Bowling alley attracts worldwide viewers with astounding drone video

11 March 2021, 15:24

A still from a drone video of Bryant Lake Bowl & Theater in Minneapolis, USA
A still from a drone video of Bryant Lake Bowl & Theater in Minneapolis, USA. Picture: PA

The one-take video was produced for free to help the coronavirus-hit business.

A drone-filmed advert showcasing a neighbourhood bowling alley has gone viral worldwide thanks to the remarkable precision flying of its pilot.

The one-take video of Bryant Lake Bowl & Theatre follows the device as it flies in through the doors of the venue, before touring it at remarkable speed – even going behind the pins and dodging between a bowler’s legs.

Pilot Jay Christensen, 25, and director Anthony Jaska, 35 – both from Minneapolis, Minnesota – undertook the project free of charge as part of an effort to help local businesses recover from coronavirus-related losses.

“Those small businesses have taken a major hit, obviously because of Covid, but then that whole area is in ruins at one point,” Mr Jaska told the PA news agency.

“It looks like some buildings have been bombed out or something like that.”

“We thought it would be a great way to help them, and also it’s a great way to see how we can be creative with that one-take shot,” Mr Christensen added.

“Hopefully they see a lot of business coming back soon.”

The short film has since gone viral, with more than 90,000 upvotes on discussion website Reddit, where viewers marvelled at the speed and skill on show.

“To me the hardest move was going behind the pins,” said pilot Christensen. “That was really stressing me out… and I ended up getting it 15 of 15 times.

“It ended up being that the hardest moves were actually just getting in the front door to start. I was on the phone with the guy that was opening the door and I was like ‘action!'”

Pilot Jay Christensen, 25, and director Anthony Jaska, 35 – both from Minneapolis, Minnesota
Pilot Jay Christensen (left) and director Anthony Jaska (Rally Studios)

Mr Jaska added “The bowling was way more tricky, because of the physical aspect of people bowling – are they going to get a gutter ball?”

The success of the video is worldwide, but both director and pilot – who work out of Rally Studios – said that people need to back local community businesses like Bryant Lake Bowl & Theatre when society begins to reopen.

“If you don’t do it today those places might not be around,” said Mr Christensen.

“This year we’ve been fortunate enough to document films that have gotten a lot of exposure for our work, and so we want to be able to, in a way, repay the community of Minneapolis.

“I think that’s a win-win.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Google homepage

Competition regulator objects to Google’s ad tech practices

A passenger waits for a Tube train at Westminster London Underground station

TfL restricts access to online services due to cyber attack

A purple Currys sign above a store entrance

Currys boosted by AI-curious customers as it takes 50% laptop market share

The Darktrace wesbite

Darktrace chief steps down ahead of £4.3bn private equity takeover

Charlotte Owen

Baroness Owen to introduce law change aimed at criminalising deepfake creation

Hands using computer with artificial intelligence app

UK signs first international treaty on artificial intelligence

The logo of mobile phone network EE is displayed on the screen of a smartphone

EE launches its first standalone 5G network across 15 UK cities

Lord Chancellor Shabana Mahmood signs first legally-binding treaty governing safe use of artificial intelligence.

'We must not let AI shape us': UK to sign first international treaty to safeguard public from risks of artificial intelligence

Visa debit card sitting on a keyboard

Visa unveils initiative to boost consumer protection for bank transfers

A child using a laptop computer

Seven in 10 children exposed to harmful content online – research

Oasis band members Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher

Dynamic pricing to be examined by European Commission amid Oasis ticket furore

Amazon's new AI-powered shopping assistant Rufus on a smartphone

Amazon launches AI-powered shopping assistant Rufus in the UK

Gamers play on a PlayStation 4

Sony to take multiplayer game Concord offline two weeks after release

A woman's hnad on a laptop keyboard

Competition watchdog clears Microsoft arrangements with Inflection AI

Health Minister Stephen Donnelly (PA)

Time of expecting social media sites to remove harmful content ‘is over’

An Nvidia sign

Nvidia shares plunge nearly 10% in largest single-day value loss for a US firm