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No one's going to get hurt if they actually know martial arts, and they will be able to perform it at a decent speed. I'd shoot it at something like 22fps to give it that extra zing.
I'm thinking you should also shoot with a higher than normal shutter speed (since it will be high action)....maybe about 1/120 or 1/250 shutter.
Thanks. I'm not really concerned with the shutter speed. My camera has the cine mode which is what I intend to use. I let the camera choose the shutter speed for me as long as it gives crisp pictures :happy:
You know...that freaked me out a few years ago when I learned that she was only a dancer. Here I was bragging about how she is probably the best female kung fu fighter I have ever seen in films....so convincing. I'm sure that would be an easy transition for her. But yeah...practice, practice practice ...not only with the fighters but also with the camera angles.Ziyi Zhang is a great example of a non-fighter in fighting movies.
"Even though she has been in many kung-fu movies, she is not actually a trained martial artist, so in fact she uses many dance moves in her fight sequences." ~IMDB
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0955471/
Your actors need to rehearse , rehearse , rehearse. Oh did I mention rehearse. Since they don't already have a martial arts background it become even more important for then for two main reasons.
1) Safety. Having one of your actor hurt another actor accidentally will not help production
2) production value. Nothing lowers production value on a fight scene then sloppy choreography
if you pick the right camera angles, you can make it look like the actors are hitting each other even though there is a safe distance between them. i would tape the rehearsals and storyboard a lot. make sure to get lots of coverage! good luck.
Ziyi Zhang is a great example of a non-fighter in fighting movies.
"Even though she has been in many kung-fu movies, she is not actually a trained martial artist, so in fact she uses many dance moves in her fight sequences." ~IMDB
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0955471/
No not really. Not in terms of general shooting. There are plently of high action,high speed shutter, footage floating around that shows otherwise. Sometimes a shot might call you to jerk your pan around quickly...it's in situations like those you might have a visual problem. But I tend to stay away from shots like those with my HV20.Your HV20's rolling shutter CMOS may have some issues with roundhouse kicks and just motion in general.
Your HV20's rolling shutter CMOS may have some issues with roundhouse kicks and just motion in general.
Well, you have to work with what you've got. I have a black belt in Tae kwon Do, and the beauty of choreographing real martial artists is that they can get much closer to each other with their blows and still be safe.
As a matter of fact, in my case I could spar with another TKD black belt and actually LAND the kicks and punches and it would all be controlled. This really ups the realism because the less your fighters know, the further apart they will be and thus you will be locked into certain shots (like the over the shoulder John Wayne Punch) instead of capturing what amounts to real fighting.
Get your actors to practice and it should look plausible.