Stuff You Should Know - Selects: How Steadicams Work
Episode Date: June 18, 2022There have been many inventions that have advanced filmmaking, but maybe none as important as the steadicam. Invented in the mid-70s, it literally changed the way movie making happened, and made the i...mpossible possible. Learn about the fascinating history behind this amazing technology, in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hey, everybody, it's your silly pal
Josh. And for this week's select, I've chosen our episode on steady cams. What with it being the
beginning of the summer blockbuster movie season? I figured that the chances you want to know how
movies are made have gone through the roof. So I'm here to satisfy your curiosity with, like I said,
our steady cams episode. Enjoy. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant, Jerry's over
there. Chuck's wearing a hat. So it's stuff you should know. Yeah. He's still, still pretty sad.
Yeah. Are you really? Sure. All right, Pete. You know what? I'm getting the,
Josh is referencing my last chance garage hat that I've talked way too much about.
I'm getting the patch remade as we speak. Whoa. I actually found one in eBay that had been sold
three months ago. It's all a big conspiracy. Is that right? No, no, not really. Okay. But I found
a picture of the patch that I sent to a patchmaker who like can digitally reproduce this thing.
Nice, man. Well, then I got to find the right hat. It's coming back home. Well, that's step one.
That's a big step one. Yeah, I'm getting a few patches and a few hats this time. I think that's
a good idea. Yeah. You can name them one through eight. That's right. Let's see, Chuck. You worked
in the film industry previously. Yeah. So did you technically? Yeah. You did more than I did
by far. You worked in front of and behind the camera. That's right. Did you ever work with
a steady cam at all? Yeah. So like you've seen these things up close. Yep. I don't recall Scott
or anybody using one. We did not have one on our show. Okay. They're expensive. Okay. But I mean,
there was some pretty good equipment on set, it seemed like to me. Sure. But there was no steady
cam, right? Nope. Because I was trying to recall and I could not for the life of me remember a
moment when there was an awesome like extendo arm camera with like all of the components
exploded out in the different parts of a pole. That didn't happen because he would have walked in
and said, what's that? Right. And everyone would have laughed and you would have been like,
why does everyone make fun of me just because I don't know all this stuff? I'll be in my dressing room.
No, we never use one on our TV show for Science Channel because like I said, it's pricey to rent
and this is a bit of a giveaway, but a person, a steady cam operator, comes with the package.
Right. With all the equipment. It's a lot of times their own and it's pricey to pay for that lady
or that dude. Right. But the reason it is pricey is because it has a really good effect. Yeah.
And the person who's doing it really knows what they're doing. Yeah. I don't know, but just from
researching this, it seemed like they were probably the most skilled tradesperson on the set at any
given time when they were on the set. Is that right? Well, I think it's just a matter of what skill.
It's just a different skill. Are they like the highest echelon of camera operators?
No, it's just different. Okay. Like a top notch. They're niche. Yeah. Okay, I got it then. But you
don't just wade into steady cam and start getting work the next day. It does take a lot of work
to master, but like a good dolly grip is just as skilled at just pushing that thing around,
but that takes a very nonherky jerky. Well, it's not going to be herky jerky anyway, but just
to hit the marks, right? And oh, I see. Yeah. I mean, all that stuff takes a great amount of skill.
Well, let's talk about this because steady cam, you know, when I came of age,
was already invented. It was basically became commercially available the year I was born.
So I don't really know a world prior to steady camp. I've never seen a movie that came up before
1976. Funny. And I'm just used to it, right? Yeah. But it's interesting to look back and
see that there actually is a point in time where this one dude who was actually kind of an outsider
of the movie business basically changed it permanently forever. For sure. Yeah. His name
was Garrett Brown. Is Garrett Brown? Yeah, he's still around, right? Yeah. And he was working
for, well, he was working in TV commercials on Sesame Street in Philadelphia. Yeah. And
he got a little frustrated, as camera people do, pre-steady cam, with not being able to
accomplish certain shots. Yeah. There's supposedly there were 30 impossible shots
that just based on the equipment of the day, you just couldn't do, right? Yeah. And a lot of it
had to do with rough terrain. Sure. Staircases were a big one. Yeah. And the reason these shots
were impossible, it's not like you couldn't lug a camera around up and down the stairs.
