How Noiseless Props Are Made For Movies And TV Shows | Movies Insider | Insider

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @yingzhang7640
    @yingzhang7640 3 года назад +57670

    We need those quiet plastic chip bags in theatres NOW.

    • @RonLarhz
      @RonLarhz 3 года назад +636

      True....

    • @kazuhoshiinoue2695
      @kazuhoshiinoue2695 3 года назад +1764

      The bags may not be noisy. But what about the chips themselves?

    • @artiemilano378
      @artiemilano378 3 года назад +3248

      @@kazuhoshiinoue2695 oh no no no, it's the rustling of the bag that you hear way more prominently. There's nothing more annoying sounding then a person trying to slowly quietly eat their chips. It just prolongs the shuffling ripple noise

    • @chriswright8114
      @chriswright8114 3 года назад +201

      @@artiemilano378 yet it would be equally annoying and almost as loud if you were to dump them in a bowl. the bags would solve nothing.

    • @umloucobr4980
      @umloucobr4980 3 года назад +17

      LMAO..........

  • @pingidjit
    @pingidjit 3 года назад +19766

    Okay that explains why movies and shows with smaller budgets sounded so different to me. Hearing heal clicks, scuffs, bags and all the other things that bigger budget productions can afford to silence. This makes so much more sense now. I was confused cuz you're filming with the same tools, why would it sound different. Now I know.

    • @Native_Creation
      @Native_Creation 3 года назад +975

      There's also more attention on sound on proper projects and better sound recording/mixing that enhances the audio.

    • @rainydeestar
      @rainydeestar 3 года назад +790

      @Le-Johnny No, it doesn't sound better. Big corporation doesn't always mean bad

    • @pingidjit
      @pingidjit 3 года назад +520

      @Le-Johnny tbh the small budget ones, because of all the noise, are often too distracting for me to properly enjoy. i think big budgets not over stimulating us is a good thing worth spending money on.

    • @lauramessy
      @lauramessy 3 года назад +14

      @@pingidjit yeah I hate loud noises in those movies

    • @TowZatya
      @TowZatya 3 года назад +23

      that's why I like these films. These everyday sounds are so calming for me....

  • @nathankellogg2640
    @nathankellogg2640 3 года назад +7383

    I somehow never even noticed that these scenes weren't using noisy material. Now I'm gonna watch a movie and notice how many props aren't making sound.

    • @jackmccarthy2761
      @jackmccarthy2761 3 года назад +222

      Sometimes they don't even use any of the audio and it's all dubbed in later, including the voices.

    • @Klm49
      @Klm49 3 года назад +1

      Me too!!!

    • @octochan
      @octochan 3 года назад +101

      If the foley people did their job well, they'll have added the sounds back in so the props don't sound fake, but at a level that doesn't interfere with the dialogue

    • @Insulted25
      @Insulted25 3 года назад +21

      If you didn't notice, then the props did their job.

    • @maggiem6209
      @maggiem6209 3 года назад +18

      Something tells me I'm basically never going to watch another movie again without looking for silent props.

  • @nrgao
    @nrgao 2 года назад +4516

    As a musician who records vocals and as an amateur sound engineer, this just hits so close to home. I remember being 13 and walking into record for my first time on a professional microphone, getting halfway through my first take and seeing the engineer smiling and laughing outside while talking to my brother. I thought I sounded terrible. He buzzed thru into the booth on my headphones and said “that was great man. Now this time, take the bag of nickels out of your pockets.” 😂 my keys and change could be heard on the playback. Thanks for unlocking a memory! Great video.

    • @libsyates2426
      @libsyates2426 2 года назад +226

      Oh yeah, definitely. As someone who does sound stuff, I can usually hear just about everything. I could tell when my friend was feeling better after he had gotten sick just by the timbre of his voice

    • @DarinCates
      @DarinCates 2 года назад +7

      WASNT ABOUT YOU ..... Stop making everything about YOU

    • @your_dailydoseofcringe8424
      @your_dailydoseofcringe8424 2 года назад +2

      @@DarinCates chill, it isnt that big of a deal to be using caps (indicates a strong emotion), they just wanted to share a memory they had flashbacked to while watching this. 99% of the other comments in the same context as the video; so please stfu bc ur talking like this is ur ex

    • @lightningchegg4823
      @lightningchegg4823 2 года назад +300

      @@DarinCates calm down

    • @theflaminglitten-fo6jd
      @theflaminglitten-fo6jd 2 года назад +148

      @@DarinCates why did this make you so mad?

  • @hfar_in_the_sky
    @hfar_in_the_sky 3 года назад +10714

    I remember a professor once told me "Background sound in a movie is like salt in a soup: you can always add it in later but you sure can't take it out if it's already mixed in."

    • @marikothecheetah9342
      @marikothecheetah9342 3 года назад +120

      Amen to that.

    • @drowningin
      @drowningin 3 года назад +33

      Lol you have debt & a useless degree. Let me guess, you serve coffee

    • @davideinfeld4815
      @davideinfeld4815 3 года назад +177

      With soup that's over salted: pour out half the liquid and add vegetable stock! I learned that from youtube and it cost me no debt

    • @hfar_in_the_sky
      @hfar_in_the_sky 3 года назад +109

      @@davideinfeld4815 The equivalent of that in film making is ADR. Which is doable, but a pain.

    • @hfar_in_the_sky
      @hfar_in_the_sky 3 года назад +67

      ​@@davideinfeld4815 If however, you mean it is better to learn film techniques from free videos like RUclips, you are correct. To a degree.
      Techniques like the Rule of Thirds, the Kuleshov Effect, proper blocking, how to execute a vertigo shot, what an "f stop" is, those you can learn through videos and tutorials just fine online. The big thing about film making though is that no-one can do it alone and sooner or later you need to find people to form your team. Your friends can help, of course, but a film class is also an excellent place to find like minded student film makers. Is that alone worth what most colleges charge? I certainly don't think so. With the exception of community colleges, which are not only more affordable but are more likely to have teachers with experience actually working on films.
      Is film school worth going into debt over? In my opinion, no. I personally have no college debt, but I know people who do and it is indeed a high struggle for them regardless of their degree. Which is another reason why I think community colleges with film classes are better. Especially if you just want to try one or two classes to learn some unique skills and/or network.
      So, can you learn many thing from RUclips that you could at a film school. Yes, most certainly. Could you replace the entire process of learning film with something like RUclips? No entirely. But it can act as a good first step.

  • @tasnimtabassum785
    @tasnimtabassum785 3 года назад +19640

    So much more effort goes into movies and tv shows then we actually can even think about.

    • @christophercrawford2736
      @christophercrawford2736 3 года назад +119

      *than

    • @shadowbanned.5658
      @shadowbanned.5658 3 года назад +8

      Yes but are you thinking about how little comments there are? 700k views but only as little as 500 comments?

    • @moonchild8477
      @moonchild8477 3 года назад +4

      @lia_berry 🍓 lmao ikr

    • @joekerr5418
      @joekerr5418 3 года назад +34

      Guess you've never wondered why movie budgets can go up to millions up til now

    • @tasnimtabassum785
      @tasnimtabassum785 3 года назад +40

      @@joekerr5418 indeed I haven't, i just thought actor were really well paid, and the movie sets and travel costs and food costs, editing and etc were all.

  • @thestrugglingguy5368
    @thestrugglingguy5368 3 года назад +5901

    I always wondered how objects like paper bags didn't make noise in movies. This finally gave me the answer I was missing.

