How to Film a Cinematic Interview: A Repeatable 30-Minute Setup
The framing, lens, lighting, and audio decisions that make an interview look like a film instead of a Zoom call — plus the exact 30-minute setup checklist we run before every Dallas shoot.
Josiah Love··8 min read
Most interviews fail before anyone hits record. The subject sits two feet from a beige wall, the camera stares at them dead-on at eye level, and a single on-camera mic picks up the air conditioner. None of that is a camera problem — a cinematic interview is mostly a decisions problem, and the decisions are repeatable. This is the setup we run on client shoots, compressed into a checklist you can execute in 30 minutes.
What makes an interview read as cinematic
Strip away the gear talk and cinematic interviews share five traits: the subject is separated from the background by real physical depth, the framing follows deliberate composition rules instead of centering by default, the eye-line lands just off the lens, the light has direction and shape, and the audio is clean enough that you never think about it. Every item below serves one of those five.
One camera setting comes first because it silently ruins everything else: shutter speed. Keep your shutter at roughly double your frame rate — 1/50 at 24fps, 1/60 at 30fps — for natural motion blur. Indoors under LED lighting this also avoids flicker in most cases. Lock it, then build exposure with aperture, ISO, and ND filters, never by drifting the shutter.
Framing and eye-line: where the subject looks decides everything
Place the subject on a rule-of-thirds vertical line, looking into the empty side of the frame — this is called lead room or nose room. A subject framed on the left third should look right, toward the open two-thirds. Reverse it and the shot feels claustrophobic even if nobody can say why.
For eye-line, sit or stand immediately beside the lens — your head should almost touch the matte box. The subject talks to you, and their eyes land maybe five degrees off-axis. That slight offset is the documentary-interview look. If the brand wants direct-to-camera delivery instead, commit fully: eyes in the lens, framed closer to center. Half-measures, where the eye-line wanders fifteen or twenty degrees off, read as the subject watching someone pace around the room.
Lens choice and background depth
Focal length is a face-rendering decision before it is a framing decision. On full frame, 85mm at f/2 to f/2.8 is the classic interview A-cam look: gentle compression that flatters features and melts the background. A 50mm works when the room is tight, and a 35mm only when the environment itself is the story — an owner in their workshop, a chef in their kitchen. Below 35mm, facial distortion starts working against you.
Depth of field comes from distance as much as aperture. Pull the subject at least six to eight feet off the background — this is the cheapest production value available. A subject at f/2.8 sitting one foot from a wall still looks flat; the same subject eight feet from a bookshelf with a practical lamp in the background looks like a documentary frame. Then add depth cues inside the blur: a warm practical light, a plant edge, a window with daylight. Two or three soft shapes at different distances beat an expensive backdrop.
50mm, f/2 — the compromise lens for hotel rooms and small offices
35mm, f/2.8–f/4 — environmental interviews where the location sells the story
Avoid 24mm and wider for the A-cam close-up — noses grow and ears recede
Two-camera coverage that saves the edit
A second camera is not about looking fancy — it is an editing insurance policy. Every cut between takes, every trimmed rambling answer, every removed "um" becomes invisible when you can switch angles. Set the B-cam 30 to 45 degrees off the A-cam axis, on the same side of the subject's eye-line so you never cross the 180-degree line, with a different frame size: if the A-cam is a medium shot on the 85mm, put the B-cam on a 35mm or 50mm for a wider or tighter complementary frame.
Match color as closely as you can at the source. Shoot both cameras in the same log profile and white balance, and confirm exposure with false color or zebras rather than eyeballing two different LCDs. On low-light locations, cameras with dual base ISO help here — the Sony FX3, for example, offers base ISOs of 800 and 12,800 in S-Log3, so you can hold a clean image in a dim room without stacking lights (Sony help guide).
Audio redundancy: record every word twice
Interview audio has no second take. The rule on our shoots: every syllable is captured by two independent recording chains. The standard rig is a wireless lavalier on the subject plus a shotgun or small-diaphragm hypercardioid on a boom or stand, positioned just out of frame above the subject, 18 to 24 inches from the mouth, aimed at the sternum.
Modern wireless kits make redundancy nearly free. The RØDE Wireless GO II transmitters can record uncompressed 24-bit/48kHz WAV files onboard — over seven hours of it — independent of the wireless link, so a radio dropout no longer costs you the take (RØDE). For the boom chain, a 32-bit float recorder such as the Zoom F3 removes gain-setting risk entirely — it has no gain knob at all, because 32-bit float files can be pulled up or down in post without clipping (Zoom).
Lighting shape in three moves
You need three sources, and two of them can be found objects. Key: one soft source — a 200W-class COB LED through a softbox or diffusion — 45 degrees off the camera axis on the side the subject faces, slightly above eye level. Edge: a small hard light or bare practical behind and opposite the key, skimming the shoulder and hair to cut the subject off the background. Background: a practical lamp or a slash of light on the wall behind them, one to two stops under the face. Keep the key side consistent with the eye-line — light the short side (the side of the face turned away from camera) for the moodier, more dimensional look.
The 30-minute setup checklist
Run this in order. The sequence matters — audio problems and background choices are expensive to fix late, so they come first.
Minutes 0–5 — Pick the frame, not the chair. Walk the room, find 12+ feet of depth with layered background interest, listen for noise, kill HVAC and compressors.
Minutes 5–10 — Set the A-cam. 85mm (or 50mm in tight rooms), subject on a thirds line with lead room, lens at eye level, f/2.8, shutter 1/50 at 24fps, white balance locked.
Minutes 10–15 — Set the key light. 45 degrees off axis, short side, soft and slightly above eye level; expose the face with zebras or false color.
Minutes 15–20 — Edge and background light. Rim the shoulder from behind-opposite; drop a practical or slash on the background 1–2 stops under the face.
Minutes 20–25 — Audio, twice. Lav rigged and hidden, boom 18–24 inches out of frame, onboard backup recording enabled, headphone check on both chains, 30 seconds of room tone.
Minutes 25–30 — B-cam and record check. B-cam 30–45 degrees off, same side of the eye-line, matched profile and white balance, timecode or a hand clap for sync, then roll both cameras and both recorders and confirm every device shows elapsed time counting.
None of this requires a cinema camera. A mirrorless body, one fast prime, two lights, a lav-plus-boom audio chain, and this checklist will out-perform an expensive rig pointed at a subject sitting against a wall. The look comes from depth, direction, and discipline — the gear just records it.
What is the best focal length for filming interviews?
On a full-frame camera, an 85mm prime at f/2 to f/2.8 is the classic interview look — flattering facial compression and strong background separation. Use a 50mm in smaller rooms and a 35mm only when the environment is part of the story. Wider than 35mm distorts facial features on a close-up.
Should the interview subject look at the camera or at the interviewer?
For documentary and testimonial interviews, the subject should look at an interviewer seated immediately next to the lens, so the eye-line lands about five degrees off-axis. Direct-to-camera delivery works for founder messages and ads, but commit to one or the other — an eye-line that wanders 15–20 degrees off camera looks unfocused.
How far should the subject sit from the background?
At least six to eight feet. Distance from the background does more for the cinematic blurred look than an expensive lens, because depth of field depends on the background distance as much as the aperture. Add a practical lamp or window in the blurred zone for extra depth.
Do I really need two audio recordings of an interview?
Yes — interview audio has no second take. Run a wireless lavalier plus a boom mic as independent chains. Kits like the RØDE Wireless GO II record backup WAV files onboard the transmitter, and 32-bit float recorders like the Zoom F3 remove gain-clipping risk, so full redundancy now costs almost nothing extra.