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Hi All

I hope this is the right forum to post this question..? How do the team from BBC's 'Planet Earth' achieve those stunning - super steady aireal shots. I recall the episode with the polar bear swimming for miles out into the ocean, and walking over iced landscapes, with the framing starting on a full shot, and then zooming out to reveal the bears as specs on the infinite frozen background. On some of the other episodes, the animals do not seem to be too bothered on whatever they use to fly the camera...

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Check out the making of from Le Peuple Migratoire, sorry, I do not have the name in english, you will find it easily though. Tierry Machado was the Dp on this. They used a deltaplane with a small propeller engine at the back which they are not using all the time. It is very light, very silent, but usually the birds you see from that close flying are trained animals.

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Hi All

I hope this is the right forum to post this question..? How do the team from BBC's 'Planet Earth' achieve those stunning - super steady aireal shots. I recall the episode with the polar bear swimming for miles out into the ocean, and walking over iced landscapes, with the framing starting on a full shot, and then zooming out to reveal the bears as specs on the infinite frozen background. On some of the other episodes, the animals do not seem to be too bothered on whatever they use to fly the camera...

 

Hot air balloons!

Edited by David Akinde
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Guest Tim Partridge
I recall the episode with the polar bear swimming for miles out into the ocean, and walking over iced landscapes, with the framing starting on a full shot, and then zooming out to reveal the bears as specs on the infinite frozen background. On some of the other episodes, the animals do not seem to be too bothered on whatever they use to fly the camera...

 

They are probably more concerned about the global warming. ;)

 

I've not seen the show and what you describe sounds like typical high-end aerial photography, but a cameraman who works on the show told me they do quite a bit of bluescreen.

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  • 1 year later...
I am guessing it was probably a helicopter with some form of stabilization.

 

 

Hi

 

They used a wescam mount which is standard for areal photography but attached a 40x Canon Zoom lens with the 2x extender. I saw the film last week and was amazed how steady it was. I have used the 40x a few times and especilly with the extender on, if you just breathed at the lens it would shake. So it's really amazing footage they could get. They flew the helicopter with the wescam rig around the world to film whereever they needed it. They were shootong for 4 years! The budget by the way was 47Million? for the 13 episodes and the feature length version. So they really had the budget to do it right.

 

What I am interested in is how they did the timelaps of a landscape scenery where the vegetation is going through 4 seasons. They do it again and again on different locations I want to know what technique hey used. I am guessing a 35mm still camera on a rotating base plate attached to a computer or something. But I would like to know it excatly if anybody knows.

Best

Richard

www.richardladkani.com

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They used a combination of Hot air balloons (not super successful and pretty dangerous!), and Gyro stablized mount under the nose of the helicopter. The pilot hat a monitor, so does the DP and the producer, along with controls for the zoom...etc The zooms are allowing them to get 1 1/2 miles away. This came in handy for the wild dogs shoot. If you can, buy the DVD set and check out the making of. Really great stuff.

 

jamie

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Hi!!

 

i think is a hot air ballon. why? if you see planet earth bbc show you will find that when the zoom lens goes wider the shot is taken at a big big height. theres a shot that camera is following a polar bear in a "close" shot, camera start to open until we have an amazing extra panoramic full full shot where the polar bear is just a litlle thing. please rent or buy that dvd boz, is amazing!!!!

 

bye!!

G.T

 

 

 

Hi All

I hope this is the right forum to post this question..? How do the team from BBC's 'Planet Earth' achieve those stunning - super steady aireal shots. I recall the episode with the polar bear swimming for miles out into the ocean, and walking over iced landscapes, with the framing starting on a full shot, and then zooming out to reveal the bears as specs on the infinite frozen background. On some of the other episodes, the animals do not seem to be too bothered on whatever they use to fly the camera...

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What I am interested in is how they did the timelaps of a landscape scenery where the vegetation is going through 4 seasons. They do it again and again on different locations I want to know what technique hey used. I am guessing a 35mm still camera on a rotating base plate attached to a computer or something. But I would like to know it excatly if anybody knows.

 

I haven't seen the shots your referring to so I don't actually know the answer to your question, but there was a commercial on TV here which did a lengthy timelapse sequence - shot over a year next to a river in the country to get the change in seasons.

 

They built a concrete base to mount the camera on out on location. Every time they needed to take a new shot they'd carry the camera out to the location, line it up on the mount, take the shot and then take the camera away again. They used a static shot, but I'm sure you could do a pan or tilt by making incrementally adjustments each time (require a bit more lining up and adjusting though).

 

Actually now that I think about it, they shot one second clips which they transitioned between. Created a very natural looking shot that didn't look sped up, even through the seasons changed though out the shot.

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  • 11 months later...

Some of those timelapse vegetation shots look like comps to me with foreground elements being shot separately. There wouldn't be any need for a robotic head (on these timelapse shots) because hi res stills would offer enough of a canvas to track around.

I doubt they used Hot air balloons over a polar bear infested Arctic ocean! For some reason I thought they used the Cineflex system www.cineflex.com but I could be wrong. I haven't watched the making of. In a similar vein how did they shoot or create the space shots of earth for the series? Are they stitched or entirely fake.

Great series.

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