    • @NeoLithiumCat
      @NeoLithiumCat 3 года назад +213

      I think I always assumed they recorded extra vocal tracks later

    • @cynthiaholland13
      @cynthiaholland13 3 года назад +42

      I never noticed either. You are very detailed oriented

    • @FBIIlIlIlIIlIl
      @FBIIlIlIlIIlIl 3 года назад +56

      you're the psychopath who notices stuff we're not supposed to notice

    • @jasonyau4725
      @jasonyau4725 3 года назад +46

      @@FBIIlIlIlIIlIl Anyone with perfectly working senses can notice it… just because you are an ignorant does not mean others are psychopaths.

    • @marsilies
      @marsilies 3 года назад +23

      @Nstink They tend to add some noise back in, especially when one might expect it, like riffling through a bag. The difference is that they can control the amount and the level of the bag noise if it's silent on the shoot and they add it in later.

  • @yungtown
    @yungtown 3 года назад +14406

    Love the problem solving. Major props to these guys. (No pun)

    • @Nietabs
      @Nietabs 2 года назад +57

      Burger

    • @notdanny4985
      @notdanny4985 2 года назад +259

      Yes pun

    • @davidrocamora5109
      @davidrocamora5109 2 года назад +33

      Scott(the prop master) has a yt channel Scott prop and roll if you are interested in props

    • @PunkFan04
      @PunkFan04 2 года назад +20

      Scott would be proud of that pun.

    • @trippg3261
      @trippg3261 2 года назад +7

      I see what you did there… 🙃

  • @nyashawarambwa5979
    @nyashawarambwa5979 3 года назад +5341

    Damn even the pool balls had stunt doubles

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin 3 года назад +19377

    This was really interesting. I'm familiar with a lot of ways props are used in movies but never knew about the need to make quiet versions of ordinary objects.

    • @iZetto1
      @iZetto1 3 года назад +219

      while they take away from the realism, they are great to have a nice movie watching experience without all the noise. oh also, you can notice that sometimes the sounds are added back in manually

    • @criscrosxxx
      @criscrosxxx 3 года назад +3

      Same

    • @mechanikalbull5626
      @mechanikalbull5626 3 года назад +51

      basically they add sounds to a soundless object and remove one to already have one, weird!!

    • @MrMR-sk8jm
      @MrMR-sk8jm 3 года назад +19

      It was really interesting. Especially during the parts where it was like "you want a prop that sounds like this "......." not one that sounds like this "SckKSsskckshsklcsklcs". I never new something could make so much sound when it's not moving. lol. Love how they just looped the sounds to make those "noisy" demonstrations.

    • @KatieCottingham
      @KatieCottingham 3 года назад +17

      @@mechanikalbull5626 It's actually a highly skilled job called Foley work and it takes as much artistry as the most accomplished musician combined with the knowledge of the science of sound to be great.

  • @kellisuzuki8889
    @kellisuzuki8889 3 года назад +8891

    I only truly realized just how noisy all these everyday objects were when I tried to get ready for school while my college roommates were fast asleep...
    every open and close of any door/closet/drawer, every scooting of the chair or click of the keyboard, every turn of a doorknob and every creak of the bunk bed ladder, every rustle of clothing and bags...I could go on and on and on!

    • @professor.donut24
      @professor.donut24 3 года назад +197

      Lol.. keep going i'm learning new words with you

    • @Diana72910
      @Diana72910 3 года назад +30

      @@professor.donut24 HHAAHAH

    • @chasehim3761
      @chasehim3761 2 года назад +22

      Yes! My roommates dont understand. I think they're incompetent.
      Those are the noise that easily bother me.

    • @TheHardys01
      @TheHardys01 2 года назад +12

      @@chasehim3761 Chances are it's a lack of self awareness. Pity them.

    • @marinasaburova
      @marinasaburova 2 года назад +18

      Wow! Props to you for being so thoughtful when getting ready! Most people wouldn’t even care

  • @Belgand
    @Belgand 2 года назад +768

    I've often wondered why many prop bags of chips look so off. Overly smooth, the opening is too round, etc. They look a little too obviously like props. I always assumed it was just part of the process of making them as one-offs that weren't worn in enough or something but this makes far more sense.

    • @tlahmed
      @tlahmed 2 года назад +21

      Yes! I know exactly what you’re talking about.

    • @shrew6674
      @shrew6674 Год назад +40

      chip bags are usually cut with scissors in ads and tv/movie scenes to make the opening look more appealing rather than the sort of jagged untidy ripped open version normal people use to open chips

    • @SomeYouTubeTraveler
      @SomeYouTubeTraveler Год назад +18

      It also helps me understand why so many scenes can have continuity errors that used to not make sense. Sometimes they're literally swapping out props between loud and quiet versions

  • @racquelrobinson3030
    @racquelrobinson3030 3 года назад +16793

    I have NEVER thought about this in my life. Who knew a bag of potato chips needed a stunt double?

  • @09mrbubbles
    @09mrbubbles 3 года назад +10816

    It's funny the amount of effort that goes into making these soundless props, considering the amount of, equally bizarre work that goes into adding the sound again later.

    • @shadowxxe
      @shadowxxe 3 года назад +766

      i mean the point is to make sure that the dialogue can still be heard when you have a sound that is louder than another sound it'll over power that sound and editting it out will damn near impossible. they want to make sure there is a balance between sound effects and dialogue

    • @09mrbubbles
      @09mrbubbles 3 года назад +558

      @@shadowxxe I understand the need, and appreciate the work that goes into all of this. Still, it's funny is all

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 3 года назад +12

      @@09mrbubbles which movie 5:20?

    • @filmfanaticx4212
      @filmfanaticx4212 3 года назад +17

      @@stevethea5250 Don't quote me, but I think it's an episode from Entourage. I'm speculating with the HBO watermark in the top left corner and at 5:15 I'm pretty sure that's Jeremy Piven...

    • @ngirlsdiary
      @ngirlsdiary 3 года назад +9

      Jesus loves you

  • @LuckyNako
    @LuckyNako 3 года назад +2853

    Gotta say the people working in the ‘back’ are the unsung hero’s sometimes to make the entertainment we love into what it’s is.
    Like I’m amazed cause I never thought about that and I’m really sensitive to sounds. It’s so cool.

    • @mace8873
      @mace8873 3 года назад +4

      Thank you.:-)

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 3 года назад +4

      Hero's what?

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 3 года назад +3

      @Repent!. That's Jesus H. Christ to you.

    • @cromulom2223
      @cromulom2223 3 года назад +7

      @Repent!. imma rub one out to jesus

    • @EricNorcross
      @EricNorcross 3 года назад +1

      What about the financial backers putting their credit on the line to get the thing made?

  • @BobbyDukeArts
    @BobbyDukeArts 2 года назад +1349

    Couldn't get paint to stick to plastic? I'm pretty sure it's because they were really light and wouldn't act anything like pool balls when hit.

    • @grippyfemboy
      @grippyfemboy 2 года назад +12

      Hey Bobby!

    • @AgnesLfm
      @AgnesLfm Год назад +8

      Bobby?!😅

    • @Validation_Error
      @Validation_Error Год назад +12

      I really need to check comments now if this guy is watching the same things I do- jeez- Hi Bobby!

    • @tr_walkway1933
      @tr_walkway1933 11 месяцев назад +9

      The paint was probably the easiest part of using ball pit balls

    • @mejhdhhicbfshihids652
      @mejhdhhicbfshihids652 11 месяцев назад

      If weight was an issue could they use metal cores inside the balls?

