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Overhead Shot --- help!!!

tarheelfilm

New member
I am trying to shoot an overhead shot on a huge field. I would like to not have to rent a helicopter but am not sure there are any other options. Does anyone know of anything I can do? I need the shot from a couple hundred feet off the group. Please let me know anything!!!
 
Hmm. You might could rig up some kind of cable and you could rig the cable up so that the camera would be looking toward the ground slightly.
 
So, getting a shot from a couple hundred feet up is pretty difficult, especially using tactics that require rigging from the ground. Any shot wide enough to be worth that kind of height would probably reveal the structure used to achieve the height. Using a cable-rig can accomplish some great effects (I've got several shoots in my file cabinet of ideas that include some weird cable/rope tricks), however the final say on how high you can shoot is dependent on how high the trees, or whatever other scaffolding object you use, to rig from are. If I were you I would run around to the local airports and find out if anyone bases a helo from them. Find them and talk to them, let them know you're a student shooting films and explain to them the idea you have. They'll help you figure out what the legalities of flying in that area are, and if you pitch it right could even be willing to help you out for minimal pay. (I know some guys who'd love to help students out for some screen credit and a couple few good meals or other such minimal fees...)

Talk to them first before busting your butt trying to come up with a replacement technique that will sacrifice your shot. Until you do the legwork you'll never know if you're going to strike gold or not, and if you're really lucky you'll meet someone you can work with in the future and that can really open up your shot potentials when working on visualizing your stories.
 
Having been involved in and setting up countless overhead shots, there is one thing i've found to be true more times then not.
Seldom do you need to be as high as you think you do.
Often you can use the right lens and get a much better shot by being much lower then you think.
200' is really high. Find a 200' rooftop (thats about a 20 floor building) ... take some lens up ... and see what you see.
You'll very surprised at how much lower you can be for a great "high" shot.[/url][/quote][/code][/list]
 
suggestion

suggestion

just a suggestion, there are tons of reasonably priced jibs that are easily put together in the field. I mean I suppose it all depends on how high you are going, reasonably high or ridiciously high? I have a 8 ft jib and it works wonders for such things. Just a suggestion. Good luck.

Matt
MDR Productions
 

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