Chapters: 00:00 - Introduction to Dolly Zoom Shots in Film 00:57 - What is a Dolly Zoom? 04:09 - Speed and Focal Length 06:59 - Background Considerations 08:35 - Creative Examples 10:58 - Dolly Zoom in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 11:47 - Dolly Zoom in Raging Bull 13:17 - Takeaways
They are very flashy. Especially boom shots, which only bigger productions can afford. Wide shot pans show off impressive location and set design that no small film production could afford. Whip pans aren't too difficult, but they still call attention to themselves. And basically any camera movement requires not only costly professional gear, but a lot of skill to make it smooth (dolly shots most of all) and in sync with the blocking. That's why most amateur projects avoid them, unless the style doesn't call for a polished production look. These techniques are the language of epics (they're not exclusively found in epics, but all epics use these techniques extensively).
You all should strongly consider "binding" these videos together into a curriculum for film studies teachers. I have been using your resources and found them EXTREMELY engaging. I would love to help if needed.
What I loved about this video the most, is the fact that they showcased scenes from movies outside of Hollywood, thanks for bringing attention to such legends!
Please upload tutorial related to sound recording, sound mixing - what devices are used for interior scene - how recording is done for an exterior scene etc
I just want to say, ever since I discovered this channel it’s been amazing. Great knowledge and I really love these camera movement videos. Keep them coming!
*I'd humbly like to ask StudiBinder that whatever you teach through your content is also taught in film schools cuz I'm learning alot from you, I'm making notes of it, so If I study StudioBinder videos then I won't have to join any film school, isn't it? Please tell me, whatever you are teaching is truly great. Love from India.❤❤*
Please, you got to make a HOW TO MAKE YOUR AUDIENCE EMOTIONAL/CRY!!!! Like the rules on how to make the audience care for your characters that much to feel empathy for them.
The camera work and movement in David Lean's Laurence of Arabia is a classic example of panning for scale and beauty. The other thing that comes out of a lot of your work is that Steven Spielberg is a master of blocking and staging.
You should talk about music videos in some video. For exemple in Crazy in Love by Beyoncé the director uses a whip pan in the last shot of the final choreography. Why they used?
Ah man, I wish you had shown Jackie Chan's 80s and early 90s films. He used lots of simple pans and choreographed to the simplicity of the shot. Compare that to filmmakers like Sammo Hung and Tsui Hark who used montage shooting and editing, and action was designed for that. Jackie's filmmaking style was really different.
Why is so many of the shoots, especially the pans, shown slightly hacky and laggy?? Is it my display which shows it like that or what is wrong, because it cant be that this is how it actually was shoot? Thanks.
Ik you guys are trying new narrators but the British narrator really has that essence of your videos, without him, it feels like it's not authentic anymore, no hate to the rest narrators but still
This narrator was great BUT the entire time I was trying to place his accent. Not in a distraction kinda way, but in a "I know that accent" kinda way. I can't tell if it's something he's trying to hide or if he's got a natural mix of accents. It's a fascinating combination of Great Lakes and Outer Appalachia and a sprinkling of swampy east Texas. Hard A's aside drawls... all while doing quality enunciating.
@@yondie491Not sure I caught any of those inflections. But, after listening to him more, I’m beginning to think he sounds an awful lot like Jerry Rigs Everything. If you’re not familiar with the channel I suggest listening to some videos of his and then listen here again.
