Steadicam Pilot / Photo Credit: Steadicam - Lorne Lapham
STEADICAM? (In the Entertainment industry.
What is a Steadicam?)
What is a Steadicam?
People often ask, “When was the Steadicam first used?”
read on… In the early 1970s, American cinematographer Garrett Brown had a
simple, but revolutionary idea: to make a device that could smooth out handheld
action shots. The result is the Academy Award-winning Steadicam®, which made
its feature film debut on the movie “Bound for Glory,” and rose to prominence
in the films “Rocky” and “The Shining.”
Over the past 3 decades, Steadicam has been an invaluable,
dynamic production tool in the industry.
New generations of Steadicam Camera Stabilizing Systems have been
comprehensively redesigned to unleash endless creative possibilities. Tiffen
offers you a complete line of state-of-the-art models to meet your film and
video needs. Tiffen is committed to
support the needs of the motion picture, broadcast and professional imaging
industries with the latest state-of-the-art steadicam technology to meet your
film and video needs.
Steadicam is a brand of camera stabilizer mounts for
motion picture cameras invented by Garrett Brown and introduced in 1975 by
Cinema Products Corporation. It mechanically isolates the operator's movement,
allowing for a smooth shot, even when the camera moves over an irregular
surface.
History
Before the camera stabilizing system, a director had two
choices for moving (or "tracking") shots:
The camera could be mounted on a dolly, a wheeled mount
that rolls on tracks or leveled boards. This procedure is time consuming to set
up, and it is impractical in many situations.
The camera operator could simply hold the camera. This
manual grip allows speed and flexibility, but even the most skilled operator
cannot entirely prevent shaking. Hand-held camera footage has traditionally
been considered suitable mostly for documentaries, news, reportage, live
action, unrehearsable footage, or the evocation of authentic immediacy or
cinéma vérité during dramatic sequences.
While these cinematic techniques are still common, the
Steadicam has added another dimension to motion picture cinematography and videography.
A Steadicam combines the stabilized steady footage of a
conventional tripod mount with the fluid motion of a dolly shot and the
flexibility of hand-held camera work. While smoothly following the operator's
broad movements, the Steadicam's arm absorbs jerks, bumps, and shakes, while it’s
almost frictionless gimbal gives precise control of the camera and framing.
The Steadicam was introduced to the industry in 1975 by
inventor and cameraman Garrett Brown, who originally named the invention the
"Brown Stabilizer". After completing the first working prototype,
Brown shot a ten-minute demo reel of the revolutionary moves this new device
could produce. This reel was seen by numerous directors, including Stanley
Kubrick and John G. Avildsen. The Steadicam was subsequently licensed to and
manufactured by Cinema Products Corporation, which later diversified the brand
into a consumer line for DV cameras.
The Steadicam was first used in the Best Picture–nominated
Woody Guthrie biopic Bound for Glory (1976), debuting with a shot that
compounded the Steadicam's innovation: cinematographer Haskell Wexler had Brown
start the shot on a fully elevated platform crane which jibbed down, and when
it reached the ground, Brown stepped off and walked the camera through the set.
This technically audacious and previously impossible shot created considerable
interest in how it had been accomplished, and impressed the Academy enough for
Wexler to win the Oscar for Best Cinematography that year.
It was then used in extensive running and chase scenes on
the streets of New York City in Marathon Man (1976), which was released two
months before Bound for Glory. It landed a notable third credit in Avildsen's
Best Picture–winning Rocky in 1976, where it was an integral part of the film's
Philadelphia street jogging/training sequences and the run up the Art Museum's
flight of stairs, as well as the fight scenes where it can even be plainly seen
in operation at the ringside during some wide shots of the final fight. Rocky
was also released before Bound for Glory. Garrett Brown was the Steadicam
operator on all of these.
The Shining (1980) pushed Brown's innovations even
further, when director Stanley Kubrick requested that the camera shoot from
barely above the floor. This prompted the innovation of "low mode" to
mount the top of the camera to the bottom of an inverted post, which
substantially increased the creative angles of the system which previously
could not go much lower than the operator's waist height. This low-mode concept
remains the most important extension to the system since its inception.
