Times Colonist

Video director puts you in the driver’s seat

- RONALD D. WHITE

LOS ANGELES — Tim Damon grew up photograph­ing Detroit muscle cars. His video work earned him awards and Super Bowl airtime.

Then came the call to help promote a high-end sports sedan that sounded like someone forgot the engine.

In the resulting short film about the Tesla Model S, called Lightdrive, music swells, lights play along the car’s body and, as the sun rises, the electric vehicle hugs the hairpins like a low-slung fighter jet on wheels. The film has been viewed thousands of times online.

“I started out in still photograph­y,” Damon said. “If you can make a car look great when it’s not moving, you don’t need the noise.”

Damon’s Square Planet Media is among a small cadre of production companies that manufactur­ers are drafting for the tricky business of selling cars.

More consumers are using their phones and other electronic devices to shop for cars rather than wandering around dealer showrooms. Cars are getting more complex and expensive, and young people are delaying getting their drivers’ licences because they can easily connect with friends online and by using ride-sharing apps.

Vehicles that park themselves and call your mother are “altering the basic contours and features of the traditiona­l automobile and amplifying the difficulty and cost of manufactur­ing cars,” according to a report from consulting firm PwC. “The price tag is high — as much as 20 per cent greater than the cost of the previous generation of automobile­s.”

Selling all this is Damon’s job, through his Square Planet Media, a commercial production company based outside Los Angeles, and Damon Production­s, which specialize­s in still photograph­y.

Damon’s approach is simple: You get left behind the moment you reject the latest technology.

“I grew up with coin-operated pay phones, when the only way to ‘be there’ for a big event was to physically be there and, if you weren’t there, you just missed out,” Damon, 52, said. “How do I survive now when the technology is literally changing before my eyes? You just embrace it, the second anything new comes out, no matter what it is.”

That means a combinatio­n of stabilized camera systems, lighting and chase vehicles that convey the thrill of speed in a spot that runs a minute or less.

None of that is cheap. The Tesla short had three producers, three directors, two filming units and an original music score. Damon Production­s and Square Planet Media got producer, studio director of photograph­y and camera car credits.

“It wasn’t even that big compared to some,” Damon said. “We’ve been on production­s that have had crews of 80 to 100 people working on them.”

To keep costs down, Damon’s companies make a lot of the rigging and devices that hold the lights and cameras.

“In the past three years, I’ve built four camera cars that all do different things. My studio has turned into sort of a machine shop,” Damon said. “I have two full-time welders and fabricator­s on staff.”

For commercial shoots that average between $200,000 and $1 million, Damon has assembled an exotic fleet of chase vehicles: five Porsche Cayennes and one Hummer H2. There also is a specially modified and supercharg­ed Ford Raptor. Even the Porsches have been beefed up, from 450 horsepower to 650 horsepower.

They need the extra juice to shoot footage at speeds of 160 kilometres an hour or faster.

On top of each is what looks like a giant scorpion stinger, which holds a stabilized camera crane system. When he’s operating the system, Damon sits in the back seat, working toggles on a setup that resembles the world’s largest Xbox console control pad.

His workdays have allowed as little as two hours of sleep, and he’s on the road all over the world for about 150 days out of the year, Damon said. Clients have included Acura, BMW, Fiat Chrysler, GM, Infiniti, Nissan, Lexus, Tesla and Subaru.

Damon, who’s been looking through one camera or another for decades, still gets a charge out of his job.

“We’re really into it,” Damon said of the work he does with just 11 employees, “and we’re having a lot of fun doing it.”

Although the auto industry is in flux, “it’s all going to sort itself out,” he said.

 ??  ?? Commercial director Tim Damon uses giant Russian-made stabilized camera arms for his video shoots.
Commercial director Tim Damon uses giant Russian-made stabilized camera arms for his video shoots.
 ??  ?? Commercial director Tim Damon used imaginativ­e special effects to heighten interest in the car in this ad for the Tesla Model S.
Commercial director Tim Damon used imaginativ­e special effects to heighten interest in the car in this ad for the Tesla Model S.

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