But the movement that the camera recorded would be so jarring that it would render the film
that it would be unusable. Yeah. And this was in a day before, I mean, there were shaky cam shots
and like Cassavetes and all these early indie filmmakers did a lot of avant-garde handheld
stuff, but it was known as avant-garde because it looked different and people were used to kind
of smoother looking things in mainstream movies at the time. Yeah. It had like a real frenetic
energy to it. Yeah, which you see all the time now. It's like a bona fide thing. But it wasn't
just like picking up the movements of the camera, it was like telegraphing them as far as the human
brain's concerned, because we take it for granted, but we have in our own brains a pretty complex
system that involves the inner ear coordinating with the movement of the retina so that it offsets
the movement and the motion and the jarring impact of just walking. Yeah. Like if we didn't have that,
we wouldn't be able to focus on anything while we were moving around. Yeah, people wouldn't jog,
they would get sick and vomit every time they jog. Exactly right. And you certainly wouldn't be able
to read Us Magazine while you were jogging or something like that. The fact that you can, it really
shows how incredibly complex and well-developed the system is, right? Yes. That's what the
steadicam that Garrett Brown created sought to recreate, and he did it. He nailed it on the
first time out, basically. Yeah, because we mentioned Adali. That is people that know film,
know this stuff, is pretty rudimentary information, but a lot of people don't know what Adali is,
and they see the word Dolly Grip in a movie. They just think it sounds funny,
but the Dolly is how you typically would get a smooth shot. It's just a big,
super, super heavy sled with wheels that the camera sits on, and the camera operator sits on,
and it's either on a very smooth floor, it's on a piece of track like a little railroad car,
and it pushes along, and that's how you get those nice smooth shots. Right. So that's a Dolly. The
problem with the Dolly is you can't really lay that track over a rocky terrain if you're filming
on Mars or something like that. No, and like you said, you can't push it up and down stairs. It
just had its limitations. Right, it did. So, Garrett Brown said, I'm sick of these limitations.
I'm so tired of being limited by Dolly, stupid Dollies. I'm going to invent something better,
and so he tinkered around with what was called the Brown Stabilizer at first,
which he later renamed to the Steady Cam, and to show off, like at first he was just using
them in commercials, and he was like, this is way bigger than just commercials. I'm going to
make a sizzle reel, and he made a sizzle reel of the 30 Impossible Shots that you just couldn't do
before, and he did it with the Steady Cam, but he didn't show how it was done. Yeah, and you can,
he was able to save 10 of those shots and digitize them, and a couple of years ago,
he finally released online 10 of those, so you can actually go see this original reel and see
his wife and his best friend just doing stuff. Just doing stuff. One of them was swimming.
You can't run alongside somebody swimming apparently was an impossible shot. I'm not
quite sure why. Well, you just couldn't run alongside someone doing anything. Oh, okay,
that's what it was, even with a dolly? Well, no, you could have laid dolly track down the
length of a swimming pool, sure. Right, that's why I didn't understand that one was an impossible
shot, but to show off, he goes around a slide just to kind of show. Maybe that was the impossibility
of it. But then his buddy gets out of the pool and like he pivots around him, and I'm sure
he, when he put this reel together and he sent it out, the directors are like, this is magic
sorcery? Well, it was mind-blowing, and some people say it was the first viral video because
it was shared around Hollywood literally in a matter of days. Everybody in Hollywood was saying,
what in the world, like you said, what is this sorcery? This Garrett Brown has bestowed upon
us. Yeah, it was a bit of a mic drop as far as the reel goes. And Stanley Kubrick, being Stanley
Kubrick, sent a message to Garrett Brown that said, if you are really concerned about protecting
its design before you fully patent it, I suggest you delete the two occasions on the reel where
the shadow on the ground gives the skilled counterintelligence photo interpreter a fairly
clear representation of a man holding a pole with one hand with something or other at the
bottom of the pole, which appears to be slowly moving. All of that is Stanley Kubrickian for,
hey, there's a shadow in one of your shots of the steady cam op. Yeah, which was pretty cool
of him to do. Sure. Because I'm sure there were plenty of people in Hollywood who would have been
like, okay, I think I'd kind of get the idea of what this was, because there was no suggestion
whatsoever of what Garrett Brown had used to get these shots, except in those shadows. So
he went and went and immediately cut those, I think, 14 seconds out of his reel,
and then released the second edition. And it looked pretty good. I mean, it's
rough compared to today's standard. Sure. But for the time, it was like unbelievable.
