- 9 minutes – HD Video for online course – Color
- My role: Instructor
Some approaches to lighting for film students who are isolating at home without access to movie lights, using the sun and a variety of household light sources.
Filmmaker/Educator
Some approaches to lighting for film students who are isolating at home without access to movie lights, using the sun and a variety of household light sources.
A quick overview of how to improve the quality of sound recordings made with phones, built-in mics, and pocket recorders.
This is another online demo for my Film 118 students at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, when COVID-19 isolation measures drove the course online-only. My students lost access to University equipment halfway through the semester, which meant that many of them had to complete the course using only a smartphone and without access to audio recorders or microphones. In this video, I wanted to demonstrate a few ways students could get better-quality sound from the low-quality microphones built into their cameras, phones, and other devices.
I mention a couple audio recorders in the video…
A crash course in life without a tripod.
I made this video for my Film 118 students at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee when COVID-19 isolation measures drove the course online-only. My students lost access to University equipment halfway through the semester, which meant that many of them had to complete the course using only a smartphone and without the aid of a tripod. I put together this video to give them so ideas about how to inventively marshal the limited tools available to them.
The best camera is the one that’s with you.
Right now, social distancing due to COVID-19 means that many of you have limited access to film equipment, but there are many situations where it’s necessary to improvise with whatever equipment is available.
Some of you do not have access to a DSLR; this is not a problem! Some of the most influential movies in the history of cinema remain those that were made using a wood box with a crank on the side. Great movies have been shot with a consumer camcorders and phones. This guide is designed to help you get the most out of those devices, to gain manual control over them to the extent possible, and to think about the assets and advantages of these idiosyncratic cameras rather than their limitations.
If your phone was made in the last 3–4 years, it has a remarkably high-quality camera, even by digital cinema standards. The problem with phone cameras is that they are designed to be completely automatic—to make all the decisions of focus and exposure for you. We know that this is a bad idea! But there are ways to exercise more control over your built-in camera.
I’m using an iPhone XS with iOS 13, and its available settings may differ from your phone. But they should be similar enough that you can follow along—iPhones have had very good cameras for the last 10 years, so the odds are that if you have an iPhone, you can shoot sharp, vivid, eminently usable video with it.

Before we do anything else, take a trip to your settings, and scroll down until you see “Camera.” Now, take a look at the “Record Video” submenu.

This lists the available frame rates and resolutions for shooting video with the native camera app. You can see I have mine set to 4K/24p because it’s the only 24 fps option my phone supports, but should I need to, I can go down to 720p/30 or all the way up to 4K/60p.
My camera can record slow-motion video, up to 240fps! I haven’t played with this much, but it provides some interesting possibilities.
Under the “Formats” submenu, I can choose between the “High Efficiency” codec (HEVC) or the “Most Compatible” codec (H.264). I’ve successfully edited HEVC footage in Premiere and DaVinci Resolve on my Mac, but if you’re editing on a Windows machine, you may want to switch this to “Most Compatible” to avoid compatibility problems.
The built-in iPhone camera app is very simple, but it does allow some semi-manual controls, using a tap-to-focus interface.
Open up the camera app. To get into video mode, swipe left until “VIDEO” is highlighted in yellow.
Tap and hold on the part of the image you want to focus on until the message “AE/AF LOCK” appears on screen, then tap and drag up and down to adjust the exposure.
I haven’t found a way to adjust white balance in the native app, so you’re kind of stuck with whatever the auto white balance gives you. Remember that if it’s close, you can use Premiere or Resolve to dial in the appropriate color settings.
Once you have your frame/focus/exposure set, push the red circle button to start recording. Push the red square to stop.

If you have a Mac, the easiest way to transfer files is probably to AirDrop them to yourself. Make sure you have AirDrop enabled on your computer and your phone, then open up the “Photos” app on your phone. Open the clip you want to transfer, tap the share button on the bottom left, and then tap the AirDrop icon. You should then be able to select your computer—you may need to approve the transfer from your computer—and then the file will transfer to your Downloads folder.
If you have a Windows machine or can’t use AirDrop, you can also transfer files via USB, but the process is a little more complicated.
