fall is like a POV of my worst case scenario
The stabilised and remapped 360 footage done in post production is the coolest and most underappreciated element here! Excellent work
I assume the camera does the stabalising itself. I know the gopro max does it using it's gyroscope and accelerometer data. And the post production is just. Aim the shot. Looks cool but is not so much work.
yes the software does it automatically
@@krisptree I wasn't expecting the gyroscope to be accurate enough with such a high acceleration forces.
This was an excellent ad for Insta360. It was entertaining so I'm game
they did it dirty you can see they have no idea how to edit 360
This is honestly the best ad campaign for the durability/longevity of a camera that I've ever seen
I was surprised to see a dedicated sponsored segment since the entire video is the best ad for one of these cameras.
Honestly now I want that camera. I have no use for it, but I still want one.
If you travel you will adore shooting in 360 and enjoying the videos on a VR headset. I had an original 360 One X for 4 years nd upgrated to the X3 for its ease of use with the screen.
@@Icelandlover eh, not great in a HMD tho due to the low FPS and the horizon stability. It's best for still pictures in the HMD though.
I always had this crazy idea of a medieval battlefield with an archer shooting an arrow through a crowd of fighters narrowly missing all of them except the target opponent. All from the arrows POV
Hmm interesting might steal that idea
Love that you guys aren’t only cgi experts but are also great at prop building and creating physical stuff in the workshop
14:36 is actually genius
@@Cristiano_km not hard
Exceptional joke mate. Wren is so good at creating physical stuff that he almost lost his eyes by breaking a few dozens arrows and camera cases.
The best visual effects artists use a combination of CGI and practical to make amazing effects
@@MrMysteryman00 Literally IQ over 3000 XD
Wren, if you ever come back to this idea, consider integrating the camera at the back of the arrow to ensure the launching force is applied to the heaviest part of the projectile. Might be interesting to 3D print stabilizing vanes around it, if possible.
Actually, attaching the camera in the centre of the arrow would be the better option. If it's at the back it would cause an imbalance and tilt down.
Would be tricky, but it also sounds like something that I'd like to see.
Or use a trebuchet... ;-)
@ at this point i want to see a camera lauched by a siege engine yes. Do it Corridor
Or...learn how to fletch an unthreaded steel rod. I would have considered pouring resin down the shaft, but I don't think it would have had the rigidity to prevent flexing. But hollow quarrels were never going to survive. There's a reason for streamlining the head...
As a archer, this was terrifying to look when Wren was testing with different bolts. Also, after this that crossbow's lifespan was shorten quite a lot because it basically did dry fire each time when bolt jumped out of the guide groove.
I was worried about the limbs of the crossbow exploding in his face. Safety glasses would not have mattered much
Was gonna say, that kinda draw weight at 175 dry firing is a bit lethal to the crossbow.
I too was worried about safety, especially when they were shooting in a public open field 😅. Kinda wished they just referred to an expert to be properly safe.
Shots were cool, though.
He destroyed a camera case, tore a sheet, hurt a cactus, damaged a chair, ruined 3 pieces of threaded rod, put holes in grass in a public park, burned 1/2 gallon of gas, shortened the life of 4 car tires, and consumed oxygen, in addition to shortening the life of the crossbow.
@@MaxBrix and here you are watching the video anyway
This should definitely be used as an arrow perspective shot during a large battle scene!
Umm, perspective of what? That would have to be simulated anyway.
@@Isa-154 Yes, I know, but what is the literal camera seeing? Not the battle scene, unless you're filming at a Ren Faire. The battle scene will be CGI and an arrow-cam won't see any of it. The camera won't be scanning/recording LIDAR, or have GPS installed (unless you sacrifice an iPhone for the shot) so you can't even use data about the shot to manipulate the CGI. You could use the quarrel-through-the-trees shot, but that won't give you the battle.
@@Isa-154 I really wish this response was the norm on YT. Too often it descends into "UR WRONG LUZER!". Thanks for your response, Isa. Stay well.
The last "through the tree" shot is honestly so cool. There's no other way it could be pulled so well 😄
The one thing I hate about corridor is that I sit down and I'm like "okay sick a 20 minute video" and then a minute later it's over 😂
The crossbow sales guy was super chill and helpful, give that dude a raise!
