Kohler Aleo

Finishing the Kohler Aleo commercial

About two years ago I was working as a director of photography for a commercial for Kohler from the USA. The filming circumstances were mixed, but the team for those two days was all the better. Especially the work with operator Ulrich Mors was very pleasant. I have summarized more about the production on the respective project page.

Now the film is finally finished and you can see it here: Kohler Aleo faucet collection

And for those who understand Spanish better than English, here is the Spanish version: Grifería Aleo – Jacob Delafon

Buda Castle

Egészségére

Buda Castle
Buda Castle

A new shoot, a new country. This time in the capital of Hungary, Budapest. As so often when I visit a new country, sometimes only a new area, first I study the relevant Wikipedia articles. In addition, I quickly learn a few important words: Yes, no, good day, thank you. In the service of av22, I fly to the ninth largest city in the EU with my charming colleagues Julia and Tony. Excitedly we board the plane that takes us from Cologne/Bonn to Berlin Tegel. In Tegel we have a layover – and we soon realize, go back on the same plane with the same crew as on the previous flight. This is confirmed by the nice flight attendant, who tells me that they will fly back the same routes that day. Read More

burst tyre

And then: bam!

Two weeks ago I drove from Cologne to Bremen with two colleagues. Every ten minutes we got into some seemingly causeless traffic jam, so that we needed a good 5 hours for the 3 1/2 hours distance. The way back on a Sunday should actually be easy to do. Nope! Five traffic jams later we thought that we had finally made it, until suddenly the next traffic jam came and everything stopped. Full closure. But at some point even that was lifted.

There’s one thought you should never think, “What could possibly go wrong now?” Many years ago during college we said this during a shoot after every glitch, and after almost everything went wrong – the generator went up in flames. So when the full lockdown was lifted, I dared to entertain this thought to some extent. About 80 km before Cologne it happens:

We drive in the left lane at between 140 and 150 km/h. All of a sudden there is a huge bang, the whole car is shaken and moves immediately to the left towards the barrier wall. I have both hands on the steering wheel and can react instantly and steer against it. I turn on the warning lights, quickly look around to see what the situation is behind me. The car wobbles, but I can get it into the middle lane. Ironically, I have to accelerate to keep the cars behind us from crashing into us, but they seem to recognize the situation. What could possibly go wrong now? There is no hard shoulder! I get the car into the right lane relatively stable. And then there is actually an emergency stop that seems to be within reach. By now I appreciate emergency stop bays. And what could possibly go wrong now? The brakes fail completely. We drive towards the emergency stop bay without functioning brakes. For a moment I think about using the barrier to stop the car. The hand brake then is the less violent option. We finally come to a stop.

All three of us are still in shock and full of adrenaline and happy to be alive, because everything could have turned out quite differently in every step of this event. After the (of course) sudden torrential rain has subsided we have a look at the damage. The tyre has been completely shredded, but the body seems to have suffered only little damage. We drive the car back to the beginning of the bay and as far inside as possible and change the tire, which, how else could it be, is completely flat. The ADAC (German Automobile Club) helps us to get the tyre fit again and checks briefly if everything is okay on the outside. Back on the road we decide that 100 km/h is an insanely great cruising speed. Without any further incidents we all arrive home healthy and extremely alive.

In retrospect, it is a small miracle that apart from a burst tyre and a bit of damage to the car, absolutely nothing else happened. And I will not think again: What could possibly go wrong now?

Bayarena

Soccer, take two!

During our road trip I get a call for a film shoot in a stadium. I haven’t done that yet, and since I’ve just been to the DFB headquarters, I might as well go to a soccer game. That’s how it happened that I was on the road for the stadium TV during the top match last Saturday, Leverkusen vs. Schalke. Several cameramen distributed around the stadium, mainly to capture images for the screens in the stadium and for the website. Before the game started, I was able to get an impression of the coaches benches, and what probably impressed me most was that all seats have their own seat heating!

Less than perfect headphones and unbelievably loud noise prevented perfect communication, but thanks to an insanely competent cable operator, who guided me to the right position one or two times, I was able to deliver the pictures that the director wanted. Only the continuous drizzle, which always came from the front, was a little annoying, but apart from that it was something different again. Especially when I was standing on the lawn and had to shoot a presentation while my live image was shown on the screen in front of me. Since my eyepiece was constantly fogged up, I could set up my image so much easier. Unfortunately, the screen is not that portable…

WM-Pokal

There it is!

A film shoot with DFB President Wolfgang Niersbach at the DFB headquarters in Frankfurt offered the opportunity to take a closer look at the cups. A relatively short shoot was followed by a relatively long photo session with an incredibly football enthusiastic editor and all the cups and whatever else was in the display cases.

Even if my own enthusiasm for soccer is rather low (I’m indulging in rugby!), I couldn’t resist taking a few photos. And who was not excited or died a thousand deaths during the World Cup final, especially in the last minutes?

 

So for the football fans, here are a few more photos: