[Click here to view the video in this article]
The conventional way to shoot a nature film will be to get out into the great outdoors and document it—but third year Belgium film student Boris Godfroid has proven that this need not be the only way.
Godfroid has recently produced a charming short that shows snails and insects going about their day in what looks like a patch of dewy, mossy ground in the garden—in fact, every scene in the film was shot indoor, in a tiny studio.
With just some spare bricks and transplanted moss, the creative film-maker built a miniature garden indoors, before unleashing the “film stars” on the set.
The resulting film, shot on a Nikon D7000, is surprisingly realistic and convincing—watch it below.
[via PetaPixel]
The conventional way to shoot a nature film will be to get out into the great outdoors and document it—but third year Belgium film student Boris Godfroid has proven that this need not be the only way.
Godfroid has recently produced a charming short that shows snails and insects going about their day in what looks like a patch of dewy, mossy ground in the garden—in fact, every scene in the film was shot indoor, in a tiny studio.
With just some spare bricks and transplanted moss, the creative film-maker built a miniature garden indoors, before unleashing the “film stars” on the set.
The resulting film, shot on a Nikon D7000, is surprisingly realistic and convincing—watch it below.
[via PetaPixel]