Major FAAAACTS
He let him draw a compound without an arrow, could've dried fired by accident, so nah
@@elliottjonch what's that? I'm sorry of this is a stupid question but can that hurt you?
@@HollyriousYT ohh, that sounds like an expensive and possibly dangerous mistake.
@@elliottjonch OR hear me out, the guy didn't give a stranger a loaded weapon capable of very much more damage than dry firing a crossbow
It would be cool to film a medieval battle like this. Have an archer shoot it and then you get a view of the battlefield. You could even add (in post) that the camera goes inside someone when the arrow hits the target.
Big safety concerns shooting something like this anywhere in the direction that there are people
Would be similar to that shootout scene in Three Kings… but could be done for 1/1000th of the $$$$$$
Even so a medieval battle scene would be awesome.
@@CodeNeonMC most large crowds in modern films are cgi, so it wouldn’t be that much of a concern
Lmao I had the same idea and concern! Didn’t noticed your comment, hope they do it and measure the safety
The ricochet on the dirt at 21:23 was really good.
You should try really close to the ground shot.
Like a star wars fighter chase 🚀
Bro that was such a good idea.
Only Wren could thread a bolt all the way down the rod and THEN shorten it xD
Also the music in this episode was on point!
Order of Operations LOL
I'm 69th like, yay!
exactly this is why I came to the comments
Wren shortening after screwing xD
It’s best practice to put a nut onto threaded material before cutting it. That way, backing the nut off afterwards will fix the threading at the end when it inevitably gets messed up from cutting it. Not the biggest deal with all-thread, but important for bolts because if you mess the thread up from cutting it then you can’t get a nut on at all.
@@andrewliberacki2674 but thats when you tilt the rod 45 degrees and spin it in circles on your fingertips while letting it kiss the belt that he used to screw on the nut
I'm not sure what's worse. Eating a mouthful of dirt, or immediately washing it out with tons of LA hose water 😂
Nah it’s cool LA water is like 20% xanax
That's a hard one 🤣
mouthful of dirt any day
Unless their dirt is full of Homeless people Piss and Shit, the dirt is probably safer...
Given "LA" I'm not sure I'd want to bet on it either way, that courtyard would make a good Homeless encampment.
They debunked LA's bad water a few years ago. It's really not that bad.
You should encase the camera into a torpedo-like casing and have it blasting through the water. As the speed increases, the water vortex forming behind and around it would look sick.
YES
Dude, Nick is the best. I always love seeing him get some screen time. It's few and far between these days, but it's always a treat when he shows up.
I agree, Nick is a gem.
@@philipbloom oh, hi!
Oh my days that final shot was phenomenal!
At 14:52 the video cutting to Wren using the dremel to cut the threaded rod after "screwing" the nut in had me rolling on the floor laughing.
That tree shot (21:15) was awesome! And the sound design was just *chef's kiss*🤌✨
Genuinely so impressed with that camera surviving those shots and Wren's ingenuity for making it work out, especially after the results of the testing.
im more immpressed to the fact that this crossbow is more powerfull than a 22lr
Tod from Tod's workshop really needs one of these cameras, totally stable camera shot even while it's flipping through the air! Getting a solid bit of metal for the shaft was the way to go, super stronk.
I can picture this being used for some sort of war scene. Imagine people getting fired at with arrows, but it’s in the arrows’ perspective.
or a snipe from a distance, killing the army commander
Okay I have an idea. The utility of this build is really, really interesting. I'd love to see it fired through some things that make best use of it--like through fire, or fireworks, or rain. Maybe exploding dry paint as well could be super cool!
Now, that would be epic.
Wow, timing and firing a crossbow shot through an exploding firework would be so cool
That's a sick idea.
Fireworks win the idea competition
What if you tied a rope to it and the other side to a pole. Then fired the crossbow around the pole while something cool happened in the middle. Multiple perspectives of something happening in the middle
So glad to see another classic Wren
engineering, 360 cam, and one wheels!
That’s a pretty amazing endorsement for the durability of the camera. I was fully expecting it to break.
