When
I first started looking into film-making, I was immediately sucked into the endless
abyss of shopping for equipment—and for good reason. Look at any major
film-making YouTube creator and they will tell you that equipment is extremely
important.
“So
you want to make videos? Well you’ll need a DSLR camera, a tripod, various
lenses, tons of batteries, multiple LED lights, gels for those lights, some
lavalier mics, some shotgun mics, a boom pole, a camera rail slider, a jib
attachment for your tripod, a Steadicam, high-quality headphones, a digital
recorder, etc.—all for the small investment of $10,000.” - Pro YouTuber
While
equipment is very important, it deters a lot of potential film-makers from
pursuing the profession due to the sheer amount of gear to purchase.
Too
many beginner film-makers, myself included, get caught up in researching new
gear that there is little time for anything else. If all your time goes into
researching your next big purchase, your videos aren’t going to be very good,
if made at all.
What’s
more important is building up your understanding of how films are shot rather
than what their shot with.
Other
than grabbing a book on cinematography, there’s no better resource than watching
movies—lots of movies. Critically acclaimed or 4% on Rotten Tomatoes, leave no
stone unturned. Learn what you like, what you don’t like, what could be done
differently, and use that knowledge to help you create your own films.