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Underwater
Cinematography
From islands in the Pacific to the coastline of Alaska; and
from the Magellan Straits to the Red Sea, giant screen audiences
have toured the world's oceans through the lens of MacGillivray
Freeman Films. At least one-third of their nearly two-dozen
large-format films contain sequences on or in the ocean.
For Dolphins and their other underwater film projects, MacGillivray
Freeman mounted the large-format camera on boat bows, sterns
and masts. Film teams also mount cameras on the front of "scooters,"
torpedo-shaped vehicles steered by a camera operator. The scooters,
which travel about three miles per hour, are narrow, so the
camera can move through tighter spaces and get closer to the
surface of reefs, giving audiences the feeling that they're
"soaring" through the water environment. Most of the
underwater camera movement in any one film, however, is accomplished
by the cinematographer himself. And to the cinematographer and
his crew, the large-format camera is affectionately named, "the
pig."
Large-format cameras weigh 100 pounds. Filming underwater adds
another 150 pounds for the camera's waterproof housing. True,
filming underwater lightens the load, but the sheer bulk of
the camera makes it very difficult to maneuver. Size generates
momentum and currents and waves buffet the camera, making it
harder to control than smaller cameras.
The film magazines, which each weigh 10
pounds, contain only three minutes of film. Greg MacGillivray,
the Producer/Director of Dolphins, chose to film several
of the underwater sequences in slow motion to capture
the beauty of dolphin physiology and movement. This actually
speeds up the film going through the camera. Instead of
24 frames per second, the film charges through the camera
at 48 frames per second. A three-minute film magazine
now yields just 90 seconds of action.
Those logistical nightmares are present no matter where
a large-format cinematographer is shooting. Dolphins complicate
everything. MacGillivray Freeman cinematographer and technology
director Brad Ohlund says, "Dolphins are fast-moving,
elusive animals. Filming them means you're in a situation
that requires rapid deployment of the camera." Normally,
large-format cinematographers use winches to get the 250-pound
camera in and out of the water, but a winch is too slow
for dolphin photography, so the film team built ramps
on the boats to push the camera into the water. |
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One of the most
memorable moments for cinematographer Bob Talbot was not
when he photographed a beautifully poised dolphin in dramatic
lighting; it was when the camera and housing slid down
the boat transom, into the water, narrowly missing the
waiting cinematographer's head! "I could only think...wow,
wouldn't that have been a classic way for me to go,"
he later joked (much later).
Another challenge for the underwater film team in the
Bahamas was to be in clear water with cloudless skies
so there would be enough light for the scene. "We
were jumping in holes between clouds," described
Talbot. Fortunately, most of the cinematography for the
film occurred within 30 feet of the ocean's surface. Because
natural lighting extends to those depths, artificial lighting
was not necessary. Dolphins would be virtually impossible
to track with light beams anyway, as their movement through
the water is quick and unpredictable.
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Off the coast of Argentina, another experienced
underwater cinematographer, Paul Atkins and his sound
recordist, producer and wife Grace Atkins, declared a
new-found respect for the large-format underwater camera:
Miss Piggy. "Filming in the large-format is dramatically
different than 16mm or 35mm," shared Grace. "The
bulkiness of the format requires more than twice the cases
and equipment than the smaller film formats. When you're
traveling to remote locations and filming underwater,
the details of the shoot become mind-numbing."
After searching twelve hours each day for wild dolphins,
and battling "Miss Piggy" in 90-second increments,
the crew then spends four or more hours each evening cleaning
the salt and sand off of all of the equipment to prepare
for the next day. Film teams followed this routine for
four weeks at each location in the film. They'll all say
it's worthwhile. Each underwater cinematographer knows
that their exquisitely beautiful images will appear on
the biggest screens in the world, immersing audiences
in an environment that these cinematographers love, want
to share, and have dedicated their lives to help preserve.
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