Super 8 Gripping: one example of a DIY car mount

Forum covering all aspects of small gauge cinematography! This is the main discussion forum.

Moderator: Andreas Wideroe

User avatar
audadvnc
Senior member
Posts: 2079
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 11:15 pm
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Contact:

Post by audadvnc »

We were un safe but the shot looks good.
Like every other forgettable car commercial of 3 years ago...
Shouldn't we have as much fun doing this job as we can and not take ourselves too seriously. What do you care if I fell off the front of that truck and my actor drove overtop of me.
What if I were the actor?
-if your gonna go, might as well go out shooting.-
The Clem and Clem supporter posts on that site are all quite obviously written by single hormonal 20-something types that have never been in a serious accident. These types expect to live forever. Unfortunately, it ain't so, and even if they don't get killed pulling some stupid stunt like riding on the front of a moving automobile, they are putting their production companies and clients at risk of civil and criminal prosecution for reckless endangerment.

I wonder how the "balls out" posters would have responded if the cameraman fell off.

Kids, listen to your elders. Don't be stupid. Safety is truly #1.
Robert Hughes
narri
Posts: 25
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2006 5:40 pm
Contact:

Post by narri »

Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image

Here's some exposure stills from the short film we shot last weekend. Everything went smoothly and I'm fairly happy with the results. There's one picture of the mount as well, I attached it with some very heavy fishing line to make sure it stays on the car. It was rock-steady and I can't wait to see the actual footage.

Thank you all for contributing. Now I'm just wondering if I should push process one of the 500T cartridges.

Mikael.
Pj
Posts: 309
Joined: Fri Nov 28, 2003 12:52 am
Real name: Pavan Deep Singh
Location: England
Contact:

grip

Post by Pj »

I came accross this,

http://www.hama.co.uk/portal/articleId* ... pg#picture


I think it would work for most Super 8 cameras, has anyone used one?

PJ
Evan Kubota
Senior member
Posts: 2565
Joined: Sun Apr 03, 2005 9:04 am
Location: FL
Contact:

Post by Evan Kubota »

Great looking locations and cool car - I love Mercedes convertibles. What's the story of the film? Is it a period piece?
narri
Posts: 25
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2006 5:40 pm
Contact:

Post by narri »

Thanks Evan. We really put some effort on the choice of locations, and it's good to hear that it pays off.

The film is more or less a homage to old monster movies from the 50´s(usually with a swamp theme). It's conciously clumsy and maybe a bit naive. The script includes a young couple, a dark forest and a monster. You can probably figure out the rest. It's period, dating somewhere around 1974(that's when the car was built).

We deliberately went for a simple approach for our first super 8 film, we wanted to test out the format before putting too much money on something we we're unsure of. Nevertheless, the budget grew to quite big proportions. I'm paying something around 1500€ for the whole production. We're trying to sell it to some tv-programs to cover the costs.

Thanks for the feedback and the interest.
Mikael
Post Reply