Once you get the video files on your computer, you can edit them in Premiere or your editing software of choice. Remember to use appropriate file structure!
I don’t have an Android handy to walk through this in detail (and processes will vary based on the make of your phone), but the shooting process should be similar to the instructions for iPhone.
You can transfer files from your phone to your Windows or Mac computer over USB using the free Android File Transfer app. You may need to do a little digging in the folder structure to find your videos; if you use a third-party app like Filmic Pro, the videos will save inside the folder for that app.
Unless you have a very specific reason to shoot vertical video, turn your phone sideways to shoot in standard widescreen format.
The front-facing camera on your phone is lower resolution, and sometimes does not offer as many manual controls. Avoid it unless absolutely necessary.
My iPhone’s standard camera is pretty wide-angle for filmmaking purposes (equivalent to a 26mm lens on a DSLR), but I have a second telephoto lens that’s equivalent to a 52mm lens, which renders close-ups much more naturally. In my stock camera app, I just tap the “1x” button to switch to telephoto mode.
For this example, I stayed in the same place and took two different shots: one with my default lens, one with my telephoto lens, to demonstrate the magnification:




Your camera may also have a super-wide-angle lens for extreme wide-angle wackiness! Worth experimenting with, if you have the option!

If you’re willing to spend a few bucks ($15, which is steep for a phone app, but I’ve found is worth it), Filmic Pro, available for both Android and iOS, gives you manual control over your exposure (ISO and shutter speed only; phones don’t have a variable aperture), white balance, audio levels, even your resolution and frame rate. If you want your phone to behave like a digital cinema camera, this is the best available option.
I’m not going to include a guide here because there’s just so much in the app, but it’s well documented on their website: Support page | Quick start guide | User manual | Tutorial videos
If you happen to have access to a camcorder (e.g. a Sony Handycam or similar) that shoots digital video, don’t underestimate its capabilities! Most new-ish camcorders have good sensors, excellent lenses with variable apertures, and may feature optical image stabilization and full manual exposure.
If you want to shoot with a camcorder, your first step should be to find the manual. (Most manufacturers make their manuals available online; Google your camera’s make and model and you’ll probably find something).
You’ll want to find out how to:
If you can, avoid shooting in an interlaced format like 1080i or 480i. A progressive format like 1080p/720p will be far easier to edit.
Some cameras may combine everything into a single “exposure” control, but if you’re lucky, your camera will give you individual control over shutter speed, aperture, and ISO/gain.
Digital zoom artificially enlarges your image, producing pixelation, aliasing, and other unfortunate artifacts. Disable it if you can.

If all else fails, you have a camera in your laptop that you can use to record video. These cameras only allow for automatic exposure and white balance, and are often calibrated to focus only on subjects about 2–3 feet away. Because of this, they are extraordinarily limited. Kind of exciting, isn’t it? What can you make under such strict limitations? How can you subvert your webcam’s intended purpose?
You may be tempted to use Photo Booth, but there is a better way! Open the QuickTime Player application and select File > New Movie Recording.

A window will pop up that shows you a live preview of your webcam. Click the little down arrow next to the record button and make sure that the quality is set to “Maximum.”
You may notice that the image gets a little flickery if the framing or lighting changes. If your exposure is too light or too dark, try nudging around the frame a little bit to get the auto exposure to change to something more desirable.
Click the red circle to start recording; click it again to stop.
Once you’ve stopped the recording, you can review it. If you like it, select File > Save to save the recording to a QuickTime file. Again, be sure to follow proper folder hierarchy!
According to my experiments using a MacBook Pro running OS 10.15, this produces 720p ProRes 422 video files with a 16kHz mono audio track and the truly infuriating frame rate of 29.1 fps. But it’s a video, it looks pretty good, and Premiere can edit it!
You can record video from your webcam on Windows 10 using the Camera app. I don’t have a Windows machine handy to test this out, but here’s a tutorial.
The voice memos app on your phone is a great way to record audio if you have no other choice. The only shortcoming is that I haven’t been able to find any audio recording app for iOS or Android that allows for manual gain control, so you’ll have to make do with auto levels.
