Lenses

Did you know that the type of lens you choose affects the story you want to tell, whether you’re a photographer or a filmmaker? There’s ultra-wide, wide angle, normal, telephoto, medium telephoto, and supertelephoto. That’s a lot of terminology, so if you’re lost, Sidney’s here to explain what focal lengths fall under each umbrella and how each of them change your storytelling.

In filmmaking and photography, the focal length of a lens is far more than a technical setting; it is a psychological tool that dictates how an audience perceives the space, the characters, and the emotional weight of a scene.

Here is a summary of how different focal lengths impact storytelling:


1. Wide-Angle Lenses (14mm to 35mm)

Wide lenses capture a broad field of view, making them essential for establishing context and scale.

  • Environmental Context: These lenses allow the audience to see the character and their surroundings simultaneously, emphasizing the relationship between a person and their environment.

  • Exaggerated Depth: Objects close to the lens appear much larger than those just a few feet away. This can make a room look more spacious or a landscape more vast.

  • Intimacy and Distortion: When used close to a subject’s face, wide lenses can create a “looming” effect. This can feel uncomfortably intimate, comedic, or even grotesque, often used to signal a character’s instability or a surreal moment.


2. Standard / “Normal” Lenses (35mm to 50mm)

These lenses are designed to approximate the field of view and perspective of the human eye.

  • Naturalism: Because they don’t distort lines or compress space, standard lenses feel “invisible.” They are perfect for grounded, realistic storytelling where you want the camera to feel like an objective observer.

  • Relatability: By mimicking human vision, these focal lengths create a sense of honesty and directness, making the audience feel like they are standing in the room with the characters.


3. Telephoto Lenses (85mm and above)

Telephoto lenses have a narrow field of view and “crop” into the scene, magnifying distant subjects.

  • Spatial Compression: They make the background appear much closer to the foreground than it actually is. This can create a feeling of claustrophobia, or make a character feel trapped against their environment.

  • Isolation: With a shallow depth of field, the background becomes a soft blur (bokeh). This physically separates the character from the world, drawing the audience’s absolute focus to their internal emotions or a specific detail.

  • The “Voyeur” Effect: Because telephotos allow the camera to be physically far away, they often give the scene a “paparazzi” or observational feel, as if the audience is eavesdropping on a private moment.


4. Movement and Kinetic Energy

Focal length also changes how we perceive physical motion within the frame.

  • Speed in Wide Lenses: Because wide lenses exaggerate distance, a character walking toward the camera appears to be moving incredibly fast. This is great for high-energy action or frantic pacing.

  • Stasis in Telephoto: Conversely, someone running toward a telephoto lens appears to be staying in the same place (the “treadmill effect”). This is often used to visualize struggle, futility, or a nightmare where the destination never gets closer.


5. Directing the Audience’s Eye

Ultimately, focal length is about information control.

  • A wide lens gives the audience information (showing the whole “world”).

  • A long lens withholds information (blurring the “world” to focus on a single tear or a subtle look).

By choosing a specific focal length, you aren’t just choosing what the audience sees; you are choosing how you want them to feel about it.

#Filmmaking #CameraLenses #CineLens

Source:

B&H Photo Video Pro Audio
https://www.youtube.com/@BandH