Over the weekend, Reza and I went round the South-west of Melbourne looking for abandoned buildings to carry out our shooting experiments, and we chanced upon this abandoned warehouse in Yarravale.

The place was littered with spray cans, rubble from renovation works that might or might not have taken place, old furniture, walls that have collapsed, ceiling that might have fallen down, and there wasn’t a wall that has not been artistically marked with graffiti on it. This was the perfect location for our little experiments to do some chase scenes, fight scenes, or just tracking a subject, as we need a big wide open space to play around with the movement of the camera, as well as the subject.

We spent most of the time taking still images (I’ve uploaded a couple at the bottom of this post) to capture the different pockets of space and area, in order for us to draft a script or storyboard for our upcoming shoots. The building sits on quite a big foot print, moreover, the actual building has several “compartments” and a main warehouse where we have a huge opened space with a high ceiling tattered with holes that allows sunlight to peep through into the building. If anyone has seen the movie Chappie (2015) directed by Neill Blomkamp, the building reminds me a set out of the movie where Chappie, the robot was raised by gangsters taking shelter in an abandoned building.

The above is a little test shoot that we did to see how it looks on camera. Though it’s nothing much, it is a good starting point for us to brainstorm ideas for the next few shoots that we plan to carry out on our upcoming visits back to the place. I did a test grade over the footage as well. Since it was only our recce shoot, we were equipped with only our DSLR and tripods, hence achieving a proper exposure in a dimly lit warehouse with pockets of sunshine was quite a challenge. Therefore, I might consider bringing a couple of lights in our future visits. In the colour grading process, I tried to maintaining a balance mixed of colours, not biasing to any in particular, but generally trying to achieve a more saturated look as compared to the “grey-ish” look out of the camera.

I understand that shooting on a DSLR has its limitations of having the visual compressed into H264 format, and that leaves very little “room” to work with during colour grading as the highlights would have been blown out, and the blacks might be crushed, due to the compression. Hence, in my next couple of experiments and research, I would be looking up how to use Magic Lantern (a free software created for Canon EOS cameras) to shoot in RAW, hopefully losing less details in the compression and maintaining a higher bit rate.

Ultimately, I am happy with the location we have found and we would definitely return back for several more shoots in the upcoming weeks ahead. Feeling inspired by the space and emptiness of the area, if the walls could speak, I wonder the many stories they would tell about this building that now serves as a hideout, shelter, hangout, and now featured in a little student project.