Nick's genuine excitement at not having to climb another tree to save a camera. 😂
First Corridor video I ever saw was Wren shooting 360 cam with a bow. About 7-8 years ago. I loved it so much, that you have became my most watched YT channel. Nice to come back full circle to where it all started for me, but with a fresh twist. I think I want a crossbow now. Lol.
I assume Corridor has perhaps hundreds of hours working with live weapons and is so good with weapon safety, but I gotta show Wren appreciation for his trigger discipline with the crossbow around 2:40
And then they fire a crossbow in the air in what looks like a public park...
@@feffy380 I assume they had another person out in the aimed-at area giving them all-clears before they fire.
@@XylessBrawl Eyeballing an all clear? For a barely tested weapon that's proven to be unpredictable? Yeah...I don't know if that's enough...
Looked to me like he was pointing it at his balls. You could call it a different kind of safety.
@@SpaaacceCore It isn't like they had an explosive attached to it. It's a crossbow bolt with a metal rod inside of it and a camera on the end. It isn't like it's going to fly 3 miles in a direction. You can definitely go 100 yards down field and give an ok. Plus if you looked, it didn't appear that there was another person in that park aside from them.
Oh man! Really glad no one got hurt on this one. I've actually been hit by a bent aluminum arrow, luckily I wasn't hurt. Personally I would have gone down in draw weight to keep the arrows intact. ALSO, watch a few videos on arrow accidents, they'll terrify you.
I love Corridor but this was reckless. Should've done this including the testing at a gun range or some other place where there's practically zero chance of hitting anything. Crossbows are fucking dangerous, in the same league with firearms. If the camera tip snaps off from the rest of the bolt (as happened during their testing) the rest of the bolt can fly very far and/or in unexpected directions. Not sure about law in the US or California but in my country if you pull something like this off somewhere other than the middle of nowhere you'd likely get arrested.
Pretty crazy no one here realised these crossbows are literally made to shoot though you...
@@astroturd yeah, this wasn't the best thought out video. 175 is way too much, I get the idea is cool, but as you say, it was reckless and frankly dangerous.
@@astroturd for real, It seems like so often you see americans treating anything that isn't a firearm as if it's just a harmless children's toy
I was waiting for something to happen where they shot above the fence/border in the backyard. Just as yourself, as an archer or others with shooting experience, I was worried that something would happen throughout the video.
Reversing that last "through the tree"-shot would make for a sick Evil Dead shot. Evil just launching towards you through the trees!
This video is both the best advertisement insta360 could hope for, and yet, it never feels like watching an ad. The camera itself was tested in the experiment, so i didn't even realize i was watching the sponsor segment when wren started to describe it. That's how well incorporated it is.
This shot would be awesome implemented in a large scale battle scene. To have a perspective of a cannon ball or a large rock slinged from a catapult
I guess lord of the ring have some shots like this in a battle for Minas Tirith
For movies: a sick shot of an arrow frying through a narrow hole. Th part of the arrow that is not captured by the camera can be edited in later. The last shot was so amazing (with the sound effects, of course, it's just much better) it looked like something out of a movie. You should use this in a robot hood movie or something
Through the tree shot was the best, it has that "going through the tunnel" type of thing. Hard to explain it, basically all the nice bright colors you get from the sun and the camera just passes them through, it looks like a dense forest, yet bright with green.
You could use that camera design to make a superhero first person jump. That would be pretty sick.
Yup like a Hulk jump all the way across a bridge or some buildings etc
Or their old idea of an arrow flying over a battlefield
I was so hoping you would shoot it directly through a tree-- and then you did-- so impressed! Looked totally amazing! :D
The shot that starts from 19:55 is fantastic! It looks like being pulled back from a dimension!
Like interstellar
@@Suderpants327 you said it!
As someone who has that exact same crossbow, watching Wren pull it back effortlessly with the pully system blew my mind
Wren is a very strong boi, new respect for him
I think it also helps that I'm tall haha! A friend struggled to pull it back because he wasn't tall enough to make it reach as easily as I can.
@@SirWrender true, I’m 5,8 and I would basically have to T pose wile pulling the thing back to get it to load lol
@@SirWrender oh wait! Now that I have your attention will we ever get to see an animator’s react to chainsaw man?? 🥺
@@SirWrender You seriously impressed me with not just the strength but the aim this shoot. As for what do to with this, how much foam can you put at the leading end? And how well padded can you make a stuntman's clothing? Is there any way to effectively create a kill cam, without, you know, killing anyone for real?