  • @Takoiami
    @Takoiami 3 года назад +10763

    The people of the quiet place universe: ILL TAKE YOUR ENTIRE STOCK

    • @piespies10
      @piespies10 3 года назад +38

      😁

    • @adammartins9735
      @adammartins9735 3 года назад +11

      qwter

    • @pixelmace1423
      @pixelmace1423 3 года назад +318

      *”ᴵ’ˡˡ ᵗᵃᵏᵉ ʸᵒᵘʳ ᵉⁿᵗᶦʳᵉ ˢᵗᵒᶜᵏ”

    • @Fit4C
      @Fit4C 3 года назад +25

      Jesus loves you all very much repent and believe onto Him and be saved from eternal punishment of sin amen, Jesus DIED for you

    • @noodleiswholesome5946
      @noodleiswholesome5946 3 года назад +65

      @@Fit4C um

  • @aisadal2521
    @aisadal2521 3 года назад +4432

    Damn, never knew the props in movie were specifically made to be soundless!

    • @haleyanne86
      @haleyanne86 3 года назад +14

      Same

    • @MrThunk
      @MrThunk 3 года назад +72

      It's just saves the trouble of editing out the sounds

    • @victoremisho9432
      @victoremisho9432 3 года назад +1

      666 likes 👌🏽👌🏽👌🏽.... Nobody else like this please

    • @jameswatsonatheistgamer
      @jameswatsonatheistgamer 3 года назад +6

      If only we could do the same. So Amber couldn't be heard.

    • @drogadepc
      @drogadepc 3 года назад +2

      It depends on the prop

  • @papaya388
    @papaya388 3 года назад +2927

    The trick here is that they don't want the props to mask the dialogue, so in post production those sounds are edited back in. The result is a good balance between "touch-sounds" and dialogue - you will still hear the intended sound of the props!

    • @neonoir__
      @neonoir__ 3 года назад +213

      Or if the prop is unnervingly quiet like silicone ice cubes in a closeup scene with dialogue, sounds of real icecubes clinking against glasses can be added in post and made to be appropriate volume

    • @katherinec6031
      @katherinec6031 3 года назад +58

      Yeah bad sound mixing is such a movie killer. Best not to risk it, even though it takes greater pre and post production planning-a ounce of preparation is definitely worth a pound of cure!

    • @herbderbler1585
      @herbderbler1585 3 года назад +51

      "Yo dawg, I heard you like sound effects in your movie so we took all the sound effects out of your movie so we could put sound effects in your movie."
      It sounds like a huge pain in the arse, but it's definitely worth it in the end to have total control over how and when every sound presents itself.

    • @User-90762
      @User-90762 3 года назад +28

      the foley artists are underappreciated

    • @sundhaug92
      @sundhaug92 3 года назад +21

      @@herbderbler1585 Especially since the alternatives are either bad sound or reshooting an entire scene because a cube of ice didn't sound just right

  • @Sky_The_Youtuber
    @Sky_The_Youtuber Месяц назад +57

    0:26 So that's reason why burmese movies are so loud. Cuz they don't use props! And when we're used to the silence props, our minds think the burmese movies are louder!

  • @heimiticuellar4034
    @heimiticuellar4034 3 года назад +36614

    We need noiseless packaging for our secret midnight snacks 👀

    • @henxinggan
      @henxinggan 3 года назад +815

      For when we try and sneak a snack without kids hearing!

    • @derekisludicrous9203
      @derekisludicrous9203 3 года назад +1189

      @@henxinggan or when we try to sneak a snack without our parents hearing

    • @BuizelCream
      @BuizelCream 3 года назад +105

      This is what people like us need xD

    • @plotsky_
      @plotsky_ 3 года назад +43

      @@henxinggan parents*

    • @garette8672
      @garette8672 3 года назад +71

      @@plotsky_ no, they are the parents lol.

  • @SmokeBloody
    @SmokeBloody 3 года назад +1545

    let's just pay respect to the people that put their efforts to solve problems that a regular viewer would never think of.

    • @umloucobr4980
      @umloucobr4980 3 года назад +1

      Yes:).

    • @3_pancakes767
      @3_pancakes767 3 года назад +2

      Perhaps no one would ever think of it as they probably first noticed the problems.

    • @f.p1758
      @f.p1758 3 года назад +8

      Well if the problem wasn't solved everyone would notice it...

    • @fos1451
      @fos1451 3 года назад

      We would notice it if they haven't solved it

    • @desireandfire
      @desireandfire 3 года назад +1

      @@f.p1758 how can you live with yourself why are you such a negative thinking pessimist

  • @SuperWiiBros08
    @SuperWiiBros08 3 года назад +11073

    Ok that's freaking neat, I never realized that on many shows I've watched

    • @dunmo9582
      @dunmo9582 3 года назад +1

      hello

    • @Arathunter
      @Arathunter 3 года назад

      Huh

    • @phaserxultraviolet1694
      @phaserxultraviolet1694 3 года назад +4

      sussy baka

    • @jsmliu2003
      @jsmliu2003 3 года назад +1

      when the impersonator aged 45 and named joe is being suspicious by doing actions that make crew mates think he is suspicious

    • @cleanlens
      @cleanlens 3 года назад +1

      me eating popcorn and like popcorn

  • @haley799
    @haley799 2 года назад +51

    As a sound engineer the silent props and the people who make them are a saving grace.

  • @cecefernandes5657
    @cecefernandes5657 3 года назад +12408

    Huh...I never even thought of this being a necessity or concern

    • @MakeMeBurrito32
      @MakeMeBurrito32 3 года назад +181

      Ikr, Its crazy lmao

    • @MakeMeBurrito32
      @MakeMeBurrito32 3 года назад +6

      @Sweet Cøffê .

    • @DarlaVaughan
      @DarlaVaughan 3 года назад +41

      And thus the perfection of the art.

    • @labdjcxn3xy
      @labdjcxn3xy 3 года назад +224

      I could imagine as an editor it would drive me insane trying to clip together different takes but random sounds keep clipping into the actors dialogue. In post production its easy to add sound later but hard to take away

    • @bedahnim6188
      @bedahnim6188 3 года назад +65

      im just a leader from a class group and in charge in compiling all videos presentation of the group. and yet one of them always had her fan noise going off, burrying her own voice, damn. And that pissed me off. Its actually really distracting if one frame didn't match the other environment. So yeah.

  • @ScottPropandRoll
    @ScottPropandRoll 3 года назад +3221

    Thanks to Insider for letting me be a part of this!! I’ve got a lot of prop secrets on my channel if y’all get a chance, check em out!

    • @GrandHighGamer
      @GrandHighGamer 3 года назад +59

      And a solid 2-to-1 ratio of terrible puns to excellent props.

    • @ScottPropandRoll
      @ScottPropandRoll 3 года назад +58

      @@GrandHighGamer You ain’t lyin’

    • @Snay1998
      @Snay1998 3 года назад +25

      Now just to find a way to get those prop chips bags to theatres

    • @sasguerilla9119
      @sasguerilla9119 3 года назад +1

      So I’m curious, why not just soften the sounds of the real thing via editing? Wouldn’t it be cheaper/easier?

    • @jokubask5309
      @jokubask5309 3 года назад +10

      @@sasguerilla9119 it's hard to make them quiet if there are few sounds going on the same time

  • @tanishqahuja3861
    @tanishqahuja3861 3 года назад +4167

    We can finally say, props to the prop makers 😂😂

  • @basildraws
    @basildraws 2 года назад +207

    I’ve often commented/wondered about the HUGE disparity between our current level of video processing versus audio processing technology. We can clean, edit, composite, green-screen, mo-cap, we can insert elements with rotoscoping and virtual rotoscoping, we can remove people’s legs, swap heads, and do just about anything with video and make it believable. But we can’t clean up a phone call on the radio or make someone sound clear giving a speech outdoors.
    It’s insane.

    • @illestofdemall13
      @illestofdemall13 2 года назад +7

      There is technology to clean up audio, like Izotope Rx.