Right. It changed everything. Oh, yeah. And one of the shots that he got was his wife,
Ellen. He said, dear, why don't you put on your most 70s bell bottoms you can find.
Yeah. And I'm going to run up behind you as you run up the steps to the Philadelphia Museum of
Art. And maybe when you get to the top, you can raise your hands in triumph, and I will spin
around you. And if that shot sounds familiar, it actually attracted a guy, a director named John,
what is it, Avelson? Yeah, John G. Avelson, who said, I like this. I'm going to use it in this
little film I'm directing called Rocky. Yeah. And I didn't get whether or not this was the
case, but did they locate Rocky in Philadelphia because of those steps?
No. Because he said, how did you do that? And where are those steps?
I don't think so, man, because I wondered that too. Like, did he not have a scene written where
Rocky just runs up those steps? Right. I mean, Stallone wrote it.
Right. I think they added that. We'll just have to ask him. Okay. Hey, Sly.
I was wondering if you could do it. That was pretty good.
I answered in that little moment. You'll, someone will have to interpret that.
Great movie though, man. I rewatched that. Rocky? Yeah, like this year,
from beginning to end, just phenomenal movie. Yeah. I'm trying to get Emily to watch it.
Has she never seen the original? No. It's its own thing for sure. Like, it's not
much like the sequel. It's not a boxing movie, really. It's a love story for the most part.
It's a love story and like the triumph of the little guy story for sure. Yeah. Featuring boxing.
Right. That's exactly right. Yeah. But two and three and on, onward, it's like a totally different
thing. Yeah, but those are good too. Yeah. They said, let's take your story,
take out the heart and insert cocaine instead. Insert Mr. T.
I don't get the cocaine reference. Oh, it's just the 80s and Hollywood
got their hands on it. Sure. You know what I mean? I got you.
Yeah, that's a good question though. I wonder about that if he, surely they didn't remake it
for Philadelphia just for that. Well, but the point is, is Garrett Brown created on this
sizzle reel, one of the most iconic shots in filmmaking history. For sure.
And he sent that reel out. And within that year, I believe 1976, three major motion pictures
hired him to operate his steady cam for it. There was Rocky. Yep. There was,
what was the one about Woody Guthrie? Bound for Glory. Yeah. I think that one came out first.
So that was the first actual like, and that one, the steady came up was Garrett Brown,
I think for all these, because he was the only guy that knew how he got a lot of work early on.
Yeah. And I think the Patton was still pending until 1977. So I'm sure he didn't let the thing
out of his sight. Everybody close your eyes while I shoot this. But on Bound for Glory, he was on
a crane even that lowered down, stepped off the crane. So people had seen crane shots, but then
for the crane to go down, down, down, and then all of a sudden start following this guy, everyone
was like, what in the world? Right. There would have been a cut after the crane stopped. And then
before, you know, they would have cut and he would have gotten in position and then started up again.
This is one smooth shot. One smooth shot. Yeah. And then the other one was Marathon Man.
So just right out of the blue, this guy who is a commercial director and made short films for
Sesame Street changed filmmaking like single handedly. Yeah. And won an Academy Award in 1978
for technical achievement. Got that patent in 77. And well, that's it. That's the history of the
Steadicam. That's it, everybody. Good night. But we're gonna, should we take a break and tell
everyone how this thing works? Let's do it, man. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise
or times get tough, or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever
think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so
with my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one.
Uh-huh. Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story
of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody everybody about my new podcast and make sure to
listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on
the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. All right, Chuck. So the
study camp, do you remember when we did our episode on breathalyzers? Oh boy, that was a long time ago.
And we found out that the breathalyzer is one of the most complicated machines
yeah on the planet. I kind of hated that one. Like there were crystals involved somehow.
Mm-hmm. I hated that one too. Dark crystals.
This is a bit like that. Like if you really dive into study cams like this article on how
stuff works does, it's labyrinthine. Talk about the dark crystal. We're talking labyrinth instead.
