hizlik-Event

Update: As of 2020, an updated documentation for this project is now on my website at hiz.al/3drc.

Inspiration

This project was inspired by C’était un rendez-vous (1976), a high-speed, single-shot drive through the streets of Paris in the early morning. I was really taken by the sounds of the revving engine, the shifting gears, and daredevil speeds through the cramped and winding streets of this old city.

Link: Rendevous (1976)

Description

For this project, originally I wanted to make a parody/recreation of sorts by installing a camera on an radio-controlled (RC) car I have built and used in the past for projects and art. I also decided to use two cameras and create stereoscopic video so the viewer can feel more immersed (using a Google Cardboard or “3D” glasses). This decision was in part for personal reasons (I have never done stereoscopic video before) and a valued suggestion from a fellow classmate. While the first idea was to create a choreographed scene through the streets, sidewalks and buildings of Pitt and the CMU campus, Golan really enjoyed a part of some test footage I shot where I drive underneath a few parked cars. He said there was something very intimate about the underside of a vehicle, something almost not meant to be seen and fascinatingly unique perspective.

Planning

So I decided to work from that and try to capture various interesting places and things from this unique position, with the ability to drive up to 85mph as well. 🙂 After building a rig to hold two GoPro cameras, my car was about 6 inches tall, the perfect and ideal height to be able to drive under short gaps and small areas. The camera lenses were set wider apart than normal human eyes, however that worked to my benefit as that “exaggerated” the 3D depth effect, which helps make objects in the distance look more 3D than real life. This helps because the GoPro cameras naturally have wide-angle lenses that often make close-looking objects appear farther away, so this wide-set camera setup helped bring those far-but-close objects to life.

Filming

I travelled to different on- and off-campus locations, mainly focusing on how to integrate cars and traffic into my shot. While it was fun chasing after cars, driving under buses and even a police traffic stop, many of the more interesting shots came from the social interactions that occurred on-campus. From my high-above viewpoint of a third-floor studio, I was able to chase kids and follow people around campus. One particularly memorable moment was driving through a school tour group. Unfortunately a camera was knocked out of place without me knowing, and I was unable to use much of the day’s footage in the final video. I do, however, include some of my favorites shot in mono form, as a gif, at the bottom of this blog. This is a shot of me waiting for a bus to arrive so I could (safely) drive under the bus as it pulled up:

And this is what my car looks like driving around with two cameras and going under a vehicle:

Editing

Once the footage has been shot, I learned that the process from camera to stereoscopic video on YouTube was very simple. All I have to do edit the footage to be side-by-side within one normal 16:9 video (pref. full HD or higher), with each “eye” scaled to 100% height and 50% width.

A screengrab from the final upload to YouTube looks like this:

When uploading to YouTube, there is a simple checkbox that automatically converts the video a stereoscopic format and creates three versions of the video for public viewing- mono version, anaglyphic version (the red/blue old-fashioned stereoscopic) and VR-ready video. An anaglyphic version may look like this:

and this is what you see through Google Cardboard or similar VR:

Issues

Throughout this project I discovered a few unexpected problems and/or risks:

  • Cameras mis-aligned (esp after bumps/crashes), causing issues with 3D-ness
  • Car sagging/scraping in front (fixed)
  • Car being run over (didn’t happen)
  • Cameras are farther apart than eyes in real life (extreme depth)
  • Rain
  • On-Camera sound is bad

Final Product

Be sure to use a Google Cardboard or similar VR headset to fully enjoy the depth effect! The anaglyphic mode really reduces the color spectrum of the video.

These are some loops that show my favorite moments, some of which are not in the final video (due to camera sync issues or just didn’t make the cut).

One thought on “hizlik-Event”

  1. Anonymous feedback from group crit, 4/13/2017:

    Civilian drone surveillance of arrests
    The 3D glasses excite me

    The 3d glasses feel entirely unnecessary. stereoscopic would be cool but it needs to be seamless and near perfect, doesn’t feel like it adds anything in its current state.
    the colour distortion introduced by the glasses is interesting though

    why is video backwards (not that it isnt interesting, but seems a random choice)

    wish it was more people and less cars

    & that the exploration was more deliberate / seemed more deliberate

    Really cool stuff. This is awesome with or without the 3D effect. Why 3D?

    Why?+++
    ^I agree. I’m really bored watching this. I really don’t feel a point to this. I want a little more to digest. Think about your audience, who this is for.
    ^ it felt like a gopro ad+
    ^ or like “hey check it out I stuck a camera on my RC car and drove it around”

    If you upload a side by side video to youtube you can have it turn it into anaglyph (red-blue) 3d, and then adjust the inter-ocular distance and stuff (and also then isomorphically support cardboard etc)

    what about surveilling others , counter-surveillance (ouuuuuh yes)
    ^ He did this for another project: https://vimeo.com/162565549
    peeking into cmu life
    peeking into cmu rabbit life (YAS go harass the late night campus bunnies) <<< with an IR camera yeah stick a hololens onto your rc car+ i wish you had the interactions with roxy/children in there “Going places where humans can’t go” this is close to a concept+ Choreographing your project more would add to the final product + if you had a narrative to your story If I remember correctly the rendezvous piece used audio from a ferarri- what if you also put crazy high powered car audio onto this? And perhaps removed the happy jazzy music? Could make a totally different vibe +