    • @MeJustAimy
      @MeJustAimy Год назад +1

      That’ll change greatly in the next few years I’m sure

    • @basildraws
      @basildraws Год назад +24

      @@MeJustAimy I’m not sure of that at all. I took my electronics engineering degree in 1989 with a major in real time audio filtration. Processing has gotten a lot faster and chips are cheaper and smaller, but the underlying technology hasn’t changed much at all. As K.K. said above, there exists decent software for cleaning audio in post, but that has some pretty serious limits. And for real time cleaning, well, I feel like we’re in the stone age still when compared to video. Have seen what we can do with facial deep fakes for free with a tiny app on our phones? Or a Snapchat filter?
      Seriously, look at that, then listen to a radio call-in show.
      I know it’s apples and oranges, but still…..

    • @zlcoolboy
      @zlcoolboy Год назад +1

      The problem with audio is that audio will cover other audio up.

    • @Althemor
      @Althemor Год назад +3

      I think the reason might be that with traditional audio recordings, you get all kinds of sounds mixed together, and cutting something specific out is very difficult, if not impossible, since a sound includes loads of frequency components. How do you remove a sound from an audio waveform?
      Video is easy since you can precisely select that which you want to change. That's why I think acoustic cameras might solve that problem. In case you haven't heard of them, they're microphone arrays typically with a normal camera in the middle, capturing sound in such a way that a software can then show exactly where a sound came from. You can then select certain parts of the image and listen only to sound coming from that place. I imagine it would still be difficult to correctly identify which sound reflections stem from your desired sound source, but surely that problem has/can either be(en) solved or circumvented by simulating the reflections.

  • @CrazyPangolinLady
    @CrazyPangolinLady 3 года назад +16902

    When you do something right, people won’t know you’ve done anything at all.

    • @MsSphinx91
      @MsSphinx91 3 года назад +636

      Yes, this is often why good work can go unappreciated.

    • @andrasadam8256
      @andrasadam8256 3 года назад +488

      Not just in movies, I experience this as a software dev too. Everything works 99% of the time, but just once something doesn't go the way the user expects it, and we are lazy incompetent f*cks who can't do their job right. Nobody notices the hard work that goes in there.

    • @vegeta4693214
      @vegeta4693214 3 года назад +214

      That's what my sound teacher said (I study filmmaking) "You know a movie has good sound when you're not paying attention to the sound"

    • @bmxscape
      @bmxscape 3 года назад +4

      @@andrasadam8256 maybe you shouldn't be lazy and actually test your product? i don't see the comparison between hundred million dollar movie production and you coding minecraft mods

    • @johnapple6646
      @johnapple6646 3 года назад +214

      @@bmxscape don't talk about what you don't know kid

  • @Juiceb0xful
    @Juiceb0xful 3 года назад +2424

    Honestly if the paper bag was still loud in "Tammy" that would be 100% funnier

    • @hopper6094
      @hopper6094 3 года назад +79

      It would

    • @Bumpkin-bu6eb
      @Bumpkin-bu6eb 3 года назад +5

      Cry about it

    • @Juiceb0xful
      @Juiceb0xful 3 года назад +266

      @@Bumpkin-bu6eb huh? This is just a funny comment? You think I'm actually upset that they used a prop bag? 🤣

    • @milkflys
      @milkflys 3 года назад +139

      @@Bumpkin-bu6eb what are you so mad about

    • @Bumpkin-bu6eb
      @Bumpkin-bu6eb 3 года назад +12

      @@milkflys idk I thought it would be funny to see people react

  • @imaspecialgirllalala
    @imaspecialgirllalala 2 года назад +180

    Crazy, I always thought they could just isolate the specific sounds and mute some out. This seems like it’d be a lot of extra work, but ultimately better for the end product. Props to the people in the film industry for giving us the most pleasant viewing experience!!

    • @chasehim3761
      @chasehim3761 2 года назад +1

      My exact thoughts.
      They have the technology.

    • @rayonixv4717
      @rayonixv4717 2 года назад +22

      Extra work it sometimes better work. Especially when it comes to movies, using the phase "Just do it in post" can lead to what is now the norm for Hollywood.

    • @zaclumley7553
      @zaclumley7553 2 года назад +17

      It’s much much better and easier in the long run to leave as little in possible for post to do. They got so much work anyways, and it’s not always guaranteed to be what you needed it to be like if you just did it irl

    • @JainaTargaryen
      @JainaTargaryen Год назад +3

      @@chasehim3761 they really don't.

    • @personwholovesyou4942
      @personwholovesyou4942 Год назад +11

      isolating individual sounds in a busy mix and having it sound transparent is actually much more difficult than you think

  • @f8keuser
    @f8keuser 3 года назад +4447

    Why did this movie cost 4.5 million dollars to make?
    Production crew: To make silent paper bags.

    • @Saltma15
      @Saltma15 3 года назад +5

      It will be fun when your mum is asleep,"Wink,wink

    • @SageLMK
      @SageLMK 3 года назад +8

      i dont get it

    • @f8keuser
      @f8keuser 3 года назад +11

      ​@@SageLMK It's just as each new movie comes out the price it took to make goes up and up and when they show how it's made... we get this.. I was making fun of movies that costs so much to make and it went towards making props (it's a joke)

    • @SageLMK
      @SageLMK 3 года назад +14

      @@f8keuser oh sorry i didn’t understand the “it will be fun when your mum is asleep, Wink,Wink”
      im really sorry for making you type that out, thank you anyways

    • @f8keuser
      @f8keuser 3 года назад +8

      @@SageLMK oh haahahaha all good, yeah I didn't understand it either lol

  • @CYXNIGHT
    @CYXNIGHT 3 года назад +6224

    Actor: barely moving
    Insider: "All you would hear is" KSSCHKSHKSHCKSHCKSHCKSHKCSH

    • @slapilou
      @slapilou 3 года назад +458

      It's a bit of an exaggeration but they do say that the items are often held close to the microphone

    • @shibno01
      @shibno01 3 года назад +220

      As soon as you try recording with a good microphone, you’d know what they’re talking about. Our surroundings are REALLY noisy. It’s quite amazing that we are usually unaware of it though. There’s a pretty powerful noise cancellation built-in in our ear.

    • @ABcdefgI143
      @ABcdefgI143 3 года назад +72

      nah they're right. I have a p good microphone and accidentally left it on recording on my second-floor study room, went outside to take the trash can out of my garage on the first floor and the microphone picked up the sounds of the wheels rolling on the floor out the window.

    • @CYXNIGHT
      @CYXNIGHT 3 года назад +15

      @@shibno01 Oh I get that. My mic picks up everything so I have to use Krisp. But their examples are exaggerated, that's all.

    • @shibno01
      @shibno01 3 года назад +2

      @@CYXNIGHT Yeah that’s fair

  • @gil.gosseyn4786
    @gil.gosseyn4786 3 года назад +3775

    The irony is that the prop man takes the sound of objects out, while the Foley artist works to put it back in.

    • @LordBhorak
      @LordBhorak 3 года назад +379

      But that's kinda like buying pre-flavored/spiced food vs. raw ingredients and adding the spices you want. Latter is always better, if you know what you're doing. 😊

    • @juanin200
      @juanin200 3 года назад +261

      That's because "natural" sounding objects can sometimes ruin the dialogues, at the end of the day microphones can only let so many sound waves in at once

    • @Watermelon_Man
      @Watermelon_Man 3 года назад +103

      @@juanin200 I think he gets that from watching the video. It’s just funny that they work so hard to take out natural sound (because it’s troublesome) just to (sometimes) work to recreate it afterwards.

    • @Darkerfoxtech
      @Darkerfoxtech 3 года назад +30

      @@Watermelon_Man it's more funny that they take it out to put some other sound effect in or music at 1m dbl so you can't hear the whispering lines. It's like audible lens flare.

