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Nature is both pervasive and elusive. It surrounds
us, and in subtle and integral ways enriches our lives. But to
capture those ways, to communicate the relationships between plants,
animals, and their environments, is a profound challenge for the
filmmaker. Nature doesnt wait, pose, or follow scripts. It
is as unpredictable and confounding as it is exhilarating. As an
art form, natural history cinematography is unique because of the
problems and opportunities it creates.
In August, 1989, we -- and by "we" I
refer to the writers, filmmakers, and photographers of Sea Studios
-- set out to make a film that would celebrate the diversity of
animal life on the planet.* This was our charge from the Saint
Louis Zoological Garden, our client, who had received funding from
the Southwestern Bell Foundation to produce a feature film to showcase
a 400-person theater in its new $17.9 million state-of-the-art
educational facility, "The Living World." The film was
intended to be a counterpoint to "Requiem," a three-screen
multi-media exhibit about the dire condition of the planet. We
produced "Requiem" for an 80-person theater in "The
Living World" in May, 1989. The Zoo wanted a film as uplifting
as "Requiem" was disturbing, a film that would emotionally
involve people with the amazing diversity of animal behaviors.
They felt that if people could be touched by the film they would
be more contemplative about their own lifestyles and more likely
to behave in a manner sensitive to their environment.
We approached the project enthusiastically
but with great respect for the challenge -- capturing in 20 minutes
some of the drama of a world of animal behaviors and ecologies.
As one of the few production companies worldwide specializing in
natural history cinematography, we appreciated the biological issues:
what animals were important and representative, what behaviors
were interesting, what animals could be filmed during the short
production period. We also understood the cinematographic questions:
what stories to tell, what unifying themes to choose, how much
and what kind of music and narration to use, how to pace the shots
and how to edit. Then there were the issues that bounded these:
what footage was available from other natural history filmmakers,
what was technically good and appropriate footage.
It was understood from the beginning that A
World Alive would not be a traditional nature documentary
by virtue of its goal and medium. That is, as a large-screen
35mm film intended to elicit emotion, it would not rely strongly
on narration as its principal source of information but rather
on the choice of shots and a powerful musical score. Several
other concepts were agreed upon or, at least, accepted as necessary.
For example, 20 minutes is both a long and short time -- long
enough to require pacing and movements in the film, short enough
to constrain the number and complexity of stories.
These were some of the issues debated during
the development of the storyboard -- an illustrated outline of
the film. There was also the crucial question of a structure and
theme for the movie. After all, there are countless ways to examine
animal diversity: geographically, phylogenetically, evolutionarily,
by habitat, etc. And there are many different potentially unifying
stories, behaviors, or characters that could hold the film together.
We chose to approach animal diversity somewhat
ontogenetically; that is, by looking at the range of animal characteristics
and behaviors over the course of a lifetime. The film would begin
with a prologue that established the unique qualities of earth
as a home for life. The first movement of the film, termed "Delicate
Beginnings," would introduce the birth of animals, nurturing
and development of young, and different strategies for producing
offspring. The next movement, "Magnificent Movements," would
be a fast-paced profile of the diversity of animal motions. "Diverse
Repasts," the third movement, would examine feeding strategies.
The fourth, "Divisions and Pairings," would be a sketch
of reproductive strategies and courtship behaviors. The epilogue
would re-examine the uniqueness of earth in the context of three
billion years of evolution. The film would end with a quiet message
about our responsibility as stewards of the planet.
This choice of sequences created boundaries
for other artistic choices, namely, the choice of images, music
and narration. It was clear that we would have to draw from a variety
of natural history cinematographers rather than rely solely on
our own work. After all, while we maintain an extensive stock footage
library, it cannot begin to approach the diversity of animal life.
To capture the range of behaviors and characteristics that we envisioned
would require a dynamic film. Consequently, we would need an upbeat
style of music, something to work with the images to pace the viewer
emotionally. The narration would have to be sparse but powerful,
something that would enhance the non-conventional style of the
film.
With diversity as the the films principal
theme, continuity presented a principal challenge. After much debate,
we chose one class of animals -- large raptors; specifically, the
bald eagle -- as a principal character. We decided to open and
close the film with dramatic footage of eagles, and to include
eagles or other large raptors in each of the movements.
We also proposed to the Zoo an additional
cinematographic component aimed at increasing the emotional involvement
of the audience: four original point of view shots of animals.
Our idea was to film an animals eye view of different behaviors
and to edit this in with acquired footage. Point of view shots
are uncommon in natural history filmmaking. While we knew it was
a risk, we felt it would add considerably to the excitement of
the film.
These decisions made, at least tentatively,
we spent two months researching the acquisition of the best possible
nature footage and planning our point of view sequences. We contacted
cinematographers from around the world, sending letters and request
lists to over thirty producers. One of our researchers flew to
England where she examined the film libraries of Oxford Scientific
Films, the BBC, and Survival Anglia. We sorted through ten hours
of footage shot by Charles Guggenheim under contract to the Zoo.
In total, we surveyed over 350 hours of film looking for the shots
most appropriate for the storyboard.
We realized early on that in addition to
the artistic challenges, A World Alive posed major technical
ones. Our studio is equipped with Betacam video broadcasting equipment.
We have chosen to develop our business around video because of
its advantages over film for natural
history work.** However, nearly all natural history
cinematography has been in film, usually 16mm but occasionally
35mm. In requesting footage, we asked each cinematographer to transfer
his work to Betacam SP -- the newest and highest resolution version
of Betacam -- so that we could review and edit it in-house. Eventually,
all of the footage was edited on-line to a digital video format
(D-1), then transferred back to 35mm for the final release print
show at the Zoo. Versions in 16mm and Betacam SP were also produced
from the digital master.
Betacam SP also proved useful as a means
to bring a disparate collection of formats, including varying quality
16mm and 35mm film stocks shot under different light conditions,
into a common feel in the most cost-effective manner. Transferring
all footage to 35mm to edit would have been far more difficult
and expensive and the differences in the source material would
have been more painfully obvious.
Conquering the format problem was arduous
and frustrating, since we were one of the very few production companies
to attempt it. It required repeated visits to Image Transform in
Los Angeles, viewings of 35mm tests and re-tests in local theaters,
and careful calibrations of film speeds and colors.
No less arduous were the productions of the
point of view sequences. During the twelve weeks of production,
we filmed eagle nests in the San Juan Islands using a helicopter-mounted
35mm camera with a gyrostabilizer; dolphins in the Sea of Cortez
and the Hawaiian Islands using an underwater 16mm camera mounted
to an in-board, out-board boat; and tree-swinging white-faced monkeys
and hatching Ridley turtles in Costa Rica in both 16mm and Betacam.
While all the shots were important, the eagle
sequence was key since the eagle was our theme character. Moreover,
an eagles nest was our metaphor for earth. Mark Shelley,
Sea Studios president and cinematographer, envisioned the film
opening with a point of view shot of an eagle soaring onto a remote
nest. As it landed, the point of view would shift to the inside
of one of its hatching eggs. Then, the films first sequence
on animal birth would start. Likewise, the film would end with
a point of view fly-up to the nest. This time the eggs would be
replaced by the special effect of a rotating globe matted into
the film.
We spoke with eagle specialists in Oregon,
Washington, and Alaska before choosing to scout two principal locations,
the mouth of the Columbia River and the San Juan Islands. We were
looking for an eagle nest on an isolated island, one that a helicopter
could approach without confronting telephone lines and the other
accouterments of civilization. An island in the San Juans fit the
bill, and Mark set off for a two-day shoot.
With equipment and crew costs of $2500 an
hour and a budget of only $25,000 for the shot, we were careful
to plan the shoot. The helicopter pilot and cameraman out of Preston
Cinema Systems of Los Angeles flew up to Seattle, where they equipped
a rented helicopter with the gyrostabilizer and 35mm camera. The
gyrostabilizer held the camera steady so that it could more realistically
capture the effect of a soaring eagle. While the shot was eventually
successful, our plan proved to be more exact than its execution
due to unforeseen problems with the camera and the vagaries of
weather in the Pacific Northwest..
Each of the other shots presented its own
challenge. Planning to film dolphins in the Sea of Cortez, we arrived
on the heels of a hurricane and found the water unexpectedly murky.
After much internal agonizing over costs and budgets, we scheduled
another shoot on the island of Hawaii where water conditions were
ideal and the dolphins cooperative.
We installed a World War II "Gzap" camera
into a small, streamlined housing, modified it to be radio controlled,
mounted it on a nylon-wheeled frame, and then put that frame onto
tracks mounted vertically in front of a motorboat. With a fluke-like
fin attached to the camera so that it tilted upward on ascents
and downward when the camera dove, we were able to cruise with
the dolphins, mimicking their behavior.
The species of spinner dolphins we filmed
in Hawaii were more photogenic than the common dolphins in Baja.
Spinners are so named because they jump entirely out of the water
and spin 360 degrees as they cruise along. Because the Gzap camera
only ran for about a minute and a half, we had to stop the boat
fairly often to change film cassettes. While we were reloading,
the dolphins all stopped and patiently milled around the boat,
then picked up their exuberant frolicking when we got underway.
In Costa Rica, we hoped to film howler monkeys
in the tree canopies. Despite consultations with a number of howler
monkey specialists, we learned on our arrival that filming in rain
forest canopies is nearly impossible and that howler monkeys are
very skittish. This episode and others confirmed our notion that
a good knowledge of biology is no substitute for cinematographic
innovation, and vice versa, which is to say, to be successful as
a natural history filmmaker, you have to know your animals and
to be able to think on your feet biologically and cinematographically.