As with any other microphone, the most important thing is to get your microphone as close to the audio source as possible. If you’re recording voiceover, that’s easy! Just hold up your phone and talk directly into the microphone (from a few inches away, to avoid plosives/mouth noises).
But you can also use a phone the way we talked about using a dedicated audio recorder, to record sync sound! This is great if your camera is far away but you still want to record clean dialogue—conceal your phone somewhere just out of shot and start recording, then start your camera and clap your hands to provide a reference point so that you can synchronize audio and video once you import the files into Premiere.
iOS: Though primarily designed for music, GarageBand gives you some more advanced controls for voice recording, audio processing, and multitrack editing, and may produce better-quality recordings than the stock Voice Memos app.
Android: Auphonic Edit is a great audio recording and editing app.
Adobe offers educational discounts on Creative Cloud subscriptions.
If you prefer a different editing experience, DaVinci Resolve is a free, full-featured editing program for Windows, Mac, and Linux. It’s a little tricky to pick up if you’re familiar with Premiere (and it may not run on older or lower-specced computers), but it’s a very rewarding way to edit once you’ve learned how!
Compared to editing on a computer, editing video on the tiny touchscreen of a phone or tablet can be a pretty frustrating experience. But it is possible!
If you’re using an iPhone, Apple’s free iMovie app for iOS is quite full-featured, and should allow you to do even moderately-complex edits on your phone. Here’s a detailed tutorial.
Once your edit is done (tap “Done” at the top left), you can tap the share button and select “Save Video” to export a QuickTime video file that you can then transfer to your computer or upload to a video sharing site like YouTube or Vimeo.
Adobe’s free Premiere Rush app for iOS and Android allows you to edit video and export videos, although it limits you to three exports unless you have a Creative Cloud subscription (not sure if the aforementioned student license works), or you can pay a $5 monthly fee for unlimited exports. Booooo.
Just because you don’t have purpose-built film lights doesn’t mean you can’t control the lighting of your environment! You’ve got lamps… computer screens… the sun… here are some things to consider:
If you don’t have a tripod, think about other things you can mount your camera to. This is particularly easy and fun if you’re shooting on a smartphone! A little masking tape, some string, a couple rubber bands, etc. can help you attach your phone to a shelf, a chair… maybe the end of a broom handle, for a dramatic jib shot!
If you’re isolating with your family, I bet they’re incredibly bored. Recruit them to be your actors! If you’re on your own, think about interesting ways to shoot footage of yourself.
Think about social connections in this time of physical isolation. Can you tell a story that involves actors connecting via video chat? (In addition to recording your webcam, QuickTime Player can record your desktop)
Being forced to work entirely on your own can be very restricting, but it can also be freeing. I made this film, The Deposition of Lawrence Patterson, over the course of a few late nights many years ago, while everyone else in the house was asleep. Apart from a little lighting help from a friend one night I did all the production, acting and editing entirely on my own, using my Canon T2i and a few lamps I found around the house. The result is… unpolished, but it was also deeply satisfying to make.
This is all to say: be open to the creative possibilities of solitary work. Other modes of solo filmmaking could include:
Give yourself permission to be less ambitious; to make work on a smaller scale. What is the smallest, simplest film you can make that still says what you want it to say?
I believe in the importance of art as a social good, and in the value of its accessibility to all people.
Like most of our world, the film industry was built on a foundation of discrimination, and that systemic bias continues today. Film sets and production offices can be particularly unfriendly places for women, people of color, and members of the LGBTQ+ community; I’ve lost count, for instance, of my female friends who have abandoned careers in technical film production because they felt so excluded on set. Their departure—and the departures of those who have had similar experiences—is a devastating loss to an industry that is infuriatingly slow to change. Feminism is not only for women; race justice is not only for people of color; equality is not only for the oppressed. Making art and building classrooms that embrace and celebrate diversity benefits us all by inviting us to participate in a world that is larger and more complex than ourselves and our own experiences.
