I researched much for blinds and ended up buying a Big Jim 275, 80" high for a little over a Benjamin. The windows are a bit high at the bottom, but that is cured by a few small bunjees strung from outside brush loops to inside frame rod. I can shoot my 62" longbow with no worries about hitting limb on the roof or hitting the window edge (after adding the bunjees). Seat height determines what you can do but most blinds don't allow enough room for trad bows so check them out first before dropping the ching.
From my experience, a tent blind suddenly appearing will probably spook a deer unless you brush it in well so it becomes part of the landscape not something NEW to the landscape. That is where the natural blind beats the tent blind. but the natural blind method, you are going to have to time your movement much better as the tent blind will hide all concealment.
My first experience with a tent blind was during turkey hunting. Set it up in the middle of the field, turkeys ignored it and the deer we saw were very suspicious, but we WERE like a big pimple on the face of the field. With filming, I would say tent blind wins. (disclaimer: writer may be misinterpreted as knowing what he is talking about, use information provided at your own risk!!)
TomBow