@@thetalantonx With the weight of the camera, it would not be possible to aim that accurately, I think. Shooting through the tree was easy: start of flight, telescopic sight, minimum deviation. Also, don't shoot things at people, mmkay?
The bullet time shot thought the tree was ABSOLUTELY AMAZING!! Can't wait for a studio to utilized this method in a movie
Sniper elite ahh shot
Would love to see this used in a rain of arrows scene. Something like The Battle at Helms Deep when there is the massive rain of arrows. I know that was with bows but still it would look epic seeing all the arrows being fired from the middle the pack
i was gonna say this. they also used it in the battle of the bastards and the battle of winterfell in Game of Thrones
Started looking up medieval crossbows because of this, wooden crossbows could have had a draw weight of around 400 lbs max and the steel crossbows from the times was up to 1500. I can't say anything for reliability or how practical they were just very interesting that based on pure numbers alone they really outmatched the modern equivalents that are easily available.
Modern crossbows are much more efficient at delivering the load to the projectile. Lighter strings and bow arms reduce the inertia to overcome,. allowing more force to be delivered to the bolt.
Iirc, they had to have way higher draw forces because they were way less efficient at converting that energy into velocity. So they had heavier draws, but didn't really have that much more power.
Those are made for killing armored soldiers, this consumer crossbow is for boar I assume.
@@jogadorjnc true, even with modern crossbow technology, they can only reach about half of the power of a longbow with the same poundage. so in this case, wren's 175 pounds crossbow would equal to about a 90 pound longbow in terms of range and power, mostly because of its shorter power stroke.
Now look up Carroballista or Onager ;)
im in love with both the tree shot and the second shot. you could easily see that as a nice shot of an arrow into an army would be beautiful. great job
These are the videos that introduced me to corridor. I still remember my first video was putting an arrow on a bow. Only thing is why didn't Wren cut the steel thread before putting on the nut. It wouldn't have required the nut tightener lol.
That was bloody brilliant and ingenious; plus that last shot was fantastic. Congratulations 🎉
Plus, we need more Nick in videos.
Here are some ideas:
Megaman, and it can be a practical shot from his blaster instead of CG.
Football, and it can be used to show the different runs and plays of a team.
Two crossbows firing at each other and having the arrows collide mid-air would be insane.
You tend to see a lot of shots in movies following an arrow or bullet when the shot is extremely difficult or critical to make. You could do something similar practically (e.g., following the arrow the light a beacon, takeout a guard, break a rope, etc.). It would also be interesting to see the practical shot compared to a CGI version (wins, losses, learnings).
What might be cool is seeing a "bullet time" sort of shot from the bullets perspective. Like first person from the bullet in the barrel being fired, traveling through obstacles and impacting whatever. Great concept here with the bow. It'll be exciting to see what you all come up with
I like the bullet time idea. How about shooting the crossbow bolt camera through a fake body's torso. Movies are looking to add more weird ways to ramp up the action. How much more intense would it be to watch the hero have to take out the final boss or monster and to follow the bolt/arrow through the enemy?
Looking at the way the camera cuts out part of the arrow it might be worth comping in a CGI arrow so the viewer has a point of reference and can easily tell what they are looking at.
@@maxximumb My thinking was bullet time is always shown externally, third person, following the bullet through space; what would bullet time look like from the bullets perspective? I like the idea of being able to see it go through objects or obstacles from the "inside" instead of a change of camera position. It would be cool to see an arrow blow through armor and stick in a target behind it
Maybe like Yondu's arrow (from Guardians of the Galaxy) where he is whistling and passing though the bodies or objects in a fight scene.
I think a easy but effective shot would be to mesh this with a hero landing, or a character reveal shot. Something about the initial arc shot looked so tuned for something like this.
Also, dude, LA hose water? The fruit might have been safer without it ahaha!
Fpv superhero landing would look awesome.
I am sure it has been said before...but this guy's positive energy is infectious.
The first idea I had was that you could simulate a POV perspective of a bomb being dropped or a mortar being shot.
Top tier content as always, fellas.
11:50 I love how Wren looks like doc brown here.