This isn’t just a question of encouraging diversity in the production process, either: issues of representation spill over into course design. Although I do my best to screen work by artists outside of the institutionally selected cinematic canon, the fact remains that most filmmakers who have seen significant material success (in Hollywood, but also in independent and avant-garde film) are a distinctly homogenous bunch. This is something students can and should be discussing with their peers in class, and those discussions introduce a host of questions:
I don’t often explicitly introduce such discussion topics because I find my students are more willing to engage with them if they arise organically, from other conversations—which they frequently do. In those situations, my responsibility is to step back, make some room in the schedule to accommodate what usually becomes a much longer discussion, and occasionally ask a guiding or clarifying question. This content can be difficult to cover, particularly for students of privilege who haven’t yet had to confront the ways in which their advantages might come at a cost to others, but engaging with these problems as early as possible in their academic careers has the potential to make them more mindful citizens—not only in the context of their art practice and education, but also in their lives more broadly.
Of course, there are more direct ways I try to make my classes more welcoming to students who may have felt excluded in the past. My experiences teaching at a community college and an access university have given me ample opportunities to work with a diverse population of students who often need additional support to succeed in class: something as simple as allowing some flexibility in assignment due dates and building in-process critiques and conferences into long-term assignment schedules can make a world of difference in the academic trajectories of nontraditional students who work or have families to care for, and for incoming first-generation students who don’t have a frame of reference for exactly what is expected of them in college.
As should be the case, this work is never done. In addition to making my courses more accessible to nontraditional and first-generation students, I hope to find ways to further decolonize my approach to teaching, rely less on lecture, and encourage adventurous collaboration between students.
There’s an argument amongst filmmakers that a film degree isn’t “worth it:” a student could use the money they would otherwise spend on tuition to rent film equipment and teach themselves how to use it. This argument makes some sense but presupposes that a film education’s worth lies in equipment access and technical training.
I entered film school in pursuit of technical skills, but my seven years of study and five years of teaching have shown me the greater value of exposure to a group of peers and collaborators, immersion in critical discussions about film and art, and the expectation of a continuous creative practice. I couldn’t have sought those things out on my own because I didn’t know I needed them.
It’s relatively easy to teach someone how to make a movie, but a filmmaker’s understanding of why they make their art is much more meaningful. In my classes, I strive to balance the technical instruction students expect and the critical context they may not know they need. Often that context is found by peeling apart layers of subtext and metatext that define a film’s artistic and social significance. I urge my students to consider what films are about: what they’re trying to say, and what they might accidentally be saying without meaning to. We can learn a lot by asking these questions of our work, and by applying the same criticality to the films we screen in class, we can understand them in entirely new ways.
Cinema is steeped in the same biases that shape our society. I’m uncomfortable with the overwhelmingly white‑, straight‑, male-ness of the cinematic canon and I do my best to screen work by constituents of various minorities, but the fact remains that most successful filmmakers (in Hollywood, but also in independent and avant-garde film) are a distinctly homogenous bunch. This is something students can and should contend with in class, and it introduces a host of questions. How should we appreciate important and innovative artwork made at the expense of artists who were systematically silenced by institutional discrimination? Are the aesthetic preferences of the contemporary film industry and audience inherently prejudiced against certain identities?
Critiques are an imperfect practice, but also an essential step in the creative process. Offering and receiving constructive critique is perhaps the most important foundational element of any creative education. Most incoming students are uncomfortable participating in open-ended critique sessions, so I encourage the use of a framework—a simple procedure to facilitate discussion that doesn’t rely on a complex set of rules.
With few exceptions, a work of art must stand on its own without the artist intervening to explain their intentions or their process. To this end, the Critical Friends Group model is a useful starting point. In my simplified implementation, students present their work to the class without prologue, apology, or explanation, then listen while the class discusses the work as they encountered it—things they liked, questions they had, ways the piece could be improved—and only at the end of the critique does the presenter directly engage with the group, usually to ask and answer clarifying questions. This approach ensures that nobody feels the critique is a referendum on the presenting student, and it encourages taciturn (or sleepy) critique groups to grapple directly with the work in greater detail.
