Elevating fitness advertising using vintage lenses, filters and slow-motion on Cityrow's GO campaign

I like to approach every shoot the same way - by asking myself “How can I make this better? More interesting? More captivating?”. It’s easy to become complacent in the world of commercials, especially when you start seeing the same creative over and over, so in this case, I was lucky to have a production company and collaborators that really wanted to push the boundaries and make this Cityrow spot something greater than the sum of its parts.

"Exercise is a natural escape. A way to leave the BS behind and go to a place that is entirely yours. CITYROW GO makes that easy with guided workouts that are available in your own space, on your own time. Through high-intensity, low-impact, total body workouts - it's as if an instructor was right there pushing you, taking you to the place you go when you sweat."

The concept is about transporting one's mind from their living room to the gym, and we wanted to create visuals that would not only support, but also elevate this concept. Exercise ads often times use soft light and low contrast imagery, so to make this piece stand out we wanted to embrace shadows, lens aberrations and high speed photography, while creating different looks for the various environments.

We shot on the ARRI Alexa Mini with Zeiss Superspeed lenses, mostly wide open so we could feel any flares and other aberrations that are typical of vintage lenses. Although it was a look, it wasn’t so aggressive that it might make the clients question whether or not it would work. The goal was to differentiate, not completely exit the space. 

The entire spot was handheld, and I used an Easyrig for the vast majority of it. Luckily, the camera and lens combo we had was very light, so I was able to go all day. Being handheld also allowed me to react quickly to the actors, who were all very fit and able to repeat workouts over and over. I really fed off their energy and I think that comes through in the camera work.

For our living room look, we had to create environments that felt similar in tone, but varied enough to look like several different homes. Since we shot these all in 10 hours in one brownstone in Brooklyn, we allowed the architecture of the upstairs and downstairs to separate our day sets, and we tented our third area for a night look. To boost the warmth and richness of skin tones, I wore a Tobacco 1 filter and white balanced to 3200K, which evened out the blue colors of daytime.

The daytime scene with our male hero was actually shot during a downpour, but thankfully we were able to soften it with the Superspeeds at T1.3 while lighting it to look like a sunny afternoon. Gaffer Greg Tango elaborates: "We opted to use the Digital Sputnik DS6. This unit gave us the punch of a flooded 4k while only pulling 840 watts making it location friendly. The other advantage of this unit was the ease of dialing in color temps. We ended up adding warmth into the scene for mood."

For our nighttime living room set, I wanted to feel something outside of the windows other than just the black of the tent, so we placed 2 DS6 units as far away from the windows as would fit. I gaff taped the lights so that it would feel like lit windows across the street. One of them even feels like a corner bodega, for that authentic Brooklyn feel.

For the gym look, we went in a much cooler direction to differentiate the two environments. We originally wanted a hard sunlight look, but unfortunately our location did not allow for units to be placed outside of the windows. We decided to get as close as we could with the windows, and do something more interesting inside.

"We needed to push a key through the windows of the studio, which were on the second floor with no ground access bellow. We went with rigging Lite Gear Lite Tiles to the windows for most control over color and intensity, and lit the rest of the scene with JoLeko 800s. One had a laser line gobo that panned across talent and the other was pushed into a painters tray filled with broken mirror pieces and water. The reflected mirror water bounce created subtle texture while the direct hard moving laser line provided something dynamic.” -Greg Tango

In addition, I suggested to director Winston Macdonald that we try and add a little something extra to boost the production value - 1000fps shots. Knowing that particles and slow motion are one of the best visual combos around, I thought the water rower would be a perfect candidate for this. Unfortunately, we didn’t have the budget for a Flex 4K and a tech, but I have thrown in a Phantom Miro on various shoots for some specialty shots. It works best when it is only used for macros and inserts, which is exactly what we did here. The shots of water, speed ramped in the edit, were an immediate hit.

This was one of my favorite commercial shoots to date, and it all started with the trust and collaboration from the folks over at Vagrants Co

As always, the conversation continues on Instagram (@dkruta). Please feel free to send me any questions or comments. I love chatting about cinematography and I’m always interested to hear your thoughts.

Capturing a Haunting in Progress: Behind the Scenes of a Promo Shoot for A&E's "Ghost Hunters"

I love the challenge of executing something in a single shot. It requires extensive planning, communication, lots of rehearsals, creative choreography, and a little luck. Although this promo for Ghost Hunters ended up with cuts, the original idea and execution were all geared towards a single take which would show us around a house in the process of being actively haunted.

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Our location was a historic mansion on Staten Island, the location of a 90s mob hit and a late-1800s suicide. By all accounts, it was actually haunted, but we had to go in and make it look like that and more, all in the span of a 30-second spot.

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I was lucky to have a highly communicative collaborator in director Evan Glaser, who walked me through his vision for the spot while listening to my and my team's creative ideas, and the limitations of the location. We started out with a rough walk-through, built up to photos of each room and space, and eventually mapped out the whole shot with an iPhone video. Using that as a base reference, Evan and the creative team then built the spot with speed ramps, cues written in, and voiceover, which would become our template on the shoot day.

So much of creating a single-shot sequence is about repetition. You walk it through over and over, and build on it each time. You find moments that could be sped up, others slowed down, areas that are “dead” and need some sort of action, where you can hide lights, what obstacles the operator has to avoid, etc.

Once you arrive on the shoot day, it feels like time has stopped. We planned our day around the idea of shooting right before dusk, so that we could shoot until it was too dark. The goal was to have just a little blue in the sky so we could see our house at the end. We spent almost 6 hours lighting, running cables, coordinating “jump-scare” gags, and rehearsing the move. I will usually spend the time to come up with better looking plots, but due to the tight turnaround between the scout and shoot, I opted for photos and overheads with written notes to get my crew on the same page.