    • @asymsolutions
      @asymsolutions 3 года назад +42

      @@Watermelon_Man This, to explain better for those interested, it's because microphones don't mimic human hearing perfectly, nor do sound systems produce it volumetrically in a 3d space like the scene, and so it creates an issue with the scene becoming unbelievable as the sound isn't properly fitting what the eye sees. They are trying to reproduce sounds or at least what our mind thinks should be the sound, as best as they can. The unfortunate part causing the "Reality is unrealistic" trope we all know.
      This (outside of the trope result) is a current problem in comms with electronic hearing protection in both combat, sports shooting, and aviation , where it is in the best interest to capture and reproduce sounds such as footsteps, certain impacts, vocal noises, etc; Yet limit constant noises just as wind, turbine combustion or things that are loud enough you can still discern direction even with them being muffled (explosions and gunfire). The best systems are semi-reliable (David Clark, Bose, and 3M through their comtac series), the middle ground is not protective of your hearing (active-noise cancellation systems as used by samsung and apple) and the cheapest just cut out the microphone above a certian DB such as walker and howard leight sets.

  • @dailyfuse2376
    @dailyfuse2376 2 года назад +13

    It’s so cool how much effort these guys go through just for the sound to be right. You would think the guys at the sound place would take care of that, but they implement it into props! They deserve more attention for how much detail and thought they put into the little things like this.

  • @Waccoon
    @Waccoon 3 года назад +1508

    ...and then the foley people have to put all the missing sounds back in.
    Feel the magic!

    • @13Kr4zYAzN13
      @13Kr4zYAzN13 3 года назад +85

      Now that I think about it, I guess this is the whole reason Foley artists _HAVE_ a job 🤔 lol

    • @rsolsjo
      @rsolsjo 3 года назад +93

      Yeah but mix it and time it the way they like.

    • @NotMe-fb8cw
      @NotMe-fb8cw 3 года назад +20

      They would still have a job with animated movies though

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis 3 года назад +1

      Yeah!! Wow!!!

    • @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose
      @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose 3 года назад +22

      Yup.
      The film industry is all about perfection, and if that means innovating props to remove sound then adding it back in precisely how they want it, then so be it.

  • @timno2639
    @timno2639 3 года назад +3036

    So that's why some dryed leafs look rly crunchy but arnt... Theyr just test props

    • @zaneyboy7591
      @zaneyboy7591 3 года назад +88

      @Scom Tott ya ain't funny

    • @user-em6ks9eu7l
      @user-em6ks9eu7l 3 года назад +41

      @Scom Tott what is there to even explain further? you're not clever.

    • @forgor4410
      @forgor4410 3 года назад +22

      @Scom Tott Scram, Scom. You know when you're not wanted.

    • @user-em6ks9eu7l
      @user-em6ks9eu7l 3 года назад +21

      @Scom Tott yeah? that much was obvious, and no one needs you to explain that. if you think we're triggered, you're greatly overestimating your own self-importance.

    • @rikosama7648
      @rikosama7648 3 года назад +72

      @Scom Tottignore them they are bunch of teens , ur comment was kinda funny and i giggled a little.

  • @none8680
    @none8680 3 года назад +711

    The fact that we never realized these details shows how good he's doing his job.

  • @mintyyy111
    @mintyyy111 Год назад +17

    totally practical but ngl sometimes i love the sound random stuff makes. it adds realism to the whole thing and feels almost like asmr. like it’s sometimes satisfying to hear certain sounds bc they help u become more immersed into their work idk

  • @KNOTTYBUDS
    @KNOTTYBUDS 3 года назад +2869

    I feel like the scene would've been funnier if Tammie's bags were crinkling

  • @DarthScosha
    @DarthScosha 3 года назад +585

    This has been eye opening, I always thought that some poor sound editor would have to go through all the footage taking out all the unwanted sounds. I guess to an extent they still do, but this must make their job a lot easier.

    • @georgesikorski9891
      @georgesikorski9891 3 года назад +42

      It's actually really really hard to take a sound out (especially if there's another sound over it) and it never works perfectly. Which is why they do this

  • @generalpershingm2656
    @generalpershingm2656 3 года назад +787

    I can imagine how tough it was to make those silent props for "A Quiet Place"

    • @nameunknown007
      @nameunknown007 3 года назад +93

      I'm thinking if there are no dialogues in the scene, the sound man doesn't need to catch anything

    • @99dazemusic
      @99dazemusic 3 года назад +56

      There wouldn’t need to be silent props? Anything that makes a sound is used in the plot

    • @BoomBamBopPOW
      @BoomBamBopPOW 3 года назад +46

      @@99dazemusic at that point, however, with no dialogue, the sound man can sample the area and cover all sound with that. it doesn’t mean everything actually needs to be quiet. the dialogue is the hard part, with no dialogue, all you need is a long sample of what the area sounds like.

  • @The-30th
    @The-30th 3 года назад +29

    1:25 OK BUT THAT CRACK IS SO SATISFYING-

  • @3um
    @3um 3 года назад +772

    at least I understand why filming movies and shows is so expensive now

    • @petiertje
      @petiertje 3 года назад +42

      Well, that and the main actors salary I bet :)

    • @sitter2207
      @sitter2207 3 года назад +10

      Yeah main actors make dumb money

    • @madman1128
      @madman1128 3 года назад +56

      @@petiertje I mean that and if you sit and watch the end credits of basically any film it's usually jaw dropping how many people worked on it

    • @SirKolass
      @SirKolass 3 года назад +3

      Bruh this is hardly the expensive part.

  • @naly202
    @naly202 3 года назад +10893

    The entire movie crew is phenomenal, yet only the actors take the credit.
    Edit: Wow. I never thought this comment would get so many likes and spark a bit of a controversy.
    As for "Taking the credit", I guess I should have said "Are given credit".
    I'm not a native English speaker... And phrasal verbs are not my forte.

    • @melanieruddy399
      @melanieruddy399 3 года назад +400

      All them eager actors gladly take the credit for the lines created by the people tucked away from sight

    • @31oannamphong66
      @31oannamphong66 3 года назад +249

      stuntners are so underated

    • @thefrustratedneetaspirant7777
      @thefrustratedneetaspirant7777 3 года назад +629

      They live a better life without fame
      But actually in the industry they are well known

    • @billybiljun3416
      @billybiljun3416 2 года назад +140

      @@thefrustratedneetaspirant7777 Having your life monitored by paparazzi 24/7 sure is tiring, poor actors

    • @fatcontrollerproductions9910
      @fatcontrollerproductions9910 2 года назад +14

      @@billybiljun3416 *rich

  • @rickytickybobbywobbin055
    @rickytickybobbywobbin055 3 года назад +779

    I had always noticed the brown bags in shows that look really thick but never gave it much thought. Before watching this, I probably would’ve assumed it was for durability so the bags don’t fail during multiple takes

    • @MsMinoula
      @MsMinoula 2 года назад +56

      Me, I was thinking 'they have different paper in America' 😂

  • @joshuamartin9255
    @joshuamartin9255 3 года назад +216

    I had long wondered how they killed background noises in shows like this. It never would have occured that the bags and stuff are all "fake" to cancel noise. Very interesting to see how it's done, I love seeing behind the scenes stuff, so much more work goes into production that I could ever imagine and we don't realize about 75% of it

    • @lazuliartz1296
      @lazuliartz1296 3 года назад +1

      Yeah. I always just assumed they somehow managed to kill background noises in post processing.

    • @arafat9828
      @arafat9828 3 года назад

      @@lazuliartz1296 Same I thought they somehow edited out background noise

  • @KazzatheBlankOne
    @KazzatheBlankOne 3 года назад +80

    Even after plastic shopping bags were much more common than paper ones, tv and movies still seemed to use paper ones for a long long time. I always assumed it was because they were so much quieter than plastic bags. And I guess still they are. Great video!

