Showing posts with label Canon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canon. Show all posts

Mar 25, 2013

ROGUE'S BAJA 1000 PROJECT IS WRAPPED











Back in October and November we were working on a hush-hush project for Rogue Fitness.  It started when Steve Sanders, a SEAL in the US Navy, wanted to go back to his childhood roots of riding dirt bikes.  But it wasn't a short cruise through the desert or hills in California, it was the legendary Baja 1000 he had his sights set on.  Rogue commissioned the documentary and off we went.

There were three main locations for this shoot; California, Nevada and of course Baja, Mexico.  We kept the film crew lean at the beginning as as the story begun to unfold, we increased the crew. Initially, on the first location, it was just Steve and I in California.  We then brought on James Masters as a producer.  James had spent nearly a decade filming and following the Baja 1000.  While James and a few production assistants were doing preproduction work during the race week, Tim, Nate and myself were in a helicopter in Nevada filming final bike prep and testing with Steve, Bill Witt, Ryan Sanders and crew.

Most of this film was shot on the Panasonic AF100 with GoPro footage for POV (point of view) and other pepper footage.  Once the race week arrived we beefed up our camera options with a wide variety of cameras.  The diversity of tech is almost comical.  We had 1 RED EPIC, 2 AF100s, 1 Panasonic GH2, 1 Canon 7D, 1 Canon 5DmkIII, 7 GoPro Hero2s and 2 iPhone 5s.

Here's the breakdown of race week.  Bret was stationed at Ensenada, Mexico--the starting line--with a 5DmkIII.  Down south we had three chase teams with a driver and a shooter.  And those teams played leapfrog down the peninsula.  We embedded Tim with Steve's chase crew and James and I shadowed them to sixty miles outside of La Paz.  Brandt, Lynden, Jon and Nate were our other two units.

After a twenty plus minute delay at the pit, Steve got on the bike at 20:00 and started his first leg of two hundred and thirty miles in the dead of night.  Steve and Bill traded the bike three times and Bill rode it to the finish.  Twenty-eight hours after the race started, and one thousand, one hundred and fifty miles later, Steve and the team finished the Baja 1000 fourth in their class. And as Steve put it, "Not bad for the first time."

If you haven't watched the series I strongly recommend it and not just because we made it.  It is really fascinating how much work goes into this race and how fast it is over.  For Steve, the question of what lights to use was a big deal since he would be spending most of his bike time in the dark.  A dark so dark people say it eats light.  They went with Rigid Industries LED lights and half way through the race Steve was completely stoked on how great they worked.

GoPro just released a new video that was shot entirely on the Hero3.  Their film complimented ours well because it focused on trophy truck driver Bryce Menzies ride during his first six hundred miles of the race and then flashes forward to the finish line. Ours focused on Steve in San Ignacio, which picked at mile six hundred and fifty.

If you watch in Steve vs Baja 1000 Episode 4 you'll see their truck narrowly miss Steve from non other than a GoPro we had mounted on Steve's helmet.  Watch for it at 7:29.  You can hear their siren screaming as they go tearing by.

We want to thank everyone who worked on this project.  A huge thanks to Rogue Fitness and their passion to not only building the best, American Made fitness equipment, but to documenting the lifestyles of the athletes they support. A big thanks to Ryan Arciero and Larry Roeseler from Team Herbst, the film units comprised of Todd, Nate, Lynden, Tim, James, Bret, Joh, Brandt, Chris and the two random guys that rode along. And thanks to Score International for putting on such a grueling race.

We've embedded the four Steve vs Baja 1000 episodes here and included GoPro's video that shows the first half of the race.  Let me just say we love how they just let the video live and breath during the race without any music over it.





Jul 22, 2011

Wrapped Filming FIrst Episode Of A New TV Series: Just Serve




FACT: Seattle, Washington Is One Of My New Favorite Places.

I've been in Seattle, Washington for the past week filming the first episode of a new tv show called Just Serve.  The premiss is three strangers come together and provide random acts of service for more strangers.  I'm not sure how much I can disclose of the episode at this point so I'll leave you wondering and wanting more.  Stay tuned, expected air date is October.

I've been working with Tim Irwin, Ethan Vincent, Adam Able of GoFilms, Nathan Lee, Erich Cannon and Kristi Schimek.  A super stellar crew and I love each of their faces with all my heart.  Ethan, sadly, is moving his family to Vienna, Austria in August so this will be the last project with him for the next few months until he gets them all settled.  I will most definitely be going to visit.  That city enchants me.

We've been shooting on three AF100s with a  mix of Nikon, Canon, Pentax, Lumix and ... what other lens do you have Tim?  Ethan has been shooting on Extreme II (or something like that) SD cards with a bit rate of 48/sec - ish.  Tim and I have Panasonic Gold at 22/sec.  We've found out that the faster bit rate increases card format time by A LOT.  We're talking 5 seconds vs. 50+ seconds.  Even though the AF100 doesn't need that kind of speed when shooting, it sure pays off on the post side.  I'll need to run tests and see if they faster bit rate cards actually offload footy faster too.

I'm now at the Sea Tac Airport waiting to fly to Portland, Oregon for some NASCAR filming with Patrick Wier until monday afternoon.  Then fly home, wash clothes and fly to California wednesday for the 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games.  I leave straight from there to North Carolina on a redeye to film the second episode of Just Serve.  ...a little busy, but it's great.

Thanks for the awesome week everyone.  See you all in NC.

Mar 22, 2011

Christchurch Earthquake Stopped Moving the Ground, But Not The People

This has been a great shoot thus far and as put by Curt Dahl, quite the frat boy trip.  I laughed and agreed with him and then remembered one key element to this frat boy gallivanting...I'm the only single frat boy.  That said, there has been much talk of why I'm single and how to resolve that...issue.  I'll spare you on the ideas as I'm sure you've already suggested at least one of them to me.

That said, it really has been a fun and we've had some incredible days of shooting.  Paora in Christchurch was awesome and his family is just stellar.  The earthquake has certainly had an effect on the city as seen by many brick and mortar walls leaning -- supported by two-by-four structures -- while others lie in heaps on the sidewalk.  At first glance you'd think the city has a serious construction problem with roads blocked off or dug up, bridges closed and under repair, buildings too.  Then you see the true impact... We were searching for a Thai restaurant to eat at and as we followed the GPS we noticed buildings that had chunks of them missing and lying in the street, holes in the street where water mains had broken and then we arrived at the restaurant.  It was about six feet high and resembled an imploded building of bricks and splintered wood.  The water is still not drinkable as it has been contaminated from broken sewer pipes, gas tanks and who know what else.  And strangely, other parts of town seemed completely unaffected.

We've been in Wellington now for a few days and the portraits are just great.  Things just keep going great and I'm looking forward to more.


We shot some great stuff with Paora as he ran his basketball clinic, got his 3 boys ready for school and everything else.  We ended with him at the club pool and gym doing his workout.  Fun stuff.

Below are some freeze frames from some of the portraits.