Well I'd prefer it if the bow was in a better mood.
Elaborate
@@Beengus It was cross, and it went r/woosh
@@el_es very funny redditor but just explain the joke
@@DingDingTheTH-camBuddy I have never heard anyone use cross as a word for angry though
Thanks for explaining at least
@@Beengus it's a very Bri'ish thing
Instantly clicked when I saw another arrow-camera video. I love Wren and his engineering ways
Edit: I also come from a hunting background and am well versed with crossbows and I was nervous. A lot could go wrong here lmao
- Screws a nut through 1 foot of thread
- Cuts down thread anyway
10 / 10
A cool idea that came up for an interesting use of this is the bolt POV as it flies all over a battlefield till it finally hits the target. Being a 360° camera you can get both the shooter, the battlefield from above, and the target getting struck all in a single continuous shot.
That last shot was SICK !!!!!!! Incredible, so creative and fun !
So awesome.. satisfying af too !🤯 😎
So, it went in the air for 6 seconds : initial velocity is approx. 30 meters per second....max range = 90 meters approx (assuming g = 10)
19:43 to 19:49
used
v = u + at
range = u^2 sin (2 theta)/g...and for max range, sin 2 theta = 1 ie. theta = 45 deg or pi/4
Recreating the Odysseus shot through the 12 axe heads would be pretty sick, or maybe something sports related (ball in a goal, through a basketball hoop, or a quidditch ring, etc.)
That is a MUST.
Whatever they make next will be awesome.
This could be used for tactical recon.
that shot through the tree was by far my favorite. It looked like a movie when the camera follows a bullet or in this case an arrow. Sort of reminded me of Avatar. I don't know why.
Wrens videos are always awesome.
Wren's goated
My personal assumption was just that you'd need a crossbow with less power if it keeps snapping the bolts but I'm happy to see that there is an option for just brute forcing the high power one.
I would of gone the other way gotten a more powerful crossbow and stuck some lead at the back off the bolt before puting in the all thread
Wren build videos are my favorite on the channel. Here's a bad idea for a cool shot, stand a little ways from some train tracks and fire it parallel to the tracks as the train passes. There should be a couple cool moments as it accelerates and travels farther up the train, and then slows down and the train passes it again
I always like to see Nick in videos, it's like old school Corridor.
God, I literally just stopped the video to appreciate how great this channel is. You guys are, hands down, one of the highest quality and entertaining channel on the internet, I'm blown away every time.
5:30 to 8:30 didn't feel like an ad to you?!
@@MumrikDK What does that have to do with anything I said?
@@MumrikDK it was.... what does that have to do with anything?
that shot thro the tree was amazing
Just the danger of shooting this past someone and having a 3 times slow mo fly by gives me chills. Can you imagine doing that with like a fight scene with the camera flying between two characters standing 15 feet apart?😮😮
Amazing shots. Oh my god. I love when Corridor explores undiscovered areas of cinematography. My idea for a shot using this method would be to have a character point in a direction and the camera travels to exactly where they're pointing basically from their finger to point B. But it would require some VFX.
I love these random videos outside of the norm of what you guys usually do. You have great people on the crew and to me it doesn’t matter what kind of content you put out, I’m gunna watch it. And as a casual viewer who doesn’t do cinematography (which I imagine a lot of your viewers are) I really enjoy these kind of videos. Hoping for more!
I think for a way to make this into a production shot, would be to have a medieval crossbowman sieging a castle, and these are all shots of him taking out the defenders on the castle wall while running through a forest dodging archers/arrows/catapults from the castle.
I’m imagining a medieval/fantasy (maybe lotr themed?) battle scene where the arrow 360 cam goes across the battlefield and we can focus on the intense action around it! If it’s safe enough tho. Hope you guys try this!
This is one of your best videos yet. I had an ear to ear grin during the entire video 🤣. Best one was through the tree. Now I need to buy an Insta360 🤦🏻♂️
Wren, I think you just revolutionized the way of shooting epic historian action scenes. This is insane!
