Adrian Tan
September 30th, 2014, 05:49 PM
Random musing... I doubt I could look at a piece of footage and correctly guess whether it was shot by a man or a woman more than 50% of the time. But I do think it's possible that camerawork could give clues as to the gender of the operator.
After all, I think camera work often suggests something about the personality or thinking of the operator; and I also believe that, in a very general statistical way, there are differences between male and female personality/thinking.
To put this on a more pragmatic level -- the female videographers I work with don't shoot like I do. The pace is calmer, the framing more relaxed, the details they focus on different. Whereas when I shoot, the anxiety shows through in the shots, and the compositions tend to be intense, directed -- I like it to be obvious that I'm looking at x or looking at y. Now, very likely, most of that has little to do with gender and more to do with individual personality. But I guess I often wonder if there is some sort of gender component at the back of it.
That said, you definitely can't judge a book by its cover. I've more than once experienced a rough, sweaty, tradesman-like male videographer producing subtle, delicate, "feminine" footage.
By the way, here's an earlier, related topic:
http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/wedding-event-videography-techniques/512621-gender-bride-groom-prep.html
After all, I think camera work often suggests something about the personality or thinking of the operator; and I also believe that, in a very general statistical way, there are differences between male and female personality/thinking.
To put this on a more pragmatic level -- the female videographers I work with don't shoot like I do. The pace is calmer, the framing more relaxed, the details they focus on different. Whereas when I shoot, the anxiety shows through in the shots, and the compositions tend to be intense, directed -- I like it to be obvious that I'm looking at x or looking at y. Now, very likely, most of that has little to do with gender and more to do with individual personality. But I guess I often wonder if there is some sort of gender component at the back of it.
That said, you definitely can't judge a book by its cover. I've more than once experienced a rough, sweaty, tradesman-like male videographer producing subtle, delicate, "feminine" footage.
By the way, here's an earlier, related topic:
http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/wedding-event-videography-techniques/512621-gender-bride-groom-prep.html