  • @TheGuyWhoIsSitting
    @TheGuyWhoIsSitting 3 года назад +8113

    “Real cows don’t look like cows on film, so we paint horses to look like cows”
    “What do you do when you want to show horses on film?”
    “We usually glue some cats together”

    • @its.s4ra
      @its.s4ra 3 года назад +95

      HAHAHA
      UNDERRATED 🤚

    • @Catty693
      @Catty693 3 года назад +17

      I’m 500th like

    • @elation.e
      @elation.e 3 года назад +2

      683rd like for this comment

    • @911HRW
      @911HRW 3 года назад +7

      @@elation.e sad

    • @juanrounds
      @juanrounds 3 года назад +1

      The 900th like 🤝

  • @MirandaMilner
    @MirandaMilner 2 года назад +118

    Something to keep in mind is that most movies and TV shows use a huge amount of ADR. That is, Additional Dialogue Replacement. The actors re-record their lines in a studio lip-syncing to the footage. You might notice it if you know to look for it. Sometimes the lip-syncing is pretty questionable 😂

    • @idk29484
      @idk29484 2 года назад

      Like Teddy Daniels from the Shutter Island for example. The scene where he pick his children up from the river.

    • @citricdolphin
      @citricdolphin 2 года назад +4

      Your description of ADR is pretty good, but it actually stands for "Automated Dialogue Replacement;" the use of software to assist in the process you described.

    • @MirandaMilner
      @MirandaMilner 2 года назад +8

      @@citricdolphin Oops, my bad! My dad went to film school and he told me that's what it stood for, but I guess he just remembered it wrong. Or perhaps it's different depending on the place. I found at least two examples that called it Additional Dialogue Replacement. Another even said it's called "Automated or Additional Dialogue Replacement". So the first word seems to be either of the two.

    • @MirandaMilner
      @MirandaMilner 2 года назад +5

      @@citricdolphin But I'll fix it to say "Replacement" because "Recording" does appear to be incorrect.

  • @47buddhists97
    @47buddhists97 3 года назад +1227

    *He was probably the only kid to not get caught eating chips in class*

    • @the_spider_7773
      @the_spider_7773 3 года назад +53

      WE NEED SILENT CHIPS SO WHEN YOU WATCH A VIDEO WHILE EATING THEM,YOU CAN ACTUALLY HEAR THE VIDEO

    • @paracame8162
      @paracame8162 3 года назад +14

      @@the_spider_7773 just eat soggy chips

    • @47buddhists97
      @47buddhists97 3 года назад +3

      @@paracame8162 maybe chip flavored popcorn?

  • @ELisa-qf2mw
    @ELisa-qf2mw 3 года назад +155

    Wow, us common people might sometimes think that making movies is a funny dream-job and/or only focus on actors, but there is actually so much effort, hard work, creativity and a variety of people, skills and professions involved behind each tiny detail! Very interesting.

    • @no3ironman11100
      @no3ironman11100 2 года назад +2

      Everyone's job has it's little secrets.

    • @bycintia
      @bycintia 2 года назад +3

      That’s why I love film so much. I hope I can work on set one day it would be really cool

  • @gatlina6019
    @gatlina6019 3 года назад +683

    Imagine buying a silent bag of chips just so people wouldn't hear you in the kitchen at 3am

    • @ImNotaRussianBot
      @ImNotaRussianBot 3 года назад +6

      These people are real, right? Cause I live alone.

    • @ALivingFlame
      @ALivingFlame 3 года назад +18

      Just transfer the chips to a big Ziploc bag, that's what I do 😁

    • @NaturalAegyo
      @NaturalAegyo 3 года назад +10

      Would be smart for the movie theater!

    • @theasin_old
      @theasin_old 3 года назад +4

      @@ImNotaRussianBot those people are actually real (me too)

    • @KenKopper
      @KenKopper 3 года назад +2

      Genius.

  • @xMrsGontierx
    @xMrsGontierx 2 года назад +6

    I remember noticing the brown "paper" bags at a young age and loved the VERY VERY subtle noises they'd give off and the texture they looked like lol it was satisfying idk how to explain

  • @Ithenna
    @Ithenna 3 года назад +107

    Well, that explains a LOT. I used to wonder how you didn't hear papers and plastic bags in movies when irl, those things made an insane racket over a phone or video.

  • @catboynestormakhno2694
    @catboynestormakhno2694 3 года назад +245

    Why can't this be an everyday thing, just having more silent things in general I'd love that

    • @reva7825
      @reva7825 3 года назад +102

      It's all fun until u get silicone instead of ice in ur drink.

    • @nyxx1923
      @nyxx1923 3 года назад +7

      @@reva7825 IM DECEASED 💀💀💀

    • @weberman173
      @weberman173 3 года назад +10

      @@reva7825 i mean, ignoring the fact there is fod safe silicone? as long as they dont directly eat the silicone nothing will happen, except it not being a cold drink.
      also to the original question, Costs. Paperbags exist becasue they are relativly cheap to made(less cheap then plastic bags, but still cheap) using this material woudl make it more expensive etc

    • @ADCFproductions
      @ADCFproductions 3 года назад +5

      so a paper bag instead of costing 10 cents it would cost 10 dollars, sounds reasonable...

    • @pascalpaul5339
      @pascalpaul5339 3 года назад +4

      or an anti-hearing aid that can temporarily make u semi deaf or as deaf as u wanna be ...damn.

  • @MurcuryEntertainment
    @MurcuryEntertainment 3 года назад +20596

    Literally the opposite of a foley artist.

    • @MannyBrum
      @MannyBrum 3 года назад +515

      ASMRtist.

    • @ZaneDalton
      @ZaneDalton 3 года назад +101

      That’s what I was thinking!

    • @bikeny
      @bikeny 3 года назад +224

      @@ZaneDalton Me too. My friend Solange is a foley editor and over the years, she's told me the kinds of things they do to get things right. Footsteps are a trip.

    • @Foolish188
      @Foolish188 3 года назад +70

      Listening to an early episode of the Dragnet Radio Series, there was a scene where the Detectives are searching in some brush on a hill. The Foley Artist made them sound like they were walking down the hall of the Police Station, lol.

    • @Founderschannel123
      @Founderschannel123 3 года назад +7

      Well i dont know much about a foley artist but okay i guess goley artists make alot of sound

  • @pixiemoonglow9642
    @pixiemoonglow9642 3 года назад +1789

    I always thought paper bags in movies and shows looked "softer" than regular ones!!

    • @yoymate6316
      @yoymate6316 3 года назад +165

      i always assumed that paper bags looked soft in movies because they were made of a different type of paper in america... except i've been to america once and i never consciously realized that i've seen american paper bags and they also don't look like that. i'm not very smart, am i

    • @GeneralKenobi69420
      @GeneralKenobi69420 3 года назад +25

      Furry

    • @ALocalFolf
      @ALocalFolf 3 года назад +9

      That's a fair point, actually

    • @GeneralKenobi69420
      @GeneralKenobi69420 3 года назад +13

      @@ALocalFolf furry

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 3 года назад +1

      BS

  • @reneehughes7860
    @reneehughes7860 3 года назад +653

    As a hearing impaired person, thank you. You've now given me a way to get my friends to understand how the simplest noise makes conversations difficult for me.

    • @idiotsandwich4912
      @idiotsandwich4912 3 года назад +51

      That’s a wholesome twist to this whole video. I’m glad you can use this to explain to them!

    • @CainhuPenido
      @CainhuPenido 3 года назад +6

      Great idea! Hope they understand it now!

    • @michaelsmith5769
      @michaelsmith5769 3 года назад +4

      WHAT?????????

