Name: Simon Nicholls.
Age: 44.
Hometown? Adelaide, South Australia.
Where are you based now? Singapore.
Occupation? Broadcast Cameraman/Director
of Photography.
Current assignments?
Currently engaged in a project
with
Firewalker Productions, a
Singapore-based TV production
company producing a six-part
documentary series Savage
Sports.
Recently shot in South India
and beautiful North Mongolia.
Now getting ready to travel to
the UK, then Southern Indonesia
to capture more unique,
traditional sporting activities.
Have you been busy?
The past few years have been
pretty flat out. Since teaming up
with another DoP, Brad Dillon,
I’ve been involved in shooting
a 13-part series Sun Tzu: War
on Business, a programme that
took me to Beijing, Singapore,
and Melbourne. Also Mega
Structures: Universal Studios,
Sentosa in Singapore for National
Geographic. Then there were
three episodes of Culinary Asia
for Discovery Channel – a terrific
gig with great access to some
of the finest chefs, rare and
traditional foods in Japan, Korea,
and Taiwan.
Also, three episodes of Asian
Monarchies for CNAi and BBC;
two stories for 60 Minutes
Australia, travelling to West
Timor, following the trail of
people smuggling and refugees’
efforts to get to Australia; two
documentaries for Asian Food
Channel; some sporting events
and corporate jobs; one series
of Contender Asia, and a series of
Contender US, plus one series of
The Amazing Race: Asia.
Shooting where?
The majority of my
work is based around
South East Asia, which
puts me on the road
a fair bit. I’m half way
through my third
passport, with 118 pages of
immigration stamps and visas.
What types of productions
have you mostly shot?
Fourteen years of work with
Seven Network Australia took
me through a lot of sport and
studio based programs plus
about 30 percent single camera
fieldwork. These days I’m
right where I want to be with
documentary productions. The
variety and challenge of being
knee deep in mud, inundated
with rain and insects one day
and filming in the halls of
government and royalty the
next, keeps me keenly interested
in this field of work.
You have a background in
broadcast. Any help to you
these days?
Absolutely! Working
14 years for Seven
gave me a very strong
grounding in all
aspects of production
and was a fantastic
opportunity to hone
my operating skills and gave me
experience in camera, audio,
lighting, set construction, props
crew, design department,
editing, etc. Years of shooting
sport is something that really
sharpens your skills.
What’s your idea of a luxury
shoot?
Shooting five star hotels in
wonderful and exotic locations!
A good, skilled crew with the
right attitude and a switched on
producer with good planning
makes life a lot less stressful on
location.
A hardship shoot?
Sometimes the locations are very tough to deal with, the
weather, logistical, or cultural
constraints. Our crew was once
ejected from a Mumbai street
at gunpoint. In an area that
didn’t seem to have seen much
progress in centuries, the shoot
was going along well and the
locals were enjoying it, until the
local leaders got wind of our
presence and considered us a
bad influence. Some shoving and
a lot of raised voices ensued from
the street boss, so we decided
to take a break in a café, make
some sense of the situation
and calm these fellas down. Ten
minutes later, the café owner
started shouting racial and
religious insults at us and told us
to get out. The lively discussion
continued briefly until a burly
looking thug brought a pistol
out of his coat and the executive
decision was made – get the hell
out of there.
One of the toughest shoots is The
Amazing Race. A real lung buster
and long days running around
town and country like mad men
while keeping the pictures as
stable and coherent as possible.
What was your first-ever
shooting job?
My baptism of fire was helping
on a studio camera on the live to
air midday show. Occasionally I
would get the chance to jump on
the Cam 2 live wide shot.
Most recent, interesting
assignments?
Just back from a really nice shoot
in Northern Mongolia – terrific
shoot in a beautiful location,
a great crew. The stories were
Mongolian wrestling, horse and
yak racing, and yak polo.
Recently completed a job
on palm oil in Kalimantan,
Jakarta, and Riau in Indonesia.
I was commissioned to shoot
a doco, but it turned out to be
a thinly veiled corporate job to
make the industry look good.
A heart-breaking job, to see
the wholesale destruction of
precious forest and the influence
over local folk. Late last year
I shot two episodes of Asian
Monarchies, back to back, in
Bhutan and Nepal. Both countries
offer staggering scenery and
wonderful, very different,
cultural color.
Current equipment you use?
Primarily, the Sony PDW 700
XDCAM or with a tighter budget,
the Sony EX 3. Both cameras have
a range of lenses, and a matte
box and filters. I generally travel
with a lighting kit, Digi Dolly and
accessories.
Other gear you have access to?
We have the Sony XDCAM 700,
Sony EX3 camera, Sony
Digi Betacam, and the Sony
HDCAM F900, Fujinon SD
and HD wide angle and tele
lenses, Digital SLR cameras
for time lapse sequences and
a Sony HD, POV Cam, matte
boxes, filter kits, comprehensive
lighting kits, a Jib, limpet cam
mount, and plenty of camera
accessories.
Do you have a kit “wish list”?
Fujinon HA42x13.5 lens, night
vision image intensifier, highspeed
camera. Time-lapse motor
rig. Wireless video monitor, one
foot Litepanels.
What piece of gear do you wish
someone might make?
Wireless power to the lights.
Best thing about your job?
The opportunity to see the world,
with unique access.
Worst thing about your job?
Being on the road a lot and away
from loved ones. Dealing with
customs, and sometimes officials
on the ground is becoming
harder these days too. And
dealing with companies that are
less than reliable when it comes
to payment.
Dullest assignments and why?
Shooting speeches and
conventions. Corporate shoots
are very dull and frustrating, with
some clients insisting on being
directors.
Hairiest/scariest assignments
and why?
Leaning over the side of
skyscrapers, helicopters, shooting
in the road in the midst of
Bangkok, Delhi, or Jakarta traffic.
Climbing up dodgy scaffolding
and rickety water towers with
kit to get the high angle and
shooting out of moving vehicles
of all descriptions.
How much 16:9 do you shoot?
Everything is in 16:9. Occasionally
I’m asked to shoot 4:3 safe in a
couple of countries like the China
market.
What country would you most
like to shoot in?
I’d like to shoot more in South
America. The cultural color, the
light and energy of the place has
a lot to offer.
What’s your taste in music?
A fair range of music; blues, jazz,
indie rock, live orchestral music
is amazing, even a little bit of
country. My iPod seems to have
termed most of my music as
“alternative”.
Favorite group?
Nick Cave, the Black Keys,
Lemon Jelly.
Favourite food?
Mediterranean food. But I can’t
live without chili! And I love Thai
and Korean food.
Contact details:
Simon Nicholls
simon.nicholls@mostwantedpix.tv