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October 17, 2005
Phonecamming killed the viiiiiiiii-deo star








Here's the next phase-transition in modern media: MTV videos shot using mobile phones. Apparently a video director named Grant Marshall was carping about the incredibly stingy budgets of today's videos, which force him to shoot on cheaper and cheaper quality film. "Next," he complained, "they'll expect me to shoot on my phone." Then he thought: Hey -- cool idea.

Thus was born the video for "Some Postman", the latest single from the power-pop band The Presidents of the United States. Marshall took 12 Sony Ericsson K750i phones and mounted them on tripods while the band played through its song 30 times in a row. But that was only the beginning of the tribulations of dealing with such a gnarly, lo-fi recording technology, as The Seattle Times reports:

The resolution on cellphones is equivalent to 1/3000 of the quality of normal video, Marshall said. [snip]

And although the manufacturer promised that they'd record 15 frames per second, they only did 10.

To overcome this limitation, the band performed at half time. Editors later sped the footage back up.

After Marshall was done, he used bluetooth to extract the video to his Mac editing suite. Though it was obviously a big hassle to produce, the resulting aesthetic is pretty cool: Marshall took advantage of the tight focus of the shots to layer images inside of one another. If you want to see the video, the original is here, and my friend Andrew has archived a less-jerky copy here. But it got me wondering: This can't be the first time someone has done this. Has anyone else ever seen a phonecam-shot video before?


(Thanks to Andrew Hearst for this one!)

Posted by Clive Thompson at October 17, 2005 04:25 PM

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Comments

On october 7-8-9 there was a Festival of films made on phones held in Paris. There was some good moments, but lets say we're still technically on the early stages...

The use of a phonecam mainly justifies itself to capture instants and to film unobtrusively, sometimes in places where cameras are not allowed. Apart from that, there's still the problem of having something to say -- and many don't, with a phonecam or else :)

More info there:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4314894.stm
and the official website (in french):
http://www.festivalpocketfilms.fr/

Posted by: gemp [TypeKey Profile Page] at October 18, 2005 7:22 AM

Ah, great links! Thanks!

Excellent point about how the phonecam's inherent bias is towards capturing images we normally wouldn't bother to haul out a camera and capture. But this is what intrigues me when I see its use in other, more "planned" situations, because it indicates that the phonecam aesthetic has become sufficiently well-defined that artists want to experiment with it in other genres. It reminds me of the art-scene film-makers who resuscitated the Fisher Price toy Pixelvision camera -- which recorded wildly low-fi black-and-white movies onto regular cassette tapes (!) -- and produced really demented but lovely movies with it.

Posted by: Clive [TypeKey Profile Page] at October 18, 2005 11:04 AM

the sad song wasn't created on a phonecam, but has a similar aesthetic "using 15 second jpg movies from my little Nikon Coolpix 775 still camera, reconstructed in AfterEffects." great song too :D cheers!

Posted by: kenny [TypeKey Profile Page] at October 20, 2005 1:24 AM

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