A Steadicam rig was also employed during the filming of
Return of the Jedi (1983), in conjunction with two gyroscopes for extra
stabilization, to film the background plates for the speeder bike chase. Brown,
who personally operated the shot, walked through a redwood forest, with the
camera running at a speed of less than one frame per second. The end result,
when projected at 24 frames per second, gave the impression of flying through the
air at perilous speeds. In the Michael Crichton film Runaway (1984), a
Steadicam rig was used to simulate the point of view of a futuristic smart
bullet in flight while targeting specific individuals by their heat signature.
Description
The operator wears a harness, the Steadicam vest, which is
attached to an iso-elastic arm. This is connected by a multiaxis and ultra-low
friction gimbal to the Steadicam "sled" which has the camera mounted
at one end and counterbalancing weight (the monitor and batteries) at the
other. The monitor substitutes for the camera's viewfinder, since the range of
motion of the camera relative to the operator makes the camera's own viewfinder
unusable. In the film industry the armature and weight are traditionally called
the sled, as the two units combined resembled a sled in an early model of the
Steadicam. The sled includes the top stage where the camera is attached, the
post which in most models can be extended, with the monitor and batteries at
the bottom to counterbalance the camera weight. This is how the Steadicam stays
upright, by simply making the bottom slightly heavier than the top, pivoting at
the gimbal. This leaves the center of gravity of the whole rig, however heavy
it may be, exactly at the operator's fingertip, allowing deft and finite
control of the whole system with the lightest of touches on the gimbal. The
skill of the operator is to keep the desired framing and composition by feathering
his touch on the gimbal, while the rig and operator is in motion, and, indeed,
when still.
The combined weight of the counterbalance and camera means
that the armature bears a relatively high inertial mass which is not easily
moved by small body movements from the operator (much as it is difficult to
quickly shake a bowling ball). The freely pivoting armature adds additional
stabilization to the photographed image, and makes the weight of the
camera-sled assembly acceptable by allowing the body harness to support it.
When the armature is correctly adjusted, operators can
remove their hands from the Steadicam entirely and the camera stays in place.
During operation, the operator usually rests a hand on the camera gimbal and
applies force at that point to move the camera. To avoid shaking the camera
when lens adjustments are made, a wireless remote operated by the camera
assistant is used to control focus and iris.
For low-angle shots, the Steadicam sled can be inverted
vertically, putting the camera on the bottom, and the monitor and batteries on
the top. This is referred to as low mode operation.
The newest generation is the Tango. A body-supported
camera-stabilization-system, its horizontal mechanism makes it possible to move
the camera freely while staying horizontal. A Steadicam operator can change
from low mode to high mode without any alteration. Dimensions are not limited
to ups and downs, but also in depth and over or through obstacles.
The smallest, lightest Steadicam that can be used with a support
arm and vest is the Merlin. It is light enough to be hand held with cameras
weighing up to about 5.5 pounds (2.5 kg), and may carry cameras up to about 7
pounds (3.2 kg) when used with the arm. The Merlin may be folded and carried in
comparatively small spaces such as medium-size camera bags. In its lightest
configuration, the Merlin weighs just 12.5 ounces (0.35 kg). Photographers who
shoot with HDSLR cameras that combine still and motion photography most often
work with the Merlin. Since the Merlin has no facility to carry a separate
monitor, cameras suitable for it must have built-in monitors.
Steadicam introduced a camera mount for smartphones,
called the Smoothee, in 2012. Marketed to consumers instead of video
professionals, its tubular frame supports iPhone and Android phones that are
4.53" to 6.26" long by 2.32" to 3.27" wide (115 to 159 mm
long by 59 to 83 mm wide). An adapter can be used to fit a GoPro camera to it.
An even smaller, camera-specific Steadicam Curve (a single, curved aluminum
slash) is available for GoPro cameras. It is also marketed to consumers.
Sources,
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked
In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The
Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media Match, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily Variety, The Film
Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Production Hub, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Variety, Steadicam,
Tiffen,
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Steadicam
Pilot / Photo Credit: Steadicam - Lorne Lapham
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