<Anchor> In



a popular movie these days, a video that has never been seen before appears.

The screen is so dynamic that it is surprising that it was filmed in real life and not computer graphics.



Reporter Lee Joo-hyung will tell you about the visual world that he encountered with a new shooting technique.



<Reporter>



'The Master of Action Movies', 'The King of Destruction'.



It is the nickname of the Hollywood director, Michael Bay, who ranks among the top five box office hits in the world.



Like his nickname, he is famous for large-scale explosions and breathless action scenes, this time he has released a new work called 'Ambulance'.



It's about bank robbers stealing an ambulance and running through downtown LA, but the camera angles and walking videos you've never seen catch your eye.



It raises the curiosity of how the camera was filmed, such as skimming high-rise buildings and then plummeting while making a sharp turn, turning at high speed between pillars, or passing the camera under a moving vehicle.



[Michael Bay/Director: Let's lower the drone and raise it.]



The secret is a first-person view drone called 'FPV drone'.



Unlike normal drones, they wear goggles and control them as if they were VR games.



I met Lim Jong-deok, one of the best FPV drones in Korea, and reproduced it similarly to the movie.



The scene taken while the drone vertically ascends and then falls vertically appears on the screen like this.



The FPV drone shows the camera walking possible only with CG, flying across the terrain around the hanok at high speed and turning rapidly through between the small structures of the plastic house.



[Lim Jong-deok / FPV drone piloting 1st generation, 9 years of experience: In the past, only CG was made and dangerous scenes were made with computer graphics, but the technology that can be filmed with live-action drones is now.]



FPV is the film art that has overcome the visual limitations of human beings .

Drones are taking another hit.



(Video coverage: Jeon Gyeong-bae, video editing: Choi Eun-jin)