This Film Was Shot on an iPhone, but That's Not What Made It Impressive

Every once in a while an article pops up claiming a cool looking video or an image was shot on an iPhone. Often this becomes a stage for arguments between Apple and non-Apple fans. I decided to look at this film with a different mindset and hopefully you will appreciate it too from a filmmaking standpoint.

The Story

This short film, "The Bucket," was shot on an iPhone XS and directed by the Chinese film director Jia Zhangke. It depicts a simple story of a young man who has been in the country with his mother for the Chinese New Year. He goes back a long and exhausting way to the big city with an unusual baggage his mother insisted on taking: a heavy tape-sealed bucket. The story made me smile and appreciate the simple things that can make a beautiful film, yet without flying robots and explosions.

Purpose of the Film

Of course, Apple makes that for marketing their iPhone X series so that it brings them more profit. That particular film emphasizes on the capability of the phone of faking a shallow depth of field very convincingly. While it's a nice product, I am more interested in the way the film was shot, because the truth is, it can be made with almost any camera that is capable of capturing video. Shallow depth of field looks cool indeed, but it is not essential for that film. More phones on the market start to incorporate that new technology of faking the bokeh effect. Let's leave the blurred background for now and focus on how the film was shot and directed.

The Bucket: although shot on a iPhone, it's not a no-budget production

Not a No-Budget Production

If you look at the ending credits you will find that "shot on an iPhone" doesn't mean the whole budget was spent on a smartphone. The film was not shot by Jia Zhangke alone while traveling through the country. In the following behind-the-scenes videos you will see the production was far from being a no-budget one. They had a director of photography, casting director, sound engineers, hair and makeup artists, music composer, 1st AD (assistant director), 1st AC (camera assistant), editor, colorist, and even a VFX compositor (yes, the movie incorporated visual effects whether you see them or not).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lYFWtSIPiM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRn6SutCmcU

The size of the production doesn't have anything to do it with the fact it was shot on a mobile phone. It could be shot on any other camera with the same emotional impact. Of course, in this case Apple takes credit for their video-capturing device, but, for example, the sound was not recorded with the phone. The lighting was not created by the phone. The framing and composition was not crafted by the mobile device. The phone was only used to capture the visuals (probably with an exception for the areal footage). It is possible that parts of the footage may have been altered, such as applying a sky replacement, which sometimes happens even if high-end cinema cameras are used.

Some key frames from the film that are composed in such a way, they tell a story in a single image.

Composition and Directing

When I started working with video I thought if I knew how to light, it would be enough to make nice films. I couldn't be further away from the truth. That craft is way more than lighting. It is what you put in the frame or hide from the frame, and the way the frames are sequenced together with a proper sound. Mastering that will bring your films to a whole new level even if you don't have high-end cinema gear.

Dynamic Range

The camera on the iPhone has a good dynamic range which makes it relatively well-suited to high-contrast situations. Despite that, you can still guess this was not shot on a real cinema camera, because the slightly overexposed areas make it look "digital." The same thing happens when shooting video with DSLRs. However, the director and the cinematographer did a great job using the camera in situations where the contrast was not extremely high. They used the overcast weather to their advantage.

Lighting

For lighting on several of the BTS scenes we see lights that look like the ARRI Skypanel LEDs. No other lighting is visible from these videos. Usually when shooting outdoors during the day, directors of photography tend to use black panels for subtracting light, because it's abundant and sometimes too much.

On close-ups they probably used the same LED panels, because the light is not harsh, but it not that soft as if it was coming from a bigger light source.

See how the shadows are not absolutely hard, but have a soft edge at the end. This means the light source is not so small in relation to the subject.

Focusing

There are apps that help you simulate focus pulling on an iPhone, but if the camera is in motion every touch on the screen will shake the camera whether or not it's on a stabilizer. You can see focus racking in some of the locked off shots (with the camera on a tripod). On scenes such as where the mother sends off her son, the distance between the camera and the subject in focus is maintained almost the same. This way there's no such need for focus pulling. This is one of the examples how to shoot within the limits of your gear.

Sound

You can also see audio was recorded on external professional recorders, not on the iPhone. The audio from the phone is probably used only as a reference for synchronizing later in post, as there's no time code to use.

Conclusion

This film is an example that demonstrates that don't need a high-end cinema camera and expensive lenses to create a moving and an emotional story. Knowing your camera limitations is an essential technical skill. If you study its performance under different lighting scenarios you will be able to keep it away from scenes it can't handle and use it only where it will capture moving images in a better way. None of the cameras today will help you capture cinematic footage unless you design your film with nice lighting, composition, and appropriate directing. The camera is an important tool, but not that important for such productions where the actual story is crafted and shaped by skillful people.

If some of you are still angry that this is yet another "shot on an iPhone" article, I encourage you to go and make one with a different smartphone, because it's doable. You already know what it takes. It's not the phone, it's the team.

Tihomir Lazarov's picture

Tihomir Lazarov is a commercial portrait photographer and filmmaker based in Sofia, Bulgaria. He is the best photographer and filmmaker in his house, and thinks the best tool of a visual artist is not in their gear bag but between their ears.