pre-emptive note: I am merely noticing it and stating curiosity, he's a great narrator, and there's nothing wrong w/ accents. Since this is text-only, I want to over-clarify that. I have a history of speech issues and speech therapy... as well as having grown up in quite a few places around America as a kid (military brat) so I notice this stuff more than average. 100% don't mind listening to this again, so this is what I heard the 2nd time (going to describe the sounds, not use IPA) mostly soft examples: 0:32 "subscribe" has a quasi-soft i 1:32 soft "ay" in example 2:15 soft w in build (like the british "dark l" where it sounds like a w to many ears) various times he says "tilt" w/ a soft a like "tale-t" 6:37 "wohn-ers" vs of "wun-ers" 6:45 a near "w instead of r" sound in "children" some strong examples: 1:07 "handheld" is a very strong A as if it he said "hand hayld" (the hard A is why I mention Great Lakes) Stuff like that it's rural American accents that hold onto British traits, hence east texas or near-appalachia... with the hard-A you find in the Great Lakes region (chi-KAW-goe... just without the Great Lakes O) I just think it's very interesting, that's all
@StudioBinder ..even when I say the most inane thing, y'all find the time to say thanks.. ..I mean, C'mon! Naw, but seriously, I was feeling the music on this one.. and with SB's timeless editing style.. sheesh.. but, whoever was DJ, give them a raise..😉
You have already done a video on this topic. Ok let me suggest a new topic for you: WHY MODERN MOVIES ARE SO BAD., except for a handful. Seriously nowadays movies just keep getting worse. Stories are so bad. New stories are explored less. We get a ton of sequels to any good old movies. People are sold on CGI crap. Take PIXAR for example. ELEMENTALS, Toy story 4, Lightyear...Seriously? These movie are so bad. After Avengers: ENdgame, even Marvel lost it. Modern NETFLIX shows are pure garbage. I am so annoyed by this fact. Even Nolan started to depend on stories that already exist( Oppenheimer,). 99% of movies that are released nowadays are garbage. BUT I will give you this: Technically movies are at an all time high. Cinematography is top notch, sound design, everything else is great, except for stories and screenplay. They are just the worst. ARE WE RUNNING OUT OF NEW IDEAS? Even StudioBinder latest videos arent that interesting? Art of Subtitles? Seriously? Marcel The shell with shoes on is one of the greatest movies I have watched and it was released on 2022. I am not saying all the movies are bad. Some gems are still released. But once every few decades. I am afraid this timespan will increase in the future. WHY ARE PRODUCERS AFRAID OF NEW MOVIE IDEAS. GIVE NEW FILMMAKERS A CHANCE. I FIRMLY BELIEVE THERE ARE TONS OF OSCAR WORTHY NEW FILM IDEAS, BUT IF YOU KEEP MAKING SEQUELS TO OLD MOVIES, THEY ARE NEVER GONNA COME OUT. JEESUS.
Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making
Chapters:
00:00 - Introduction to Dolly Zoom Shots in Film
00:57 - What is a Dolly Zoom?
04:09 - Speed and Focal Length
06:59 - Background Considerations
08:35 - Creative Examples
10:58 - Dolly Zoom in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
11:47 - Dolly Zoom in Raging Bull
13:17 - Takeaways
These are for dolly zoom, wrong description.,
Please give us auto subtitle
This places the playback in the commercial for Mentor Me. Did you do this or did someone hack your account?
I think we take these camera movements for granted because they’re not flashy but they are a really essential part of film grammar.
Very well-put
Agreed!
They are very flashy. Especially boom shots, which only bigger productions can afford. Wide shot pans show off impressive location and set design that no small film production could afford. Whip pans aren't too difficult, but they still call attention to themselves. And basically any camera movement requires not only costly professional gear, but a lot of skill to make it smooth (dolly shots most of all) and in sync with the blocking. That's why most amateur projects avoid them, unless the style doesn't call for a polished production look. These techniques are the language of epics (they're not exclusively found in epics, but all epics use these techniques extensively).
I think it's one of those things you normally don't notice but when it's not present the movie looks off
You all should strongly consider "binding" these videos together into a curriculum for film studies teachers. I have been using your resources and found them EXTREMELY engaging. I would love to help if needed.
Would a playlist work?
@@StudioBinder definitely
Please! @@StudioBinder
Yes, more themed playlists! Thanks again for the incredible resources.@@StudioBinder
@@StudioBinderYes Playlist would work
What I loved about this video the most, is the fact that they showcased scenes from movies outside of Hollywood, thanks for bringing attention to such legends!
Great lesson. Great narrator. Well done as always, Studio Binder
Cheers!
My Cinema Guru is *Studiobinder* .....
Always love u ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Love our viewers!
Please upload tutorial related to sound recording, sound mixing - what devices are used for interior scene - how recording is done for an exterior scene etc
Thanks for the suggestion!
@@StudioBinder any update on this ??
Kurosawa was real good at pan and tilt movements. He would cut to one pne to another one without a hinch. He created epic scenes.
Master of movement
I just want to say, ever since I discovered this channel it’s been amazing. Great knowledge and I really love these camera movement videos. Keep them coming!
More on the way!
Wow! References to Tarkovsky, Malick, Dessica, Kurosawa, and Fellini. What an episode!
Getting the masters together
Thanks StudioBinder.
The content of this video is very inspiring.
Glad you liked it!
IT Follows was soooooo good at creating suspense/ tension
Another great lesson on camera movement. Would it be possible to see a side-be-side shooting script and camera example as a follow up?
we might!
when i get big and famous with my movies, im gonna tell everyone that i did study film school, and it was here on youtube on this channel!!