Yeah, but we're going to simplify it because you don't need to break this thing apart and
look at every component like this article does. I mean, it really gets involved.
What you should do is look at a picture of someone operating one.
Yeah. And just because when you look at it, you go, it all makes a lot more sense.
Right. And there's really just three main parts to the whole thing. There's a vest.
There's an arm that's attached to the vest. And then the other end of the arm is attached to
what's called the sled, which is what the camera and its components are mounted on, right?
Yeah. And that arm, I mean, just picture yourself wearing like a baby Bjorn baby carrier,
except for instead of the baby at your sternum, there's a mechanical arm coming out.
Like a spring arm lamp. Yeah. Like a accordion arm or a spring arm lamp.
Right. And it's virtually the same thing. Well, yeah. And guess who made one of these?
Who? By himself before they started making them for at home people.
Who? Casey? No. Who? My brother, of course. Oh, did he really? Yeah.
Yeah. My brother made one of these in like the early 90s. Did he really?
Out of door hinges and rubber bands and springs. Does he still have it?
Is it in the Smithsonian? I don't know. It's in the Scottsonian.
Nice. Which is where all his early inventions. With all his pinball machines.
Yeah. But he made one. He basically did the same thing. He looked at it and looked at these
swing arm lamps and accordion arm lamps. And it's like, well, it's the same thing.
I'll just make a version of that. It is. And it worked pretty good.
It's virtually the same thing. Yeah. So the whole point of a steady cam is that it basically
simulates or the arm at least simulates a human arm, right? To where it can move around very easily.
Yeah. And it redistributes the weight of the camera, which can be up to like 70 pounds.
I imagine probably more. Yeah. The whole unit is pretty heavy and it's not easy to operate.
But it holds it. It'll wear you out. It holds it effortlessly and it holds it in place.
This arm does. And it does it by using springs and you can adjust the tension of the springs
by using a cable and pulley system so that it offsets the balance of the camera and holds it
in space in front of the camera operator basically so that they can move it effortlessly up down
to the side. You can put the camera on top of the sled so that you get high shots. You can switch
it so it goes on the bottom so you can get low angle shots. Yeah. The traditional, it's called
high mode and low mode and high mode is, it doesn't mean it's high. It just means it's
on the top of the unit. And then low mode is when it's on the bottom. So if you wanted to film
a mouse running across the floor, you would put it in low mode. Right. If you want to film a human,
you'd put it in high mode. Yeah. And the camera itself is broken out into pieces,
which is kind of an ingenious trick that I guess Garrett Brown came up with himself.
I think he did. And this is the third part, the camera sled, right?
Yes. The sled is what holds all the equipment. Right. And it's basically a pole with a little
bit at the top called the stage. Yeah. And that's where the camera goes or it could be at the bottom
wherever the camera is. Sure. The camera is mounted to the stage. Yes. Then you get the pole itself
and then the, I guess the arm is connected to the pole by a gimbal. A gimbal. A gimbal, that's
right. And that's like an old technology. It's basically something that uses basically a gyroscopic
action to take the movement of whatever is seeking to move whatever you want to hold still and
getting rid of it. Yeah. Like everything around it moves except for the thing that you want to
hold still. Yeah, it's pretty neat. It's super neat. And that's just the one arm that's connected
to the pole. Yes. So you can see how complicated this thing is. This guy sat back and I think in
a hotel room somewhere he put it together, Garrett Brown, the first one. There's just the ingenuity
it took to put this together. It's pretty in depth as far as inventions go. Yeah. And there's a
little science to it. There's something called moment of inertia. It's basically how much that
camera is resistant to rotation. So if you want the camera to be still, you want to increase that
resistance to the rotation. And this is determined by a couple of different things. How much mass
there is to the object and how far that mass is from its own axis of rotation. So by spreading
the camera out, he basically took the little, you know, cameras come with a monitor now so you
can see what's going on. Right. And a big heavy battery. Yeah. He took the monitor off of the
camera. He took the battery off of the camera and redistributed that up and down the pole.