But just think hoe dangerous it's gonna be for the actors if it's a battle? Maybe to set the scene before a battle
Love Wren's crazy solo experiments!
lol wren's look of bewilderment when it punched straight through the catching blanket like it was paper
I'd have a "Battle of the bastards" kind of scene (medieval, an archer hunting his prey). You shoot the super crossbow rig, then you remake the shot, but with an archer and with a drone (no arrow, it's just to get the pose / action), and you comp in the archer at the beginning of the shot. Maybe redoing the shot through the tree that looked spectacular.
Yeah, the obvious cool shots are things like that. Or just an archer volley for a mass battle. Getting to see the arrow leave the archers, sail through the air with other arrows, and then aim forward for coming down into the enemy force.
I believe whenever wren sees something that is obviously not meant for eating his brain immediately goes in autopilot mode forcing him to eat that thing
Offer the director of the House of the Dragon series to shoot such a crazy shot in one of the battles of the second season. It's going to be damn impressive.
I got an insta 360 camera for my birthday, which I learned about from you, and it really is a game changer!!! I attached it to some of my Lego trains and it looks pretty cool.
This is the best Crew video ive seen in years, absolute masterpiece.
Had to rewatch that tree shot like 5 times WOW. Another great video from Wren as always!
It really doesn’t matter what strength your bolts are, it matters what spine rating it has. An aluminum bolt with a 600 spine is always gonna flex more than a carbon one with a 200 spine
Ok but I never saw that spec on any of the bolts I purchased! What’s the unit used for it? 300 spine what?
@@SirWrender think its a .300 of an inch deflection with a 2 lb weight , so actually a smaller number is a stiffer bolt , however hanging a camera of the tip will change the spine
@@SirWrender it’s the amount of flex your arrow or bolt will have in the air. Usually the high the poundage of the bow, the lower spine you need. There should be a chart available from each of the manufactures you used (for sure Easton should have one) that show the length and poundage recommend for each spine. The heavier your arrowhead, the weaker it’s going to make the spine of the shaft, meaning it will deflect and bend more. When the guy at the shop told you the weight of the camera would make the bolt “weaker” he really means it’s going lower the spine of your bolt to the point it’s unusable and potentially dangerous (a bolt that’s too weak for a 175lbs draw has the potential to just explode in the arrow rest once fired)
Don’t forget to convert the weight of your camera to grains (not grams), then for every 25 grains over 100 you’ll add 3lbs to the draw weight side of whatever chart you’re looking at. Personally I’d try and find some 100 spine bolts and cut them as short as possible while still letting the camera fit. 175lbs is a TON of draw weight, so you might also want to find something a bit less powerful
Edit, for reference I use a 600 spine with 120 grain tips out of a 25lbs barebow. If I tried to use the same arrow, with stronger limbs, it’d be the same as your testing
Oh, and that through the tree shot was awesome 😮
Those shots were fantastic, awesome job. It’s an impressive camera and concept. Well done.
How fast it can go?
Maybe you can have a drag race between a car and the camera.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the reason the arrow was bending in the first few tests was because of how heavy the camera was in comparison to the rest of the arrow, when the force was being applied to the arrow from the back, the inertia of the camera was resisting movement while the back of the arrow was trying to move, thus causing the entire arrow to bend and warp around.
Yep. It's usually it's a balancing act with the weight of the bow, weight of the point and the spine of the arrow. I'll bet a fiberglass bolt would've had enough flex to make it through. But they tend to fail in spectacular fashion.
That tree shoot actually was pretty sick
I love it when Wren tries out of the world thing and actually make it happen...🔥🔥
14:47 or you could cut the rod part and then screw it :D
P.S. Idea for a scene: Arrow killing. It's dangerous to shoot a person, so you can shoot from where the person should be hit, just then do a scene reversal. And replace the shooter with the victim with CGI.
It also makes sense that the victim would run away, so the shooter can stand on a moderately moving platform.
With the reversal, you could really make some nice camera movement with hitting right where you want it.
id love to see you guys use some of the shots and see what vfx you guys can do with it. It be awesome to see a full bow to target shot into a battle scene or a really cool arrow deflect
Bounce shots off a mini trampoline would be sick!
it would be awesome if u guys used the shots from this into a video. for example a story about a person who managed to get the super jump abilities of a grasshopper but at the same time that person shrunk.
16:35 I know these dudes are smart asf but this breaches human intelect. these people legitimately deserve more attention no one else would ever be able to come up with this!!