Italian camera crane on jib arms — compact, stable, rapid height adjustment. Workhorse for long days and high-angle setups without full crane footprint.
The Elemack — an Italian design, developed for Italian film production in the 1970s — is a hydraulic lift system that raises cameras quickly and precisely. Unlike a classic crane, the Elemack operates compactly: a vertical mast with hydraulic drive sits on a stable tripod base or is mounted directly onto a dolly. The camera is suspended in a three-arm layout that allows full pan, tilt, and swing movements during vertical travel.
In practice, this significantly saves space and setup time. Where a Technocrane or Libra arm requires a large foundation, the Elemack fits even in tight sets — interiors, hallways, cramped outdoor shooting scenarios. The height adjustment is steplessly hydraulic: a grip controls it from a monitor, or the operator uses the mechanical controls directly on the arm. Speed is adjustable — from slow, emotional moves to rapid effect height changes within a scene. This makes it ideal for high-angle setups with dynamic camera positions: you move up, pan, tilt the camera, move back down — all in one take.
The Elemack requires reliable hydraulics and regular maintenance. The resonance is lower than with air-cushioned systems — during very long moves, vibrations can be felt, especially with sensitive focal lengths under 50mm. Therefore, it's common to use additional stabilizers or combine the arm with a stabilization system in the monitor setup. Caution is advised for outdoor shoots with wind: the Elemack is less flexible in compensating for side sway than larger cranes.
Typical use case: long dialogue scenes in offices or living rooms, where the setup needs to be quickly moved between positions. The Elemack is also popular for documentaries and live recordings — compact, mobile, reliably hydraulic, with no electrical complications. Related in concept are the Scorpio Arm or smaller Libra variants, but the Elemack remains the workhorse for European indie and mid-budget productions.