James Mayengbam
March 17th, 2006, 03:57 AM
Hi all,
I am new in this group. I am neither a professional, nor a researcher. I know nothing about wild life filming to start with. I have never been in any kind of production, not even as a spot boy or helper. I have never seen or handled any camera or equipments. Hence my knowledge is blank in this field.
However, I want to catch a rare species on camera and this is an aim I swear I would accomplish. It is a Brow-antlered Deer found only in my State. It has been declared as one of the endangered species with only a population of 140 roughly. It has its habitat on floating morasses of a lake. It is rather a swamp covering an area of 42 sq km and the grasses on it are 6-8 foot long that shelters the animal, which would make it difficult to film the animal. The subject is a very shy animal and more than that its habitat is now a national sanctuary, which would need clearance for filming during the rutting season especially. I want to film it during the rutting season mostly since it would be easy to sight the animal. The period would be for 4(December - April) months before rainy season starts. My plan after making this film is to broadcast it over any of the renowned TV channels like National Geographic or Discovery.
Now below are my major challenges:
What would be my pre-production plan?
What are the equipments I require?
What are to be done in post-production?
What minimum budget is required in such kind of film production?
The other things I would like to know are:
Is it better to approach a production company (since I won’t be able to afford all equipments in one go) or produce it myself?
If I have to approach a production company which one should I approach?
If I have to approach National Geographic Channels International, what type of materials do I provide them?
What kind of video format would just fit the film since it’s going to be broadcast on TV?
What is the minimum crew that is required for such a film and what kind of crew I require?
How much time would be required for planning before the filming starts?
What kind of story would be generally suitable for general public and more importantly to draw the attention of researcher and organizations to protect this animal and its natural habitat?
Sincerely
James Mayengbam.
I am new in this group. I am neither a professional, nor a researcher. I know nothing about wild life filming to start with. I have never been in any kind of production, not even as a spot boy or helper. I have never seen or handled any camera or equipments. Hence my knowledge is blank in this field.
However, I want to catch a rare species on camera and this is an aim I swear I would accomplish. It is a Brow-antlered Deer found only in my State. It has been declared as one of the endangered species with only a population of 140 roughly. It has its habitat on floating morasses of a lake. It is rather a swamp covering an area of 42 sq km and the grasses on it are 6-8 foot long that shelters the animal, which would make it difficult to film the animal. The subject is a very shy animal and more than that its habitat is now a national sanctuary, which would need clearance for filming during the rutting season especially. I want to film it during the rutting season mostly since it would be easy to sight the animal. The period would be for 4(December - April) months before rainy season starts. My plan after making this film is to broadcast it over any of the renowned TV channels like National Geographic or Discovery.
Now below are my major challenges:
What would be my pre-production plan?
What are the equipments I require?
What are to be done in post-production?
What minimum budget is required in such kind of film production?
The other things I would like to know are:
Is it better to approach a production company (since I won’t be able to afford all equipments in one go) or produce it myself?
If I have to approach a production company which one should I approach?
If I have to approach National Geographic Channels International, what type of materials do I provide them?
What kind of video format would just fit the film since it’s going to be broadcast on TV?
What is the minimum crew that is required for such a film and what kind of crew I require?
How much time would be required for planning before the filming starts?
What kind of story would be generally suitable for general public and more importantly to draw the attention of researcher and organizations to protect this animal and its natural habitat?
Sincerely
James Mayengbam.