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25 Comments

What a great video.

Indeed!

I prefer last year train video. Now that is a great story and a big thank you to train attendants during the festive Chinese New Year. (Which for most chinese people is the one time you are expected to return to your hometown to spend time with family)

I seem to have missed that one. I'll check it out, thanks!

Then why mention the iPhone at all? (Headline)

Let's say, just for the clicks... (even though the body of the article says a lot about the iPhone)

I liked how you covered this project in detail, thanks

I appreciate you appreciated my humble efforts :)

How did they get the bokeh effect in video mode?

I don't have the phone, but I see it works somehow. In one of the BTS videos you can see that the phone does that during the "live view."

You can only use that false dof effect for stills. But if you look at the end credits of the film you will see rotoscoping - so it was done in post

It is possible.

My reply was based on other commercials for iPhone X where in the live view they show you can control the depth of field and you see the result immediately on the screen. This is also visible on a BTS video I have linked above.

Again, just speculating.

I've been getting really curious about creating video, this article is very interesting, informative, and well rounded. :)

I'm glad it helped Jason. Thanks for the feedback!

Shot with an iphone and 100k of other gear

You can replace all other gear with cheaper options and you will still get the same result. You can use a cheaper LED panel, a cheaper sound recorder, or cheaper microphones.

The team, logistics, and actors are the most expensive part of the project. Just imagine you have to pay every single one of the people you see in the frame, you have to get them sign a document they agree to be filmed. You have to rent the bus, the boat, the house. You have to pay the cinematographer, the 1st AC, the 1st AD, the hair and make-up artists. You have to cover travel expenses, etc. At the end your gear cost will be a small fraction of the project. And, by the way, for most big projects gear is rented.

this is certainly another truly fine example of how a smartphone's tiny camera can be put to professional use if we know what to do ...

the 1st-ever credit however, remains for another filmmaker and another smartphone brand altogether ...

please meet the award winning movie Olive, shot on a Nokia smartphone 8 years ago:

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2011/dec/02/olive-film-shot-on-smartphone

Quite a bold move to make a feature film no a low dynamic range recording device. I hope the story covers all the visual imperfections of the camera. If it does, it's all good.

only the 'camera' was of a cellphone ... the lens setup, director of photography, actors, crew, EVERYTHING, were Hollywood equipment and professionals ... (follow the link i gave and search for more info if interested ... also, reportedly, at the moment, the Nokia phone in use boosted a 40MP camera! how was that possible? i have no idea as i know of no current smartphone offering such a high-MP camera anyway ... i'm not even sure if the "40"MP is not a typo and maybe it was a 4MP one!?) :-)

Those megapixels were for stills only, not for video. They were not real megapixels in terms of photodiode-to-pixel relation. What matters is the dynamic range which was not great for that camera, but nevertheless they did a whole film with it.

yes, i know the video capture pixel count of practically all smartphones and even FF or MF and surely APS-C size sensors is never the same as that of their still image resolution ... (at its best, some sensors make use of the entire sensor surface but the final image resolution is always MUCH lower than what the sensor can handle for stills ... that's true even in case of the 4K and higher sensors actually ...)

even the still image resolutions of the majority of sensors in use right now (that haven't changed much really in terms of image quality in the last decade or so unless for satisfying the pixel-peeper prosumer photogs out there who're more in love with more pixels rather than true image quality!) are quite overrated ...

looking at what we get from digital cameras of all types these days, i can see that my own little table i came up with nearly a decade ago is still valid if we're truly after having less noise vs higher image quality and broader DR vs lower pixel count ...

smartphones and bridge cameras with tiny sensors = 6~8MP max could work really fine IF prosumers ridiculous demands and marketing hoopla allowed that, but 20MP in some mini digital cameras is but a HUGE lie as we can see in the final image results!

APS-C = 10MP max, preferably 8MP ...
FF = 20MP max, preferably 16MP ...
MF = 40MP max, preferably 36MP ...

the sensor (and related image processor) technology appears to be working pretty much similar to the CPU technology in computers: max 4GHz speed is tops that has been manufactured so far and it's stayed without any true and major changes (in speed as well as in performance) for more than a decade now ... but yes, new CPUs with silly fancy mythical or even spiritual names do appear once awhile to give the not so successful market some boost ... :-) (even the 4GHz speed is achieved mostly by "cheating" via overclocking tricks! no CPU can do that at regular voltage ratings really ... apparently, some totally new ways and means and materials are needed for a REAL new generation of CPUs and image sensors ...)

It brings us back to the point... a good photographer can use most any camera, working within its strengths and limitations.

The same goes for framing the shot: a good photographer knows what not to include in the frame.

Good for a movie, I really like this one, watch more about some good movies like that with PlayTV Geh app at https://techbigs.com/pt/playtv-geh.html

You can replace all other gear with cheaper options and you will still get the same result. You can use a cheaper LED panel, a cheaper sound recorder, or cheaper microphones.
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