Has the Zoom finally gone?
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 9:50 am
During BIAFF I was not struck by the usual number of zoom shots (whether moving in or out). There were some, of course, but far fewer than in recent years. Have we finally escaped from the tyranny of "the camera has a zoom so I must use it" syndrome?
Whenever we have a new technical possibility it tends to be overused at first as people experiment. Think of the "terrible transition" years where movies rippled, bulged, spun, twisted and contorted from one image to the next. But zoom has been around for ages and only recently seems to be passing that experiment stage.
Of course a zoom lens is very useful - it lets you frame a shot much more easily than switching prime lenses and moving the camera set-up. Very, very occasionally a zoom shot where the lens moves during the take is appropriate. But all too often they have been used quite unnecessarily.
Such shots almost always call attention to themselves. They make audiences aware of technique rather than the subject of the movie. For years better film makers have ranted against them ... and now, maybe, the lesson has been learned.
I hope so.
But is this just my failing memory or an accidental result of the mini-cinema programmes I chose to attend?
Is the zoom all-but-dead?
Dave
Whenever we have a new technical possibility it tends to be overused at first as people experiment. Think of the "terrible transition" years where movies rippled, bulged, spun, twisted and contorted from one image to the next. But zoom has been around for ages and only recently seems to be passing that experiment stage.
Of course a zoom lens is very useful - it lets you frame a shot much more easily than switching prime lenses and moving the camera set-up. Very, very occasionally a zoom shot where the lens moves during the take is appropriate. But all too often they have been used quite unnecessarily.
Such shots almost always call attention to themselves. They make audiences aware of technique rather than the subject of the movie. For years better film makers have ranted against them ... and now, maybe, the lesson has been learned.
I hope so.
But is this just my failing memory or an accidental result of the mini-cinema programmes I chose to attend?
Is the zoom all-but-dead?
Dave