View Full Version : FINALLY.. Our first wildlife documentary...


Henrik Bengtsson
January 28th, 2003, 02:19 AM
Whaleshark - Lord of the sea

http://www.docuwild.com/feature.php
or direct link

http://hubba.is-a-geek.net/video/wsdonedv.wmv

15 min, 150 megs WMV (though it will stream if you just click on it =). Im adding smaller versions as soon as they are done encoding.

Some production facts:

Shot on a TRV900, Ikelite UW housing at the Ningaloo reef, Exmouth, NW Australia.

All shots featuring whalesharks were shot by freediving (thats without scubagear) and acompanying a normal whaleshark tour. Ie. no rented boats.

Total crew on location: 1

Audio commentary is by the photographer (and producer) who is not a professional voice actor (which will show :).

Total footage was seven 60 min Mini-DV tapes.

It was edited on FCP 3, Run through Magic Bullet for 25p plus i rented a little Combustion time aswell for some grain removal.

3D was done with 3D Studio Max and the whaleshark model was built from scratch by the Producer and our 3D artist. Its quite detailed.

Hope you enjoy it and please add any comments here :)

I know i personally would have loved to get some more human connections (interviews, location footage) in there. But alas the cameraman / producer never thought of that when he was down there.

(and for you who don't want to watch the 15 min and wait for the credits, i did the editing, audio, post and general packaging)

Regards,
Henrik

Henrik Bengtsson
January 28th, 2003, 12:30 PM
Added 3 new sizes, lowest weighing in at 67 Megs followed by 97 and 127 megs. All quicktime Mpeg4.

http://hubba.is-a-geek.net/video/wsdonedv3.mp4 (67)
http://hubba.is-a-geek.net/video/wsdonedv2.mp4 (97)
http://hubba.is-a-geek.net/video/wsdonedv.mp4 (127)

Comments appreciated (for those of you without 56k's =)

/Henrik

Ivan Hedley Enger
January 28th, 2003, 12:47 PM
Hi Henrik,

I really would love to see your film, but when I tried to play it I only got a window stating that I downloaded a text file. What am I doing wrong here, can you help me out please?

Ivan

Henrik Bengtsson
January 28th, 2003, 02:59 PM
ok. that may happen (especially on the mac for some reason). You can either right click and select "save source as" (ctrl + click on the mac) and save it to disk.

This means you have to go to the site (and not use the direct links i provided above).

http://www.docuwild.com/feature.php

Use that one.

/Henrik

Rob Lohman
January 28th, 2003, 03:38 PM
Hey there... I'm downloading your 170 mb version, but this isn't
going very fast (10kb/s on average). Already 5 hours into download
and 2,5 hours remaining (according to my download program).

If you want to stream this you are in for a long wait. Unless
something is wrong on my end...

Ivan Hedley Enger
January 28th, 2003, 03:57 PM
OK Henrik,

Thanks for the reply. I will try to do it like you said to me, but I hope it wonīt take as long as Rob told in his reply.

Ivan

Henrik Bengtsson
January 28th, 2003, 04:01 PM
The stream part needs a very fast connection. Which is why i put up some smaller ones aswell. The 170 meg is of course the best looking, but the smaller mp4 versions are not bad either.

And even with 67 megs its a hefty download. I dont have the means of producing anything worth looking on that is smaller than that though. And to see 2 blue pixels blob around and call it a whaleshark isn't exactly enjoyable :)

Thanx for downloading it =)

/Henrik

Ivan Hedley Enger
January 29th, 2003, 04:59 PM
I downloaded your documentary last night (170MB in little more than 2 hours), and I had the opportunity to watch it this evening.

Jag gillade den mycket! (Swedish for: I liked it very much!)

Beeing a man who loves watching wildlife films, I enjoyed watching this production. Beautiful film and great editing, and I thought the animation sequences was very well done too.

You mentioned the narrator was not a professional. Based on that fact I think he did a very good performance. You also wanted more human connections, and I think that would have been great, but this is just a minor lack.

Well done to you all, and good luck in the future!

Ivan

Scott Silverman
January 29th, 2003, 05:44 PM
I tried downloading the smallest file and it was going at a steady rate of 3 KB/sec. Which would take 9 hours or so. I would love to see it but this was just too slow for me to bare on a 93 MB file. Maybe I will let it download over night!

Keith Loh
January 29th, 2003, 06:35 PM
Very nice. Lovely colours. The shot selection is good. Impressive video quality.

You are right about the narration; it is flat. I don't think the problem is that serious because North American viewers might find the accent interesting in itself.

I found the music was a bit much. I don't mind the melody but I thought it could have been cut back by half.

