Film & Editing Blog - Behind the Scenes
HD Outdoor Film Making - Filming in Machu Picchu, Peru
Thursday 8th September 2011
![]() So we completed filming the Inca Trail Trek yesterday and spent the night in a hotel! Which meant a shower and a real bed! But just when you thought it was all over... worry not! today is the big day. We're off to Machu Picchu (pronounced Machew Pic Chew). So I've got the HD DSLR 5D mk II rig ready and we start the day early getting on a bus at about 7am to take us to the Machu Picchu site. It's like going to a prison! There's only one road and there's a security checkpoint. Then once you arrive and "de-bus" - you've got to love those Americanisms! you go through passport control! yep that's right you need your passport and a ticket to get in. One of our party has forgotten her student card and this causes a 5 min queue and I'm thinking of that Clint Eastwood film "Firefox" where the guard stops him and says something like "your papers are not in order...". Anyway no one is arrested, deported, killed or otherwise in hollywood fashion taken off and interrogated and our party gets in! Once through there is a stall for the tourists where you can get your passport stamped with an official Macchu Picchu stamp! (and yes like the tourist I am, I got mine done - well you only live once!) I'm going in with the filming rig and audio equipment in the backpack and the 5D Mk II slung over my shoulder with the Canon EF 24-70mm 1:2.8 L series USM lens with a Fader ND Mk II filter. The 5D is not a small camera especially with the battery grip on but it's also not that big and so it doesn't get unwanted attention from the guards at the gate. Why would that be a problem... well you see if you're a professional then you may need to pay for a filming permit. I wouldn't mind but this is a charity gig and I'm doing this bit out of the goodness of my heart - there's no cash invovled so technically it's not a job and I'm just a tourist, but I don't need the hassle! Back to Machu Picchu... it's .... BEAUTIFUL! There's still a low mist and the mountains are shades of grey! Makes for some stunning abstract black and white shots. Hey I always shoot in RAW full colour but I can imagine what the black and whites will look like. This is a photo opportunity that's worth the tired legs! My guide tells me to keep the rig in the bag for now, we'll use it later... fine! I'm in photography mode right now! But here's how I see life... There's probably been millions of people stood here with cameras and they're all taking the same shot... that's not for me. I don't like being predictable and Banksy's graffiti in London which says "This is not a photo opportunity" springs to mind and so I stop and get out of tourist mode and back into pro photographer mode. I'd rather go away with 5 pictures that make me tingle than 500 that anyone could have taken. I start looking around me, thinking about the movement of the sun, the way the clouds and mist are evolving, where the people are and where they are not... I do that thing that photographers do that is more intuitive than logical and you start putting yourself in various places and seeing from those spots... I wonder off from my group a little so I can start to take pictures that tell more of a story than "I was here". We headed up to Sun Gate which is about an hours treck uphill and en rout we discovered that the Discovery Channel were there shooting for three days. They had a 3D filming rig and also some standard (very cool) stuff. Sad to say our guide had to tell some of their crew off because they were standing on the ancient walls. It'd be like a Peruvian film crew coming to the UK and walking on the roof of Canterbury Cathedral... come on guys! filming a place does not make you special or give you a right to disrespect another cultures historical artefacts! Better watch that I don't make the same mistake! Still round the corner from the Disco boys I set my rig up and carried on up the hill. My guide laughed and said "you can just say you're one of their team now" - thanks I think :). We film a couple of mini documentaries about the Inca belief systems, symbols and such with my guide making a willing and quite good presenter. Lots of scenery footage which is easy in a place like this. I also do a little behind the scenes skit which I may release one day and then we de-rig and head back to the main tourist hubub. I once visited Muir woods in San Franscisco and my friend and guide told me that something like 95% of Americans never make it further than 100m from their cars when they visit nature. I don't know if that was true or not but you get the feeling that's true for most people. The site closest the entrance is naturally heaving and so I take fewer pics as I'm after the sense of scale of the place. I did ask my guide to take a quick snap of me with the main site below (which is the picture shown) just to prove I was there... the rest of the proof will be in the video I'm going to edit when I'm back in Blighty.
Footnote:If you're thinking of going... GO! It really is an amazing place and saddly it may be shutting to the public soon as the rocks are subsiding and becoming unstable. The charity organisers I'm filming for are Student Adventures in the UK and I think they do non-student trips too so look them up. Tags: Peru, Inca, adventure, 5D Mk II, Canon, Mountains, Machu Picchu, Trekking Categories: Behind the Scenes, Outdoor Filming |
Add a comment | Posted by Mark Zaretti at 16:26
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