*I'd humbly like to ask StudiBinder that whatever you teach through your content is also taught in film schools cuz I'm learning alot from you, I'm making notes of it, so If I study StudioBinder videos then I won't have to join any film school, isn't it? Please tell me, whatever you are teaching is truly great. Love from India.❤❤*
But film schools are great for networking and connections
Our videos are often shown in film schools!
Which state of India?
@@StudioBinder That's great 🥰
@@mr.diluaa8941 *I'm from Delhi, it's not a state but a union territory. Where are ya from?*
Great guide, excellent examples, thank you. But why did you "upsided down" the scheme on 11:03 😅?
Fair point haha
New Video by my favourite channel.... Thank you as always
Cheers!
I used this thing in my last projects. Thank you 🙏
Congrats on finishing it!
studio binder should start giving graduation certificates to it's students
thank you for this tutorial, watching your videos helps me a lot 🙂😁😋
Thanks a lot @studiobinder..❤ good knowledge
👍👍
Great video! I would love if you guys did something sound based about creative sound design!
Thanks for the suggestion!
Thanks for the Video 😀
👍👍
✅@@StudioBinder
His voice is beautiful.
💯💯
Please, you got to make a HOW TO MAKE YOUR AUDIENCE EMOTIONAL/CRY!!!! Like the rules on how to make the audience care for your characters that much to feel empathy for them.
we have a video on how to direct a gut-punch th-cam.com/video/tPyceDUaG4M/w-d-xo.html
The camera work and movement in David Lean's Laurence of Arabia is a classic example of panning for scale and beauty. The other thing that comes out of a lot of your work is that Steven Spielberg is a master of blocking and staging.
Both are masters with movement!
Really great like each video. Thanks sir
Glad you liked it!
Great video-thnx!
Thanks for watching!
Superb video 🤩
Thanks for watching!
I love your videos💫
❤❤
Love how you’re using Harry Potter’s shots :)
Great video 👍🏾
Could you make a video on Kurosawa?
We want to!
Awesome content
Thanks for watching!
Thanks guys!
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this video
You should talk about music videos in some video. For exemple in Crazy in Love by Beyoncé the director uses a whip pan in the last shot of the final choreography. Why they used?
Ah man, I wish you had shown Jackie Chan's 80s and early 90s films. He used lots of simple pans and choreographed to the simplicity of the shot. Compare that to filmmakers like Sammo Hung and Tsui Hark who used montage shooting and editing, and action was designed for that. Jackie's filmmaking style was really different.
I like this narrator better. 🏆
(His voice and performance fits the content better.)
Appreciate the feedback!
Please let me know the name of the movie in this video where people are chasing the car.
I was waiting for the part where u mention Wes Anderson 😅. I mean he uses tilts and pans quite a lot
Fantastic content
Why is so many of the shoots, especially the pans, shown slightly hacky and laggy?? Is it my display which shows it like that or what is wrong, because it cant be that this is how it actually was shoot? Thanks.
They're shown as the films displayed them
7:33 anyone knows name of the movie?
Ik you guys are trying new narrators but the British narrator really has that essence of your videos, without him, it feels like it's not authentic anymore, no hate to the rest narrators but still
This narrator was great
BUT
the entire time I was trying to place his accent.
Not in a distraction kinda way, but in a "I know that accent" kinda way. I can't tell if it's something he's trying to hide or if he's got a natural mix of accents. It's a fascinating combination of Great Lakes and Outer Appalachia and a sprinkling of swampy east Texas. Hard A's aside drawls... all while doing quality enunciating.
@@yondie491Not sure I caught any of those inflections. But, after listening to him more, I’m beginning to think he sounds an awful lot like Jerry Rigs Everything. If you’re not familiar with the channel I suggest listening to some videos of his and then listen here again.
pre-emptive note: I am merely noticing it and stating curiosity, he's a great narrator, and there's nothing wrong w/ accents. Since this is text-only, I want to over-clarify that. I have a history of speech issues and speech therapy... as well as having grown up in quite a few places around America as a kid (military brat) so I notice this stuff more than average.
100% don't mind listening to this again, so this is what I heard the 2nd time (going to describe the sounds, not use IPA)
mostly soft examples:
0:32 "subscribe" has a quasi-soft i
1:32 soft "ay" in example
2:15 soft w in build (like the british "dark l" where it sounds like a w to many ears)
various times he says "tilt" w/ a soft a like "tale-t"
6:37 "wohn-ers" vs of "wun-ers"
6:45 a near "w instead of r" sound in "children"
some strong examples:
1:07 "handheld" is a very strong A as if it he said "hand hayld" (the hard A is why I mention Great Lakes)
Stuff like that
it's rural American accents that hold onto British traits, hence east texas or near-appalachia... with the hard-A you find in the Great Lakes region (chi-KAW-goe... just without the Great Lakes O)
I just think it's very interesting, that's all
alright, bye. we’ll keep having fun over here.