Much of my research relates to what I call “radical collaboration,” an abject dedication to the process of making work jointly with other artists, and an exuberant rejection of any claim to individual authorship of that work. My own forays into radical collaboration allow me to escape my customary practice and contribute to work drastically different from the work I usually make. Such opportunities can be particularly beneficial in encouraging more adventurous work from students who are still establishing their own creative identities but may also feel constrained by work they’ve made in the past. I’ve done some collaborative exercises in recent courses (they tend to make for amusing writing games), but I hope to further expand on these principles and introduce more ambitious collaborative processes into my courses.
In Notes on One-Person Shooting, Joel DeMott discusses the pitfalls of making documentary films with multi-person crews and cumbersome, highly-visible equipment. The “machine-ridden” filmmaker, surrounded by “extraneous materiel—lights, booms, radio mics, cables, cases of back-up gear” is inevitably distracted by the technical minutiae of filmmaking, and forgets—or is fundamentally unable—to forge a genuine relationship with their subject. She dubs this cyborg-like, overladen filmmaker the “Technical Monster.” Such a presence is understandably intimidating to any documentary subject because the machines, lights, and technical crew invade and alter the space. They make the subject’s home feel less their home, and they present an insurmountable barrier between the maker and the subject.
DeMott’s proposed solution to this problem is, perhaps ironically, a technical one: recent advancements in film stocks and camera technology allowed filmmakers of the early ’80s the freedom to shoot without the assistance of a support crew, operating the sound and camera themselves. This method of production allowed filmmakers to be more agile and, most important to DeMott, to give primacy to their relationship with their subject, rather than the relationship with their crew. This is surely a noble goal, but I remain skeptical that a reduction in the scale of the production and the visible complexity of the equipment actually solves the problem of an alienating, anxiety-inducing Technical Monster, or that this problem should be solved.
16mm cameras of the type used by DeMott and Jeff Kreines in production of their film Seventeen weigh in excess of ten pounds and are painted completely black. They perch, gargoyle-like, protruding forward from the operator’s shoulder, who then presses their eye to the eyepiece and (traditionally) squeezes their other eye shut while making a sort of involuntary grimace that suggests either deep concentration or extreme pain. The lens of the camera reflects and distorts whoever it points at, a mechanical cyclopean eye. The digital revolution has further shrunk the documentary filmmaker’s tools, but the form factor remains roughly the same: the technical monster may be getting smaller and lighter, but it is alive and well.

The fact of the camera is hard to ignore, but subjects seem to do it almost instinctually. DeMott observes that “if a movie crew begins following people who are not actors, they will try to act as if they’re unconscious of the fact.” She’s referring to the type of large-scale productions that make use of multi-person crews, but the same criticism could just as easily be leveled against single-shooter films in which subjects self-consciously ignore the camera and speak to the filmmaker, in their best imitation of what a conversation between the two of them would be like if there wasn’t a giant black box pointing its unblinking eye at them from a distance of “a foot-and-a-half to three feet” (DeMott 6). In a sense, as DeMott argues, this close positioning of the camera is a gesture at honesty: “The filmmaker is there. And playing unaware is inconceivable when you can reach out and slap someone.” On the other hand, the brazen presence of a camera makes self-consciousness an immediate and ever-present concern.
It isn’t just that the camera cuts an imposing silhouette; the awareness of a camera of any size, position, or proximity is a powerful catalyst. We are cognizant of the power cameras possess, and in an era of ubiquitous imaging technology, we understand that the implications of a small camera are the same as the implications of a large camera: this is being recorded.

Errol Morris has attempted to sidestep this issue by developing the “Interrotron,” a modified teleprompter that displays the interviewer’s face in line with the camera’s lens. The result of conducting interviews with this particular Technical Monster is that the subject maintains direct eye contact with the camera/viewer, but more importantly, the edifice of a giant device that demands the subject’s undivided attention pushes every other condition of the setting to the periphery: “For the first time, I could be talking to someone, and they could be talking to me and at the same time looking directly into the lens of the camera. Now, there was no looking off slightly to the side. No more faux first person. This was the true first person” (Morris). In this way, subjects are encouraged to forget everything except their relationship to the interviewer. And yet, this comes at the cost of forcing an even more aggressive confrontation with the machinery of filmmaking.
