Hitchcock and his cinematographer used this to remarkable effect in Vertigo by trucking the camera and changing the focal length of a zoom lens at the same time, keeping Jimmy Stewart the same size in the frame
Thanks for that. I saw
Vertigo about 1959-60 when I wasn't yet a teenager, so wouldn't have taken much notice of that effect, but when watching the DVD of
Jaws a few years ago I certainly noticed, because that was the earliest example of it (1975) that I could recall, and I wondered who originated it.
Does anyone know exactly where that scene is in
Jaws? From memory it's a shot of Roy Scheider sitting on the beach and he realises the shark is starting to "bother" people close to shore, round about the time that a dog disappears.
The effect is currently in an advertisement on New Zealand TV where a young couple is house-hunting. It's a view of them standing back-on to the camera and facing a house they like. The lens might have a bigger zoom range than the one in
Jaws.
The DVD of
Vertigo has been selling here for around $10 recently, so I must grab it. Maltin says it's a great film, and it lingered in my memory for a few years.
Just remember, never take a tight close-up of someone with a short lens if you want to stay friends...Oh, I dunno about that. We have a lot of Polynesians in New Zealand and some have fairly flat, wide faces with even flatter and wider noses, so careful use of a shorter lens, closer in than usual, often gained me happy customers. Conversely, someone with a very long nose can be made to look better with an extra-long lens. The whole art of being a successful portrait photographer is, in some cases, re-interpreting reality. Painters have probably done that for centuries.
The difficulty is that there is no single objective reality.A favourite escape clause of mine is, "Everything is relative and every situation is unique. Everything depends on something else." It got me out of all sorts of trouble.
A classic case is the derisive expression, "Aw, c'mon man, it's just common sense." For something to be common sense, you have to be in possession of the appropriate information.