How does it feel less authentic when it is literally coming from StudioBinder? lmao so weird.
Please add captions 😮
Captions should be up!
13:41 the word "Ghost" in bottom left corner is misspelled ...you're welcome
THANKS I WOULD HAVE NEVER GUESSED IN A MILLION BILLION YEARS.
Thanks!
The Brit guy be having mood swings nowadays
😂
🎶 _catjam_ 🎵
Thanks for watching!
@StudioBinder ..even when I say the most inane thing, y'all find the time to say thanks.. ..I mean, C'mon!
Naw, but seriously, I was feeling the music on this one.. and with SB's timeless editing style.. sheesh.. but, whoever was DJ, give them a raise..😉
How do elicit acting throw artist.
Could you elaborate what you mean?
How do directors get acting from an actor.
@@StudioBinderHow do Directors get acting from an actor.
Explain Gaspar Noe film making
First Here.!!!❤️❤️
Welcome!
Please give English subtitles
They're up!
Does the other guy refer to the first Harry Potter book/movie as the philosopher’s stone? (As he should)
👌
Surprised to see you didn't use any of Park Chan-wook's work in this video, especially Decision to Leave
Probably will in the future
Rajamouli, chatrapati film final fight his mother shoot him. which camera moment it was?
Explain monologue
Thanks for the suggestion!
How a Story become powerfull 🤔
Thanks for the suggestion!
You could've contacted me to give u an ultimate pan shot that i used in my award winning shot film
Didn't know you had one!
Pan shot! 😂
😅😅
Where is British guy ?
🎥🎥🎥
🙌🙌
For some reason it felt wrong to watch this video with another narrator
👌
This video made me realize I’m pansexual.
😮😮
0:53
Thanks for watching!
Subtitles please ¡¡¡¡
They're up!
@@StudioBinder in all languages, please ¡¡¡
First!
Welcome!
Excuseme sir,
Next content can you make about how to make romance story ..?
But not Erotic story
Thanks for the suggestion!
@@StudioBinder Thank you for the useful content sir 🫡
❤🇱🇨!!!
Panning and tilting...Hmmmm
Where is the British guy 😡
Making more vids with us
:)
Thanks for watching!
You have already done a video on this topic. Ok let me suggest a new topic for you: WHY MODERN MOVIES ARE SO BAD., except for a handful.
Seriously nowadays movies just keep getting worse. Stories are so bad. New stories are explored less. We get a ton of sequels to any good old movies. People are sold on CGI crap. Take PIXAR for example. ELEMENTALS, Toy story 4, Lightyear...Seriously? These movie are so bad. After Avengers: ENdgame, even Marvel lost it. Modern NETFLIX shows are pure garbage. I am so annoyed by this fact. Even Nolan started to depend on stories that already exist( Oppenheimer,). 99% of movies that are released nowadays are garbage. BUT I will give you this: Technically movies are at an all time high. Cinematography is top notch, sound design, everything else is great, except for stories and screenplay. They are just the worst. ARE WE RUNNING OUT OF NEW IDEAS? Even StudioBinder latest videos arent that interesting? Art of Subtitles? Seriously?
Marcel The shell with shoes on is one of the greatest movies I have watched and it was released on 2022. I am not saying all the movies are bad. Some gems are still released. But once every few decades. I am afraid this timespan will increase in the future. WHY ARE PRODUCERS AFRAID OF NEW MOVIE IDEAS. GIVE NEW FILMMAKERS A CHANCE. I FIRMLY BELIEVE THERE ARE TONS OF OSCAR WORTHY NEW FILM IDEAS, BUT IF YOU KEEP MAKING SEQUELS TO OLD MOVIES, THEY ARE NEVER GONNA COME OUT. JEESUS.
We did a shot list on camera movement in general but not a video specifically on panning and tilting
Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making Explain Gaspar Noe film making
Why you are not translate all of your videos in Hindi language for better understanding for those who don't much understand English language ❓❓❓❓❓❓❓❓❓
For indian Hindi speaking people
It's not berg Khalifa 😆. It's burj
Appreciate the feedback!
This is a commercial now. Mentor Me. This has nothing to do with camera movements. This needs to be fixed.
A guy fell off during this Ran scene
Honestly, that makes sense
Boring Repetitive Information.
Perfect video for commemorating 9/11.
We were all tilting our heads up to look at the planes panning into the twin towers. *wink*