    • @alainportant6412
      @alainportant6412 3 года назад +1

      @@michaelsmith5769 It's unclear. I think she can only hear noises but not voices

    • @galacticgiraffe2277
      @galacticgiraffe2277 3 года назад +18

      ​@@alainportant6412 I can't speak for OP, but I'm also a hard of hearing person - I can hear voices when I'm wearing my hearing aids, but my hearing aid microphones pick up a lot of background sounds really loudly, just like in this video, and it drowns out the people speaking. Even "simple" background sounds can make things infinitely more difficult when you're already struggling to make things out. It's likely OP can understand voices when there's no background sound, but finds it difficult to pick out the words people are saying when there are other noises.

  • @bird_philosophy
    @bird_philosophy 3 года назад +423

    Fun fact: The sound of a red-tailed hawk is used for a bald eagle in tv shows because a bald eagle actually sounds like a gull!

    • @billygoatguy3960
      @billygoatguy3960 3 года назад +45

      More like the film industry has created our view of how a bald eagle sounds

    • @bruh3457
      @bruh3457 3 года назад +25

      Bald eagle sounds like a bald eagle lol

    • @bird_philosophy
      @bird_philosophy 3 года назад +8

      @@bruh3457 Haha true

    • @BudDinktrap
      @BudDinktrap 3 года назад +16

      And the sound of a kookaburra is used for generic jungle sounds (and also dolphins, iirc)

    • @dragonsheen3049
      @dragonsheen3049 3 года назад +26

      Similar to lions in cinema. Lion roars sound pretty underwhelming, so they’re replaced with tiger roars, which sound amazing and imposing.

  • @Trump20-24years
    @Trump20-24years Месяц назад

    Glad scott is getting his recognition, he seems like a genuine guy.

  • @Inflake
    @Inflake 3 года назад +46

    They are the true underappreciated artists behind the whole art of creating a movie

  • @MrSam1804
    @MrSam1804 3 года назад +157

    Prop masters: making soundless props
    Foley artist: adding those sounds back

    • @erravi
      @erravi 3 года назад +17

      Making propless sounds

    • @corradoriccomini4474
      @corradoriccomini4474 10 месяцев назад +1

      Production sound mixer: not having a mental breakdown on set

  • @Npianos
    @Npianos 3 года назад +37

    I am quite surprised by the silicone ice cube, its amazing seeing how much effort the prop master had to rethink an alternative material for a better sound reception of the actor/actresses voice, very well done :)

  • @thechannelitrollwith1645
    @thechannelitrollwith1645 2 года назад +5

    I’ve actually always wondered how they did sound in some situations. I just assumed the audio would have to be dubbed in all cases but even if that was the case, I’m sure having noiseless props lends itself to concentration. Super cool stuff!

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak 3 года назад +1161

    This is extremely crucial for filmmaking

    • @felix-kr9zn
      @felix-kr9zn 3 года назад +2

      Yeh

    • @09jeremiah80
      @09jeremiah80 3 года назад +3

      @Sup plz give good piano i wanna listen

    • @09jeremiah80
      @09jeremiah80 3 года назад +1

      @Sup i like the soung of good pino

    • @shantanumunjal8963
      @shantanumunjal8963 3 года назад +1

      Lol I opened your Comment to see if anymore people Liked your comment I see that 2 people removed their like

    • @aitakemi
      @aitakemi 3 года назад +29

      And your comment is extremely useless and adds absolutely nothing.

  • @SimpForNatty
    @SimpForNatty 3 года назад +132

    He’s also helping foley artists as well. If the sounds are quieter and not hitting the microphone then the foley artist can now add better sounds behind the scenes.

  • @MsSphinx91
    @MsSphinx91 3 года назад +469

    I always assumed the sound editors were just that good! 😅 I'm sure they are, but who would've thought the prop guys had to worry about sound? Just one more reason why a professional movie costs so much. There are so many craftsmen on set.

    • @ms_ch
      @ms_ch 2 года назад +4

      They are literal sound engineers, the ammount of knowledge to make it all match the film is huge! Really amazing, like you said, how many people work together to make a film happen.

    • @GwyndolinOwO
      @GwyndolinOwO Год назад +6

      I'm sure there are ways to quiet sound to a certain degree but an easy rule to remember is that its easy to add something, but hard to get rid of it. So it might seem really annoying to have quiet props and then add in the sound later, but it also means they have a lot of power in mixing.
      and its not that abnormal for specialists to know a lot about other roles in a movie. A prop artist will have to know about sound, but they also might want to understand how props will interact with the lighting, or if the colors of the props will fit in with the set or stage. its cross communication like that that helps movies get made well. or any kind of creative thing made by a large group of people really.

  • @GeeklingNo1
    @GeeklingNo1 2 года назад +3

    I just... I love cinematography so much. Like every single detail is thought of

  • @hanananah
    @hanananah 3 года назад +105

    I've learned a fair bit about how they make sounds for movies, it never even occured to me how they AVOID sounds for movies. Really cool.

  • @zombiesun44
    @zombiesun44 3 года назад +29

    This is so cool. I've never really considered the need or existence of silent props before. I love videos like these that educate you and widen your understanding of the world a little bit.

  • @jacobbo-lee6107
    @jacobbo-lee6107 3 года назад +146

    The scene from Tammy is suddenly more funny with the bag noise haha

    • @DaemonRayge
      @DaemonRayge 3 года назад +18

      I do agree, it makes the scene appear more weird and awkward.

  • @duyNguyen-fn9rs
    @duyNguyen-fn9rs 2 года назад +2

    i didn:t expected that required so much effort to put on. Such a talented people

  • @willwunsche6940
    @willwunsche6940 3 года назад +209

    I always thought they turned down the volume of the noises in editing or used specialized microphones

    • @nikiTricoteuse
      @nikiTricoteuse 3 года назад +14

      Same. I'd never really really thought about it but just assumed they added sound to the film later.

    • @albarleta2361
      @albarleta2361 3 года назад +45

      You are right. Everything except the dialogue are removed in editing using "room tone". Room tone is a "silence" recording of the set used for patching the audio track. Then every sound on screen (footsteps, props, ambience, etc) will be recreated and recorded in post production via sound effects and foley.
      What they showed here is just a technique to avoid production sound to overlap with the dialogue. Because when that happens, there's no way to separate the two in post.

    • @willwunsche6940
      @willwunsche6940 3 года назад +5

      @@albarleta2361 Interesting!

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 3 года назад +1

      @@albarleta2361 they can also solve this problem through ADR

    • @albarleta2361
      @albarleta2361 3 года назад +6

      @@isaacbruner65 yes, but ADR is the last resort. It’s more complicated to match the dialogue in post than to capture it right on set. The engineer has to recreate the angle and the distance of the boom mic on set, then eq it to fit. Not to mention the additional costs of rebooking an actor with a busy schedule just for the lines.

  • @snitchbstudios
    @snitchbstudios 3 года назад +64

    "A sound guy can hear grass growing on location." Reminds me of a story on set of Dawn of the Dead when the biker gang drive through the abandoned mall. The sound guy almost went deaf from recording the motorcycle engines.

    • @mace8873
      @mace8873 3 года назад +9

      "A sound guy can hear grass growing on location" - I work as an SFX techie and just came home from a shoot, during lunch I talked with the other crew members and actors about the industry, and we eventually ended up joking around about all the types you see on a set, for example, the overly dramatic director that is frustrated because he "simply can't work with amateurs that can't see the big picture because _this is art!"_ while he's shooting a commercial for water balloons, or as my contribution was, a sound guy, he could've been called Heimdal, complaining that "some guy over there is sweating too loud, and he's also breathing..."
      We had a lot of fun.:-)

  • @HelloItsVG
    @HelloItsVG 3 года назад +778

    Small details but soooo interesting

  • @Jonathan_Doe_
    @Jonathan_Doe_ 2 года назад +51

    I feel like some films have made use of switching silent props to loud ones for effect (like a character suddenly hyper focusing on their environment, or the room dropping silent, and the normal noises becoming audible without the speech there). It’s usually done that well I can’t think of a specific example though.