John Locke
January 29th, 2003, 08:38 PM
Henrik,

I'd love to watch it...and have tried downloading all the links above. All I get is pages and pages of code when I click any of the links. Any Mac users out there have any idea how I can watch this?

Jeff Donald
January 29th, 2003, 10:45 PM
John,

Go here (http://www.docuwild.com/feature.php) and you'll go to his site. Then right click and hold on the link you want to download. A pop-up window will appear and select download target (or something similar) and save it to your desktop.

Henrik Bengtsson
January 30th, 2003, 03:08 AM
OOoooo Comments =)

Thank you all for commenting on it. Some more info on the creation process:

Just about every shot was slowed down to minimize jittering. Since we shot it without scubagear and Whalesharks are very fast swimmers, it was a matter of constantly swimming to keep up. This made a lot of shots quite jumpy and had to to be smoothed out.

The voiceover was recorded in my apartement (in the hallway actually) since i did not have access to a soundstudio at the time. I used a rhode NT3 microphone and captured into Logic Audio. It was then cut up into the parts we wanted to use, and synced with the images inside Logic. The audio was then exported and used as a separate track in FCP where we then added the music tracks. Everything was then exported back out and run through the mastering plugins (Waves) to get the levels right.

There is a shot (which occurs twice) where there is another fairly large shark just beneath the whaleshark. This second shark is not a Whaleshark (maybe some oceanic spieces of shark, its a bit hard to tell) and the people in the water (including the cameraman) had no clue it was there. It was discovered when we looked through the footage back in Sweden :) Kinda sobering.

I have not tried to pitch this show to any networks or distributors yet. We see this more as a good first try and have learned a lot in the process of making this.

For you who cant download with the links above; please go to http://www.docuwild.com/feature.php to download. The direct links i posted above only works with PC's apparently. Us Mac people have to ctrl click / right click and chose save target as.

Again, thank you all for the comments.
/Henrik

Ivan Hedley Enger
January 30th, 2003, 05:57 AM
I donīt agree with you Keith, I like the music just as it is. But, I think you are a great guy anyway, because I noticed on your Web site that you are listning to norwegian music (Royksopp) ; )

You must reconnect your hyperlinks again, so that we can look at your films as well, Keith.

Ivan

Keith Loh
January 30th, 2003, 11:21 AM
<OT>Once I get off my butt and finish editing the music video I will be sure to post links.

Royksopp are coming to Vancouver next month. I will have to see if they are sold out. :)</OT>

Andreas Fernbrant
February 4th, 2003, 09:12 AM
Very Nice Henrik!
I didn't have time to watch all of it because I'm at work.
But great work! To film under water is hard, not to say keeping up
with an animal built for swimming!

I downloaded it mainly because I wanted to see the 3D :)

Just wanted to let you (or anyone else) if you need a 3D artist
perhaps I can help. I've done 3D for 5 years and use 3D max.
But most of us work without a budget so I'm offering myself for
free. One drawback though.. I have limited time, but if I can help
I will help.

Ha det bra (Take care)

/Andreas
www.fernbrant.com/andreas

Kenn Jolemore
February 14th, 2003, 08:47 AM
I really enjoyed your work and my only constructive criticism would be to stream it so that it can be watched without having to do a download if you are capable of doing so. I have broadband so it did not take forever or anything but it did takew about 25 min to download the larger file in MPG4
Again, wonderfull work you should be proud of it.

Bud Kuenzli
March 6th, 2003, 10:27 PM
i'm downloading the small version right now but it's download name is wsdonedv3.txt which makes me wonder if whether this will come across properly. we'll see.

Benjamin Taft
April 1st, 2003, 05:02 PM
That's a great little documentary! I think you should try to get it broadcasted. While the net is a great way to reach people like us, tv is still the way to go to reach a broader audience, plus it's cool.

I saw thet you showed it at the previous 'Underwater Film Festival' at 'Haga Biografen', I just found out today that they are going to have it again from the 3 to 6 of april. I'll try to check some of the films out, if anyone else is interested their homepage is at: http://www.shell.linux.se/uvfilm/UV/

Now I have to save up for a trip to Australia as well, I love going diving, and swiming around with that huge animal looks great!

Henrik Bengtsson
April 3rd, 2003, 04:35 AM
Hi there Benjamin,

Then i might run into you in gothenburg. Im going to be attending the Festival on sunday.

We would like to do some additional work on that production before we try to get it shown which is why we haven't pushed it out yet. And first we need to finance a trip for 2 to Australia to shoot additional footage =)

Glad you liked it,

/Henrik