Patomakarn Nitanontawat
May 8th, 2006, 04:18 AM
Dear Sirs,
Having never worked with a steadicam before, only read on what it can do, I have this question, can a steadicam replace the traditional track and dolly? I have a shoot coming up in a very exotic and obscure temple, the catch is they only let us in for 3 hours at any given time. I want to catch the golden hour, so question is, will getting a steadicam operator and his rig have a faster setup time for each shot vs the dolly grip and his team? From my understanding, the a good steadicam operator can mimic the rock steady movement of a dolly, but can he also pan around to follow the subject to? Also it only seems logical to me that since the whole rig is operated by one guy, it should be faster than laying down tracks no? Experience and advice would be greatly appreciated!
Pauly Nia
Having never worked with a steadicam before, only read on what it can do, I have this question, can a steadicam replace the traditional track and dolly? I have a shoot coming up in a very exotic and obscure temple, the catch is they only let us in for 3 hours at any given time. I want to catch the golden hour, so question is, will getting a steadicam operator and his rig have a faster setup time for each shot vs the dolly grip and his team? From my understanding, the a good steadicam operator can mimic the rock steady movement of a dolly, but can he also pan around to follow the subject to? Also it only seems logical to me that since the whole rig is operated by one guy, it should be faster than laying down tracks no? Experience and advice would be greatly appreciated!
Pauly Nia