Beyond posing simple procedural questions (“How am I expected to behave?”) the fact of a camera raises the stakes of the interaction because it implies the scrutiny and judgment of an unknowable audience. This is particularly problematic for the subject, who is denied vital information about the expectations their audience has for them. As Erving Goffman explains, the performances we all craft in everyday life rely on our understanding of our audience:
We can appreciate the crucial importance of the information that the individual initially possesses or acquires concerning his fellow participants, for it is on the basis of the initial information that the individual starts to define the situation and starts to build up lines of responsive action. The individual’s initial projection commits him to what he is proposing to be and requires him to drop all pretense of being other things.
(Goffman 11)
If this is true, the problem posed by standing in front of a camera is an interesting one. We perform in different ways for different people in different settings: we are, in effect, different people to our boss, our family, and to strangers in the airport; but how do we perform when the audience of our performance is potentially everyone? Subjects still seek to dramatize and idealize themselves through the methods Goffman describes, but they are denied the opportunity to “accept minor cues as a sign of something important” about their performance, which serve as checks on their behavior (Goffman 51). This can sometimes have the effect of increased self-consciousness, as the subject substitutes cues from their real audience with the imagined reactions of an audience of their own construction; rather than adapting the performance based on feedback from an actual audience, they regulate their presentation of self based on their limited inferences about the film’s eventual viewers.
It might be this anxiety that is the cause of some of the more performative and self-conscious moments in Seventeen. When Buck insists that he can’t hear anything more about Church Mouse’s injury, and yet seems unable to speak about anything else, it may be because he recognizes that his distress is dramatically important—thus appeasing the Technical Monster standing three feet away from him—and that it presents him as being a loyal and caring friend, a quality that the film’s audience will surely find admirable.
As is the case with much social performance, these performances are frequently transparent to an audience: “The arts of piercing an individual’s efforts at calculated unintentionality seem better developed than our capacity to manipulate our own behavior, so that … the witness is likely to have the advantage over the actor” (Goffman 8–9). Still, Goffman cautions that “an honest, sincere, serious performance is less firmly connected with the solid world than one might at first assume,” and that a skillful, convincing performance is not necessarily a more accurate one, only a more practiced one (71). These unpracticed performative moments are significant because they allow us insight into the subject’s process of crafting a universal front that they feel comfortable presenting not within the confines of a specific setting, but to the entire world.
In this way, the Technical Monster provides a completely novel space for subjects to work through their identity on a grand scale. Confronting the Technical Monster, coming into conflict with the inconsistencies between performances crafted for other situations, and working integrate those performances into an unproblematic self fit for a global audience is an act of courage—and possibly hubris. It is not uncommon for documentary subjects to misjudge their audience and come off as unintentionally unsympathetic or transparent. These misjudgments can be intentionally exploited by filmmakers, such as in Errol Morris’s Gates of Heaven, in which Phillip Harberts is depicted as deluded, self-important, and preoccupied with what appear to be meaningless accolades. This surely would not have been the intent of his performance, but it could be argued that his inexperience with performing in this setting has revealed something about his motivations than he would have preferred to keep hidden from public view.
This dynamic can also alert audiences to their own position in relation to the work. In Cannibal Tours, the condescending tone of the German tourists as they discuss the lifestyle of the Iatmul people is not merely an indictment of their colonial arrogance; it implicates the viewer as well, because the tourists, assuming Western audiences share the same attitudes and will not judge them harshly, feel completely comfortable having this conversation while a camera is pointed at them.
Short of using hidden cameras and filming subjects without their prior consent, it seems unlikely that a solution can be found to the problems of self-consciousness and “unconvincing” performances, and that it is likely impossible to stop a camera from altering what it sees. Instead, I would suggest that these performances, though often unpracticed, are no less genuine than any other social performance, and may even offer greater insight. If we are defined by the collection of diverse and sometimes contradictory performances we practice, watching someone face down the Technical Monster and attempt to reconcile those conflicts to perform as a fully-integrated self allows us to glimpse the hidden machinery that constructs these fronts.