It felt like we weren’t getting anything done, despite the flurry of activity. But suddenly the sun hits the right spot in the sky, the lighting cues are all set, and the AD is anxious. So you start to roll, and very quickly, it all comes together beautifully.

Gaffer Billy Macartney used a DMX board to control all of the lights in the spot. From his control booth on the porch, he was able to cue light flickers, lightning effects, and make adjustments from take to take when something was too colorful or too bright.

This spot was lit with a K5600 Lighting Joker 1600 with an Octobank to create our moonlight from outside. As we progress through the house, we use an Arri Skypanel S60c to wrap the moon beams around the house and into the dining room, where a 1k Parcan on a doorway dolly creates our moving-headlights gag, casting a creepy shadow on the far wall. Astera Titan tubes fill out the next room and hallway for lightning strike effects.

An equally crucial contributor was Steadicam operator Tanner Carlson, who added his own flair to the move, finding moments that could be adjusted to help the overall flow of the spot. He also proved adept at avoiding obstacles in the tight hallway, and was able to navigate backwards down the front stairs and land on a perfect frame of the car pulling in every time.

Check out the final spot below:

As always, the conversation continues on Instagram (@dkruta). Please feel free to send me any questions or comments. I love chatting about cinematography and I’m always interested to hear your thoughts.


Shooting slow motion with a robot and a Phantom (camera)

Shooting a commercial with the Motion Control Bolt system behind the scenes

There’s nothing I love more about my job than being given a real challenge. Most jobs have some kind of problem you have to solve, while others are very straightforward (how many interviews could you light in your sleep?). But once in a while, they push you way out of your comfort zone in the most unexpected ways. These are my favorite type of jobs. They might not be the sexy, moody films that we all love to brag about on Instagram, but I have a blast trying to solve problems, make the product look good, and above all else, make the client happy. Shooting commercials is often less about the art and craft of cinematography, but rather about delivering a product that the client asked for. But what if you can merge all of these things, maybe learn something new along the way, and on top of that have a great time with your team? Now that’s the type of work I live for.

Brian Neaman directs a commercial with the bolt motion control slow motion system phantom high speed

Working with Yonder Content and director Brian Neaman, we were tasked with delivering a series of comedic spots for the New Jersey Lotto. Sounds like a typical, unmemorable job, right? Not if you’re shooting with a robotic arm capable of shooting motion-control at high speed, all while precisely choreographing a room full of actors that had to hit exact cues during a shot that lasted less than 5 seconds in real time.

First off - the agency boards. When you’re shooting a commercial, usually before even the director or production company is hired, the agency and the client put together rough storyboards of what will be delivered. It’s then up to the director and production company to execute them. This is what we were given and asked to shoot.

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Bolt High Speed Cinebot

Working with the Bolt

The Bolt is a repurposed robotic arm that is typically used in automobile manufacturing, but has been modified to hold and move a camera at high speed with frame-accurate precision. It weighs a thousand pounds, requires 42 amps at 400 volts, and can move 6 feet per second. It’s absolutely terrifying and one of the coolest tools I have ever used.

It requires a 3-man crew to unload, set up and tweak. Each camera position is mapped out and programmed in to the software, and the move is built between the key frames. This is a time-consuming process, and it’s not uncommon for a single shot to take up the majority of a shoot day. However, the results are entirely worth it.

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Blocking

Our prep process included a significant amount of blocking. Since the ad plays out in one take, we had to be precise in mapping out all of the action. In addition, due to the significant risk of injury from the Bolt arm, actors had to be on their marks at all times, and could not move until given specific instructions. When you hear something described as having a lot of “moving parts”, this was literally the embodiment of that definition.

It’s amazing seeing everything come together. Below, you can watch everything in action.

Lighting for the Phantom

This spot called for slow motion in the realm of 400-1000 frames per second, so we shot on the Phantom Flex 4K and ARRI Master Primes, courtesy of Abel Cine in New York. Personally, I love the Master Primes - not only do they have a great look with beautiful skin tones and subtle focus falloff, but they are also tack sharp wide open. Knowing that I have the ability to open up a stop or two further than most other lenses without losing that sharpness is usually a must with Phantom shoots. Luckily the Bolt accurately controls the focus as well, so my camera assistant had a pretty relaxed day.

Gaffer Greg Tango had this to say about his experience lighting for high speed: "The challenge of slow motion is having enough punch from units while not flickering. We utilized an ARRI Skypanel 360 and a couple S60s for keys. These units all have a high speed mode that allow filming up to 1000fps. The key is never truly the issue when shooting high speed (just need enough punch), it’s trying to fill the backgrounds with the right intensity and shape of light. Our first choice was to use Quasar Crossfades but we found those to flicker at the higher frame rates. Instead we ended up using a mixture of ARRI L10Cs and Lite Mats to get the right background levels."

Creatively speaking, both the client and director were open to playing around with more colors and shape to the lighting than might be typical of a spot like this. The teal in the background really helped sell a nighttime look, even though we shot during the day and couldn’t use any practicals. Coincidentally, the color ended up being on-brand as well. I’m very happy with the look of this spot.

I’d like to extend a big thank you to Yonder and NJ Lotto for having me, and to my amazing crew that made my job easy. Check out the finished spot below!

As always, the conversation continues on my Instagram (@dkruta). Please feel free to send me any questions or comments. I love chatting about cinematography and I’m always interested to hear your thoughts.