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-   -   Slowmotion Video/audio Norm Speed (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/jvc-gy-hd-series-camera-systems/69804-slowmotion-video-audio-norm-speed.html)

Manny Rodriguez June 19th, 2006 12:45 AM

Slowmotion Video/audio Norm Speed
 
Just wanted to ask if anyone shot a music video with the HD100, Achieving RECORDING some of the video in slow motion, but the artis sings at norm speed, thus slowing down the moment as the artist sings. Can this be achieved withe HD100?

Les Howarth June 19th, 2006 04:43 AM

Slowmo but normal sounding audio
 
To achieve the effect requires two things.

1) You need to overcrank the camera when shooting

2) The performer must lipsynch to a playback that is also running at an equivalent higher than normal speed.

So-
If you are Shooting 50fps (or 60 for NTSC zone) the music playback must be at double speed. You can make a double speed version your song in most audio editing software.

On the HD100
You would shoot at 50 or 60 fps by using either the "SDHD" mode or via the component output.

Getting the performance right with the speeded up audio playback will probably take a bit of practice. - Singing at double speed can't be easy ;)

Les Howarth

Stephen Knapp June 19th, 2006 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Manny Rodriguez
Just wanted to ask if anyone shot a music video with the HD100, Achieving RECORDING some of the video in slow motion, but the artis sings at norm speed, thus slowing down the moment as the artist sings. Can this be achieved withe HD100?


Maybe I don't understand the effect you are trying to achieve. You want the audio of the song to progress at normal speed and pitch while the video images come at you in slow motion. A couple of things come to mind.


1. The artist continues to move at "normal" speed but the background is slowed.
That I think you would chroma key. Shoot the background separately at a higher speed than you use for your shots of the singer in front of a green screen.

2. The artist slows with the background.
Les's suggestion of shooting the artist lip synching to a speeded up playback will give you lipsynching, but on final playback the lip movements won't appear to be in slow motion. They can't, either, if the lips have to stay in synch. So if the performer is walking down a street in slow motion, the coordination of body movements and lip movements will appear unnatural. But as you try to move the rest of the body into coordinated speed through performance, you approach number 1.

Either way, the HD100 can get you there, since it gives you a few shooting speeds.

Manny Rodriguez June 19th, 2006 09:08 AM

The effect I am trying to do is where the video is in slow motion but the music is not,of course, It's used in some Music video, I'll try to link an example later on today, But I think the way you do it is the way Les said...

Daniel Patton June 19th, 2006 09:21 AM

Manny, Les hit it on the nose, that's exactly the way.

It's funny you have come up with this idea, it's one that I have been throwing around with a local artist, one that we but together a video for last year.

I wanted to do it in one long single take with no cuts, but am starting to see the nightmare of doing it that way. However, if you did it with cuts then the artist might not look so rushed at places in the song with a lot of lyrics. More cuts also give you time to move the camera for better and more dramatic looks. My version was going to have his girlfriend in the background throughout trashing the place like a human tornado (constant throwing of glass with beautiful crashes and shatters in the background), while the whole time he is indifferent and moves around the place, as if she was not even there.

I would like to hear what you had in mind.

Stephan Ahonen June 19th, 2006 04:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stephen Knapp
2. The artist slows with the background.
Les's suggestion of shooting the artist lip synching to a speeded up playback will give you lipsynching, but on final playback the lip movements won't appear to be in slow motion. They can't, either, if the lips have to stay in synch. So if the performer is walking down a street in slow motion, the coordination of body movements and lip movements will appear unnatural.

That's rather the point. Check out this music video from a local band: http://www.12rods.com/packages/video...ersonality.mp4

It was shot at three speeds, undercranked, normal, and overcranked, with the lip sync track played at matching speeds. I think having all the different speds right next to each other kind of illustrates the kind of effects you can get.

Manny Rodriguez June 20th, 2006 12:01 AM

Hey Stehan I tried looking at that footage, but could not, I get lots of text codes, but no video. What format is the link? I use Mac/G5

Stephan Ahonen June 20th, 2006 12:21 AM

It's probably a problem with the server sending out the wrong MIME type. Windows tends to ignore MIME types and looks at the extension to determine a file type, while Macs are pretty much completely the opposite. If there's a way you can manually save the file to disk and open in Quicktime you should be good. It's just standard MPEG-4 video.

Manny Rodriguez June 20th, 2006 08:41 AM

no Luck shuks... I really wanted to see the footage....

Daniel Patton June 20th, 2006 08:44 AM

Rename to MPG?

Stephen Knapp June 20th, 2006 10:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Manny Rodriguez
no Luck shuks... I really wanted to see the footage....


VideoLan has a cross platform video player called VLC. Someone else suggested it to me in the Cineform section of DVInfo because I was having trouble running mp4 and m2t files on my system. It is available for Macs, and this link should take you to the page where you can download the Mac version.

http://www.videolan.org/vlc/

It worked for me for both file types.

Manny Rodriguez June 20th, 2006 10:37 PM

Thanks Stephen, I was able to see the footage

Stephan Ahonen June 21st, 2006 04:07 AM

Aha, I use VLC for everything I want to watch but didn't know they had a Mac version. Silly me.

Nima Taheri June 21st, 2006 08:04 AM

Manny: by slow motion, do you actually mean 50%? I think usually you can slow down the footage by a few %, and still get that slow feel to it. Unless you are trying to get a special effect with 50%... then you pitch the playback faster with the same % during the takes, and try to have the singer synclip to that. I haven't tried it, but I think that will give a decent effect, instead doing 50%. Anyone actually tried this with the hd100?

or you could just rent a varicam:)

John Mitchell June 21st, 2006 08:17 AM

This is a common technique in music video, although you are ususally not after a full 50% slo-mo. On film you might typically overcrank at 30 -36fps (for 24/25p playback) and speed up your music track to match. Generally you use a timecoded CD or DAT for playback, so you can have code on a clapper for each scene to facilitate post. You can't do that on the JVC, but you could still shoot at 50/60fps and do fantastic slomos in post anywhere between normal speed and 50% speed by using software.
Slowing down by 50% is more obvious but does have it's place, but usually not for lipsync.


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