    • @switchunboxing
      @switchunboxing 2 года назад +6

      It’s all done in post. Foot steps, doors opening and closing, setting objects down. Humming of computers and ambient noise

    • @Jonathan_Doe_
      @Jonathan_Doe_ 2 года назад +2

      @@switchunboxing Foley artists are genius

  • @frickinfrick8488
    @frickinfrick8488 3 года назад +31

    I am so into these kinds of videos. This is an incredibly niche and high expertise job that nobody talks about, it’s so cool seeing how he solves sound problems

  • @100PercentNotJo
    @100PercentNotJo 3 года назад +12

    This is truly fascinating! I had no idea that such small and forgettable props can have so much work done to make sure that the noise isn't harsh on the ears! Very cool indeed.

  • @Angel_Billy4-30-23
    @Angel_Billy4-30-23 3 года назад +51

    I never knew that this was a part of movie making. It's just neat to see the behind the scenes of every single thing/department that goes into making movies. I am definitely going to be paying attention for these props in everything I watch now.

  • @CasualKillZz
    @CasualKillZz 2 года назад

    I love Scott’s RUclips channel, his dad jokes are just 🤌🏻 chefs kiss

  • @annoyingcommenter2461
    @annoyingcommenter2461 3 года назад +127

    "Waiter! My drink is too quiet!"
    "Did you expect to converse with it, sir?"

  • @TheTableReads
    @TheTableReads 3 года назад +18

    I actually worked on a movie with Tim… and I had no idea he created the silent bag. They’re actually a mainstay of props, and prop supply houses like ISS sell them. And they’re crazy expensive.

  • @alexmomo2851
    @alexmomo2851 3 года назад +427

    No wonder it is still cost millions to produce a simple movie

    • @dudepersonvids
      @dudepersonvids 3 года назад +61

      Yeah this, and insurance, and equipment, and stars whose names will put butts in seats lol

    • @clockhanded
      @clockhanded 3 года назад +40

      Low budget movie directors and writers have to account for sounds and uncontrollable things as well because they can't afford to use silent props and years of editting. Makes me appreciate the legendary low budget movies even more.

    • @alexmomo2851
      @alexmomo2851 3 года назад +3

      @@clockhanded yes yes, it is hard, but they did, well it is good for a start

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis 3 года назад +1

      Yeah! This is mind blowing!

    • @AlexNiedt
      @AlexNiedt 3 года назад +1

      A relatively small portion of film budgets goes into consideration for audio.

  • @MercurialMoon
    @MercurialMoon Год назад +4

    No wonder why sounds in movies and tv shows always sound so pleasing

  • @rain028
    @rain028 3 года назад +336

    Never knew you could completely remove the sound from an object so easily.

    • @EarthIsFlat456
      @EarthIsFlat456 3 года назад +21

      Not completely but the sound level is greatly reduced.

    • @courtney-ray
      @courtney-ray 3 года назад +8

      This doesn’t seem “easy”

    • @rain028
      @rain028 3 года назад

      @@courtney-ray Well it is apparently

  • @eleishatamiyaj.8470
    @eleishatamiyaj.8470 3 года назад +9

    The amount of detail that actually goes into film/TV is amazing!

  • @ArizonaJewell
    @ArizonaJewell 3 года назад +8

    This is seriously so cool! I knew that a lot of care is taken as far as sound design/audio engineering goes for movies/TV (I’m a music producer), but I had no clue they also had to ensure certain props were noiseless!

  • @artisticanna5275
    @artisticanna5275 2 года назад +2

    I love how genuinely happy Tom looks when he's doing the demonstrations

  • @kentbenedict2005
    @kentbenedict2005 3 года назад +42

    This and the destructible props are one of my favorite. They put so much effort in the shows and movies.

  • @bartman9400
    @bartman9400 3 года назад +186

    I never realised we live in such a noisy world

    • @sinister2423
      @sinister2423 3 года назад +6

      You can hear the ceiling fan only when you concentrate. Not otherwise.

    • @rogerioerio2
      @rogerioerio2 3 года назад +1

      Try to eat a Chips at 3am.

    • @priscilah4
      @priscilah4 3 года назад +1

      Most people seem to filter noises without much effort.
      I often feel like I live in those Better Call Saul noisy montages.

  • @YooB1
    @YooB1 3 года назад +16

    Understanding how hard the film crew work. Makes you appreciate movies more.

  • @mitskiluvr420
    @mitskiluvr420 Год назад

    i love the quiet pride on his face. you can tell he enjoys his job.

  • @sebashernandez2058
    @sebashernandez2058 3 года назад +72

    A master in the sound of silence, nice

  • @jyotisingh-lz3de
    @jyotisingh-lz3de 3 года назад +103

    I actually used to wonder what happens to all the random sounds in shows and movies but then i thought maybe they did something while editing but this was awesome and very creative

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 3 года назад +2

      Most of the sounds in movies are edited out, and, if necessary, replaced with studio-recorded sounds from foley artists. Almost every sound you hear in a movie is fake. Tires squealing, doors opening, birds chirping, and of course, gunfire. The techniques being described here are just to prevent background noise from overpowering the dialogue when the actors are actually speaking. When the actors aren't speaking, nothing that gets recorded is needed anyway. Sometimes they don't even use the on-set dialogue either and just have actors record their lines again in a sound booth, then dub it in. That's called additional dialogue recording, ADR.

    • @AlexNiedt
      @AlexNiedt 3 года назад +1

      @@isaacbruner65 ADR stands for Automated Dialogue Replacement. 🙂

  • @codenamerishi
    @codenamerishi 3 года назад +295

    This makes sense when you realize just how sensitive the microphones are

  • @chef9524
    @chef9524 2 года назад +2

    Wow never realized how innovative these prop guys are very impressed with the work put in.

  • @epic9436
    @epic9436 3 года назад +12

    5:04
    Subtitles: [ice softly clunking]
    Silicone: the trickster

  • @birdgirl8390
    @birdgirl8390 3 года назад +323

    The way German movie makers don't give a shid and shoot 90% of their scenes in a disco with actors who are known and hated for their habits of mumbling or talking through their nose or teeth.

    • @PoptartParasol
      @PoptartParasol 3 года назад +57

      Most american movies and actors mumble too, they are unwatchable without subtitles.

    • @birdgirl8390
      @birdgirl8390 3 года назад +19

      @@PoptartParasol I think I wanted to watch the marvel movies in English and omagod Chris Evans was awful. I like the guy, but fvck...

    • @Utonian21
      @Utonian21 3 года назад +4

      @@birdgirl8390 What?

    • @hexyko4850
      @hexyko4850 3 года назад +7

      @@PoptartParasol Very true

    • @freddybaumgartner3096
      @freddybaumgartner3096 3 года назад

      Omg, so true!

  • @gollwand
    @gollwand 3 года назад +258

    LOL.
    "we hired people that made props that are less noisy"... "so then we had to hire foley artists to make noises for the props"
    (yes I understand why both are needed, I just find it funny haha)

    • @erikawright1510
      @erikawright1510 3 года назад +5

      No youre right its hilariously ironic

    • @panykfelidae9018
      @panykfelidae9018 3 года назад +26

      "I got a humidifier and a dehumidifier as housewarming gifts... put em in a room together and let them fight it out." - Steven Wright

    • @devynkumar1997
      @devynkumar1997 3 года назад +1

      niceee