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Rush practicing at
Rush practicing at "Corner Wave" on the Ottowa.

How to Make a Killer Whitewater Video

Pro paddler Rush Sturges dishes tips on making dazzling adventure films

Published: 
Rush practicing at

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You don鈥檛 need vanloads of equipment or even years of training to become a professional adventure filmmaker. You just need a decent camera, some innate talent, and guts. . The 28 year-old professional kayaker and filmmaker started his career when he was in high school, shooting paddling groups on the Salmon River in California with a Canon camcorder. In 2009, he , River Roots, which has since produced three full-length paddling films. He has worked on projects on almost every continent, most recently in Mexico directing aerial footage for a kayaking, surfing, mountain-biking, and BASE-jumping video for the Mexican Board of Tourism.

We caught up with him in-between edits and asked him what it takes to become an adventure filmmaker.

1. 听It鈥檚 Not Your Equipment; It鈥檚 How You Use It

In the modern era of (relatively) affordable digital SLR鈥檚, the playing field has never been more even for aspiring filmmakers. 鈥淭ake the fact that the Canon 7D, which only costs $1,500, has been used to shoot Hollywood movies,鈥 Sturges points out. 鈥淭he reality is that, to the average eye, the difference of quality between top-level cameras and consumer/prosumer cameras has become increasingly thin.鈥 According to Sturges, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not so much what you shoot with, it鈥檚 how you shoot it.鈥

Good Options for Starting Out:

High-End (Read: 鈥淓xpensive鈥) Options:

2. Listen to the Music, and Keep It Eclectic

According to Sturges, music is the root of all of his projects. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the heartbeat and driving force behind cinema,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he best directors also tend to have the best soundtracks.鈥 (Think Tarantino, Scorsese, Anderson, etc.). Sturges tries to find songs that are not yet popular, or underground enough that he can afford the rights to them. 鈥淭here is a real art to this,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥淎nd it often requires countless hours on music blogs or programs like iTunes, Soundcloud, Spotify, or Pandora.鈥 If you are having trouble finding music you can afford, Sturges suggests getting a composer to create something original. 鈥淔or my DVD projects, about 40-50% of the music is original,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥淭his will also make your project more unique.鈥

3. Tell a (Good) Story

鈥淪toryline should always play a role in your filmmaking,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥淚鈥檝e always been a fan of action-sports porn, which is generally just epic footage set to a bumpin鈥 soundtrack. There is a time and a place for this, and God knows I鈥檝e put in my hours making these kinds of movies. However, as you mature as a filmmaker, most people tend to go in the direction of being more story-oriented. This is the trend in action sports, too, and it鈥檚 exciting to see it move in this direction.鈥 In a nutshell: You need a beginning, middle, and an end. 鈥淭he has been a tried and tested format since the dawn of entertainment,鈥 Sturges says. It works.

4. Create a Solid Team

When Sturges selects the people he wants to work with on projects, he tries to pick out the ones that he knows are going to be efficient and fun. 鈥淲hen creative people are having fun in the field, they are usually doing a good job,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥滱s the director, it鈥檚 your duty to choose a group of like-minded and positive individuals who can get the job done. 鈥淚t takes just one big ego in a group to throw off the balance,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou need to be able to accept your own faults and also point out the faults of others in a way that is diplomatic and favorable to progress.鈥 It simply won鈥檛 work if you have everyone on your team working on a different film.

5. Prepare Yourself for Postproduction

Sturges often spends more time editing his films than being in the field shooting them. Get ready to spend a lot of time at the computer. 鈥淚 tend to be meticulous about making sure my shots are all on the right beat within my edit,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥淭his is easy to overlook, but if you watch your edits enough you will start to see your faults. If you are just starting out with editing, your best bet is to learn Adobe Premier. Adobe has a few more options and also enables you to mix most formats.鈥

6. Fake It Till You Make It

If you feel like you鈥檙e not sure what you鈥檙e doing or that you鈥檙e in over your head, there鈥檚 a good chance you are. 鈥淭he best thing you can do is roll with it,鈥 Sturges says. 鈥淔rom my experience, this is a big part of filmmaking in general. The reality is that, like any art form, there is no exact science. The best you can do is to maintain a positive attitude, and do your best.鈥 As long as you remain confident and open throughout the creative process, you will probably be fine. 鈥淲ork hard to make the best product possible with your team,鈥 Sturges says, 鈥淎nd chances are you will get hired the next time.鈥

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