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Background information

A dash of technology, a mountain of fire and flames – how we created an artsy burger commercial

Manuel Wenk
12.1.2021
Translation: Veronica Bielawski
Support: Luca Steiner

Challenge accepted: we’re producing a short commercial with modest means. The apartment is our studio and the TV is our background. A budget in the tens of thousands of francs? We can only dream of that. Some creativity, fire and a few hours of post-production will have to do.

We feel like doing something new. We want to stage a burger in a short commercial... with basically no budget and a very modest studio. The end result is supposed to be dynamic. We’re thinking a juicy patty on the grill, fresh ingredients... and we want it all to combine into one beautiful burger – as if by magic. Challenge accepted.

Time flies

The real star on the set, besides the burger, is the Venus Optics lens. That unusual rod thing is a macro wide-angle lens. It makes small objects look larger than life.

Fix it in post-editing?

At 8:00 p.m., it’s a wrap on the last shots. The camera's SSD is filled with 177 GB of data. Did we really get all the footage we need? We’ll find out in the cutting stage.

In Adobe After Effects, I mask out distracting areas, replace backgrounds, and remove the wooden sticks holding the burger together. It’s a lengthy and complex process. You can see exactly how we shot it in the video at the top of the page.

Since only the centre of the image is interesting to me, I mask out all the distracting elements. I add a green backdrop to the program. I now have the burger in front of the blue TV screen. I remove the blue background using the «Keylight (1.2)» tool. Because the blue is quite uniform, I can do this in just a few clicks.

Then, I use the «CC Wire Removal Tool» to remove the wooden stick, creating the illusion that the burger and its ingredients are floating. To make the effect work, I readjust the position of the CC Wire Removal Tool frame by frame. A Sisyphean task. Back in Adobe Premiere Pro, I run the clip a little faster so that the burger collapses in a split second and it looks like all the pieces are floating in the air. That's the magic behind it!

In some of the footage, I struggle with the small TV. When we flip the burger, the camera follows it. The white wall quickly appears in the background. I cover the white with a backdrop in the colour of the next frame. Again, I have to adjust the size and position of the green backdrop frame by frame. Since this clip also runs at a higher speed, you can’t see the con job that the green backdrop is.

Success!

English subtitles are available for the video at the top of this page.

Update

Many of you have asked questions about our budget. With all the technology used, all the time spent working, etc., the amounts add up quickly. To produce a proper commercial that can then be aired at the movies, on TV, and so on, it takes a bit more than just a camera, a great lens, and two creative minds. Here’s a video showing how things are done on a real set for food commercials:

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As a Multimedia Producer, preparing multimedia content and knowing about cutting-edge technology is my business. My main focus at digitec is producing videos. I can’t wait to try out new products such as cameras, drones or smartphones as soon as they’re launched. This is where being at the source comes in rather handy. When I’m not working, I’m probably skiing, biking or hiking – the mountains are my place to be. 


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