So what he ended up doing was spreading out that mass which takes away the center of gravity
from the camera itself. Yeah. Because like with a regular camera where all the components are in
one single unit, that center of gravity is inside the camera. Yeah. So it's easy to rotate. But
since he exploded it out into its various components, he made that center of gravity land
somewhere on the pole. Right. And the gimbal attaches to the pole just above the center of
gravity so that the camera operator holds the pole and manipulates the camera at the center
of gravity which makes it very easy to balance, keep balance. Yeah. And they do a good job in
this article if you'd like just take a broomstick and you find that center of gravity with your
finger, you can hold it with your finger and lift it up and down. Right. And it's just,
it's balanced on your finger because you're hitting that center of balance. That's right.
It's the same principle. Yeah. And in fact, if you took, if you took that same broomstick and
cut it off and you just had three feet of broomstick and just took your SLR camera and screwed that
broomstick into the bottom of your camera instead of a tripod, that would function, you could walk
around with that and it would be steadier than if you just had it in your hand. Oh, I could see that
because of the change of the center of gravity. Change of the center of gravity and if you put
a little counterweight at the bottom, it would make it even more steady. Yeah. And that's the
whole concept of the steadicam sled. Yeah. Then attach that to an arm, that accordion arm. Right.
And you're cooking with gas. Yeah, because you were saying like if you walk around with just the
pole holding or the broomstick, cut off broomstick and you're holding it just with your hand. Yeah.
It's steady. The point of the arm is it's taking your hand out of the equation and replacing it
with something that can isolate movement even more. Yeah. So that your movement of you walking
just gets lost within the arm before it ever gets to the camera and could shake it. Yeah,
like if you did it with the broomstick, your arm is the same thing as a steadicam arm. Right.
Except it's better. If the steadicam arm is. Is better than your human arm. Right. Yes. Exactly.
Pretty neat stuff. It is neat stuff. And I think that's it for the science man. We made it through
it. Yeah. I mean, it's all got to be very precisely balanced. You don't just throw the stuff on the
pole willy nilly. No, and they point out that the balance of the camera can actually change
during filming. Yeah. Just from the film moving from one end of the camera to the other as it
records, right? Well, yeah, in the old days when they used film. Right. For sure. Nowadays,
it's just that digital card. Yeah. Well, not always. Well, not always. Quentin Tarantino's
camera operators have to deal with this. Yeah. And if you've ever been on a job with a steadicam,
there are a lot of, there's a lot of breaks where, I mean, you can adjust them on the fly more now,
but I remember there just being a lot of breaks with a steadicam up would say, hold on, you know,
I need five minutes and they go over and they have a little stand that they put it on to take,
because, you know, it takes the weight off to a certain degree, but it's still a lot of weight
to be carrying on a vest on your chest. Yeah. And running and moving and doing all sorts of stuff.
Yeah. It's a tough gig. Like there's a pretty amazing video. Did you watch it of that Eurovision
shot? No. There's a guy from, I think, Belarus singing and they showed him. I didn't see that.
He's like, they showed the shot and then they showed what somebody filming the shot being done
and the guy with the steadicam wearing the vest rides down the aisle on a segue. Is that what
he's on? Yeah. Hops off, runs up this ramp and then starts circling around the guy who's singing
and it's a pretty amazing thing. It's a great shot, but then when you see how it's done,
wow, that guy deserved a standing ovation. It would have been more impressive had it not,
like the subject matter, been more interesting in the video quality been better. It was pretty,
pretty bad. Like if it was a Scorsese movie, you'd be like, wow. Sure. But it was just,
you know, kind of corny, what, I mean, it looked like an American Idol or something. It was, but
it was American Idol. If you took American Idol at its peak and then spread it out over Eurasia
and like it was popular over that, that large of a population, that's what Eurovision is.
That's right. So you want to talk about some of the shots when we come back after a break?
Please. Okay.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh God. Seriously,
I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband,
Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush
boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Not another one. Kids,
relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure
to listen. So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right. So Chuck, um, in addition to that Rocky shot and that Eurovision shot,
there are some other very famous shots, classic shots of all time. Uh, yeah. That had to do with
Steadycam. It couldn't have been done with, without Steadycam. Well, the shining is the
first one that pops into most people's minds because, uh, like we said, Kubrick was a big
fan of this invention and, uh, immediately started talks with Garrett Brown on how to,
uh, help him out with this movie, the shining that he was making. Right. And, um, apparently they
kind of battled one another quite a bit on, uh, the set of the shining and, and Garrett Brown later
admitted, he said a lot of that was probably, uh, what do you call it? Like inventors, pride or
something. Right. Kind of getting in the way of this like brilliant altour. So, um, Kubrick already
had his own ideas on how to best use this thing that this other guy invented. Right. Um, and,
you know, the shining's classic example, those tricycle shots, uh, the famous maze chase at the
end, uh, very iconic in motion picture history. Yeah. And, um, I mean, the, the, how did they,
do you know how they did that, that shot behind Danny on his little big wheel?
Uh, they probably just went into low mode and, uh, like walked behind him or, yeah,
ran down the hall after him. That's really impressive. Yeah. So the shining's a big one.
Sure. Rocky's a big one. Goodfellas is another classic example, too. Classic. Um, where Ray
Leota and Lorraine Braco are going into the Copa Cabana, but they go through the back. Yeah.
And they're followed like throughout like the back stairs into the kitchen and then they finally
come out into their table. And, um, it's like one uninterrupted, like five minute shot or something.
It's amazing. And it's, um, I think when you see this, you're, you might see it and not be a discerning
film viewer and just say, well, that, I didn't notice anything, which is probably good.
Yeah. Um, or you might be a fan of the Steadicam and just say, man, that was amazing. Uh, then
you have to step back and look at lighting and realize that how incredibly hard it is to light
a shot like that that takes place over, I don't know how many hundreds of feet.
What, without seeing the lights in the shot? Well, that, or just consistent lighting and
having it look good. I mean, that's just usually you light for like a room or something or a hallway.
Right. Yeah. Yeah. But to light all those different rooms and hallways and, uh, just
incredibly, I can't imagine how long it took to set that shot up, you know.
They were like, wait, what do you want to do? Yeah. Yeah, it'll be great. Don't worry about it.
Stick with me. Stay with me. Uh, you know, he's making another gangster movie.
No, I didn't know that. Yeah. And it may be like the, some folks are saying it's like,
you know, his last big gangster movie. Uh, yeah. But it's got De Niro again.
Okay. Uh, he hadn't worked with him in a long time. Um, Pacino.
Nice. And Joe Pesci is coming out of retirement.
I didn't even know he was retired. I just thought he wasn't doing stuff anymore.
No man, he retired. Didn't know that. Yeah. So he's, he's got the three heavy weights
and supposedly Harvey Cotail, of course you got to throw him in there.
Sure. But I'm just like giddy thinking about this.
Yeah, I'm glad he is cause his last one was the departed, right?
No, he's made movies since then like Wolf of Wall Street or his last gangster movie.
Yeah. Which I thought was great. I know you didn't love it.
He didn't. I thought it was awesome.
I thought everything but what Jack Nicholson did was, was pretty good.
Yeah. You didn't like his performance?
No, I really didn't. Well.
Sorry, Jack. He'll forgive that.
All right. Cause you like him as an actor, right?
Yeah. Oh, okay. As good as it gets. Come on.
Return of the Jedi, 1983, the famous speeder bike chase scene.
And I think they... On indoor.
Yeah. California's Redwood National Park doubled as indoor.
And that was Garrett Brown walking and they sped it up.
Yeah, but and then you're just like, wow, who cares?
The reason why it's such an iconic steady cam shot is because he walked very slowly.
Yeah.
And when you speed film up, the tiny movements involved, their telegraph,
they just become much more exaggerated.
Yeah.
So without a steady cam, when they sped the film up, again,
it would have been just so blurry and just jarring, it would have been unusable.
Yeah. The fact that you can see the trees and stuff.
And even at that high speed, it's all steady cam.
Yeah. And people, I think it's just so easy to take it for granted now in movies when you see these shots.
Yeah.
But to pioneer these things and this equipment was remarkable.
Yeah.
And nowadays, you can, they're all manner of at home steady cam.
You don't have to do like my brother and build one out of spare parts and door hinges.
No.
You can buy one.
For not too much.
Yeah. You can spend $100 on a decent enough little home steady cam.
This article says that the steady cam curve, which is made for GoPros,
is like $100.
Yeah. Well, those are teeny tiny.
And there's one for the iPhone called, what's it called?
The smoothie.
That one is like, it's like, I think even less than $100.
And it's just like a handheld camera stabilizer that works pretty well from what I can gather.
Yeah. We should have had Casey, our video producer, Casey.
He's in France right now, though.
Yeah.
Living the high life.
Right. Eating baguettes.
We should have had Casey in here, just giving thumbs up or thumbs down to each one of these
brands that we mentioned.
Yeah.
And I would trust that is like the gospel truth.
Right.
But Casey's not here.
So we're just going to say, read online reviews.
I also saw that there's a lot of gimbal-based drone steady cams that are just not that expensive.
Well, drones, they're changing the game again.
Sure.
Because then you can do a shot where you follow someone by the swimming pool and then
fly up into outer space with them if you want.
Yeah.
In one continuous motion.
Yeah. Like the Quisp monster.
The what?
The Quisp monster.
You remember the alien from Quisp cereal?
I do remember Quisp.
Remember the weird alien?
Sort of. I didn't eat Quisp.
Wasn't that a Captain Crunch knock off or was it different?
It was different because they were saucer shaped rather than square waffle cut.
Gotcha.
Same thing though.
Yeah.
Same thing.
It was good.
It didn't cut the tongue like Captain Crunch did.
Yeah. The roof of the mouth.
I'll suffer through that still.
And then of course, steady cam is a name brand.
Right. Like seeing eye dog.
Yeah. It's made, who makes it?
Tiffin.
Tiffin now.
That's what, yeah. I think Tiffin does.
They have a pretty good site.
Like if you are at all interested in this, like they've got a great site and they have
all of their steady cam models with a real like in depth overview of them.
And pretty, I think it's got all their manuals and everything just right there for you to read.
Yeah. There's other companies making them.
There's one called Glidecam.
And Verizum.
Yeah. But you know, steady cam is still probably the giant.
It's like dollies. There's only two dolly makers.
Or there may be more now, but it's like Chapman and Fisher.
And each, you know, every dolly grip has a preference.
Those are the dolly makers?
Yeah. Chapman dollies or Fisher dollies.
It's kind of like a, kind of holding it down.
Jamison or Bushmills.
Yeah.
You know, Budweiser or Coors?
Neither.
And then Garrett Brown, as if the steady cam wasn't enough as far as revolutionizing filming goes.
He later on invented something called the Skycam.
Yeah.
Which like, if you watch any kind of sporting event now, especially,
it's especially useful for football and football, where like it's,
there's just cables above the field and there's cameras hanging down that are just like doing
overhead shots following the action like it's nothing.
Yeah. It's pretty neat.
Garrett Brown invented that too.
I got one more little thing for you.
There are two positions, not high mode, low mode positions are like how you're operating the camera,
but if you are pointing forward as the operator and your camera is pointing forward,
you're just walking.
It's called missionary.
No.
And then if you are, if the operator is forward and the camera is backward,
they call that Don Juan.
And so leave it to film set goons to think of sexual names for.
Sex it up.
Camera positions.
Don Juan.
Yeah. I never heard of that one.
I hadn't either.
Well, if you want to know more about steady cams, including a really,
really fine grain involved look at the physics of how the steady cam arm works,
you should go type steady cam into the search bar, howstuffworks.com.
Since I said search bar, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this encouragement from a Christian listener.
Okay.
Hey guys.
I was listening to the Easter show and it was compelled right in as a Christian.
I've always appreciated how you make a solid effort to not rail on the church too hard.
I found it humorous and simultaneously sad when you felt you had to tiptoe around the
pagan traditions that have been integrated with the resurrection.
I find it disheartening to think that other believers can't find anything better to do
than wait to be offended by something, then jump all over you for it.
But based on your years of experience and careful treatment of the subject,
it must be the case a lot of the time.
Personally, I just want to say I can't think of anything you've ever said to offend me.
I think you've done a stand up job with sensitive subjects like satanic panic in particular.
It's also nice just to hear you talk about things directly related to my beliefs without
sneering like many others will.
That's nice, Dane in Minnesota.
Yeah, for real thing.
If you want to get in touch with us like Dane did and be a super cool person,
lay it on us.
Send us an email to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
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