Our alternative primate was the white-faced
monkey, which could be found in several of Costa Ricas national
parks. Using mountain climbers harnesses, we scaled trees
so that we could film the monkeys on their level. In one sequence,
while swinging in a tree from a tether rope to film the point of
view of a monkey jumping from limb to limb, our cameraman smashed
into a tree with caustic juices and within ten minutes developed
welts and stinging eyes. This injury would have been much more
serious -- people have been blinded by the tree - had we not received
special medication from the director of the national park.
While one Sea Studios team was off filming,
another was holed-up in front of a monitor viewing and logging
stock footage. Editors Kate Davis and Natasha Fraley viewed over
80 hours of footage on the first pass before selecting 200 minutes
of possible shots. Their rough criterion was simple: find the most
spectacular, representative, and diverse footage possible. As they
began to weed footage down, other facets became important: what
effect would the shot have when transferred and projected in a
large screen 35mm format; how well did the shots work together;
and what unifying features were present, such as color, function,
context, or motion.
For example, they looked for humorous as
well as dramatic shots. In one courtship sequence, two albatrosses
display humorous neck-bobbing and beak-tapping behaviors. They
followed that shot with an avian ballet of two grebes shaking their
heads then skimming across the water in unison. These shots were
juxtaposed with a later sequence showing wolves in battle and big
horn sheep ramming their heads into one another.
Concurrent with the filming and editing,
other decisions were being debated, including the choice of music
and narration. After listening to many different styles of music,
we decided on jazz fusion because of its rich rhythms, changes,
and emotion. We interviewed several musicians and chose Kit Walker,
a recording artist on Windham Hill Jazz, to compose the musical
score. Called "the Henry Thoreau of jazz" by Jazziz magazine
because his music is inspired by the elemental forces of nature,
Kit was enthusiastic about the project.
The creative process between a filmmaker
and a composer, like any creative process, is not easy to describe.
As the film developed into a rough cut, Kit developed musical treatments.
Film and treatments were reviewed, critiqued, and reiterated until
the two began to meld together.
Natural sounds also played an important part
of the soundtrack of the film, and our search exacted both artistic
and biological precision. A Santa Cruz graduate student provided
the barking sounds for the species of wild African dogs used in
the film. Long Marine Lab provided underwater recordings of dolphins.
A professor at Staten Island University provided the screeching
sounds of white-faced monkeys. The Cornell University Library of
Ornithology provided a variety of bird sounds. In each case, we
were careful to match the sound to the behavior of a particular
species.
In choosing a narrator, we wanted someone
who was unconventional but popular. We wanted a rich, lyrical,
gentle, and upbeat voice. Our aim for the film was to reach the
widest possible audience, yet break the pedantic mold of nature
films. After a long and somewhat convoluted search, we reached
and convinced Shakespearean actor (and Darth Vaders voice)
James Earl Jones to work with us. His voice is outstanding, adding
a richness and depth that very few narrators could. Being a superb
actor, he was able to put meaning behind his voice and, unlike
many narrators who simply come in and read a script, was insistent
on giving us the effect we envisioned. He read and reread the script
aloud, asking how certain lines should be interpreted. Then he
recorded each line many times, always working to get the best possible
inflection, the most out of each word.
The final film is as much a celebration of
natural history filmmaking as it is a celebration of animal diversity,
a testimony to the art of capturing animal behaviors from a new
point of view, selecting and editing footage to present the drama
and beauty of animal life, composing an original musical score
and blending it with unusual footage, and choosing and recording
a powerful and unconventional voice. A World Alive was
a very special project for Sea Studios and, we hope, for all the
people who have a chance to see it at the Saint Louis Zoo or purchase
it as a home video.
Footnote: A World Alive was completed
in February, 1990, on time and on budget. It opened on April 26
at "The Living World" Pavilion at the Saint Louis Zoo
and is available daily free of charge to the 2.8 million people
who visit the Zoo each year.
______________________
* Mark Shelley, Sea Studios president and principal
cinematographer; Dr. Robin Burnett, Sea Studios principal writer
and a former instructor of biology at Hopkins Marine Station of
Stanford University; and free-lance filmmaker and editor Kate Davis
(director/producer "Girltalk," editor "Paris is
Burning," producer/writer "Vacant Lot," and assistant
editor "Shermans March) formed the core team that conceived
and produced the film. They received biological and editorial assistance
from Natasha Fraley, a Sea Studios natural history film editor;
and Nancy Burnett, a Sea Studios natural history photographer.
Roger Birkel, assistant director of the Saint Louis Zoo, provided
general oversight and direction on the film for the Zoo.
** The cost of shooting video is much less than
film, which is critical when running a camera in anticipation of
unpredictable animal behavior. Because video doesnt require
off-site processing, it provides real-time confidence: you can
watch what you shoot. You save the cost of making mistakes in setting
up, waiting, shooting, or processing
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