One of the more interesting threads lately. I've read all the responses. So many are very deep and profound.
This will be my 50th year big game hunting with archery equipment. The hunt is very special to me and has changed over the years and I find it changing again as I receive more and more Medicare Insurance offers these days.
I tried to video tape my son killing his 2nd deer in Missouri when he was 14 back in 1994. Those were the days when the consumer video set up involved a two piece VCR, pretty good sized camera, and cables. It took me several minutes to set the whole thing up once in the tree. I did get him on very poor video killing that deer, it was more for me than him. I wanted to see if I could do it. However, that film was recorded over by mistake and is lost.
Fast forward to the past couple of years and I'm fiddling around again but just with an iPhone. It isn't important to me but when I think of it I have a clamp that will hold the phone, aimed where I suspect a shot might happen. I actually turn the video on during prime time moments. I've "captured" a few deer walking (deer that I don't want to shoot), but I haven't captured a shot on the phone. I'm not doing this for others per se, although if I get it done I'll show my son and brother.
I might find that I don't like reliving the shot in that way? Most of the visuals are emblazoned in my brain anyway.
To answer the posters original question. I'm not intent on filming because it isn't important enough to me. My favorite visuals posted on this forum are of the places people hunt; the trails, the stands, mountains, etc. I'd rather see a photo of a beautiful forested valley and imagine what lives there rather than focus on the animal.
I can offer this however, I missed an Impala in South Africa a few years ago. My friend/PH tried to provide solace by suggesting the beast "ducked" my recurve-launched arrow. I knew that it didn't. I simply shot high.
He had a camera going so we looked at the recording....alas, I was right and he was wrong. He said, "Wow, you just missed by an inch." I replied, "No, I missed the kill shot by about 6" inches. I failed to pick a spot. The lament of sightless archers since the invention of our equipment.