Sabtu, 14 November 2009

FILM TERMS


Basic film Terms :
Frame : dividing line between the adges of the screen image and the enclosing darkness of the theater. or single photo of films.
Types of Shots :
Cinematic shots are defined by the amount of subject matter within the frame
Shots can vary in duration
Shots vary in time from subliminal (a few frames) to quick (less than a second) to “average” (more than a second but less than a minute) to lengthy (more than a minute)

Cinematic shots are defined by the amount of subject matter within the frame

Shots can vary in duration

Shots vary in time from subliminal (a few frames) to quick (less than a second) to “average” (more than a second but less than a minute) to lengthy (more than a minute)

Establishing Shot
(or Extreme Long Shot)

Shot taken from a great distance, almost always an exterior shot, shows much of locale

ELS

Long Shot (LS)

(A relative term) A shot taken from a sufficient distance to show a landscape, a building, or a large crowd

Medium Shot (MS)

(Also relative) a shot between a long shot and a close-up that might show two people in full figure or several people from the waist up

Close-Up (CU)

A shot of a small object or face that fills the screen

Adds importance to object photographed

Extreme Close-Up (ECU)

A shot of a small object or part of a face that fills the screen

Over the Shoulder Shot

Usually contains two figures, one with his/her back to the camera, and the other facing the camera

Types of Angles

The angle is determined by where the camera is placed not the subject matter

Angles can serve as commentary on the subject matter

Bird’s Eye View

Camera is placed directly overhead

Extremely disorienting

Viewer is godlike

High Angle (h/a)

Camera looks down at what is being photographed

Takes away power of subject, makes it insignificant

Gives a general overview

Low Angle (l/a)

Camera is located below subject matter

Increases height and power
of subject

Oblique Angle

Lateral tilt of the camera so
that figures appear to be
falling out of the frame

Suggests tension
and transition

Sometimes used as
the point of view
of a drunk

Point of View (POV)

A shot taken from the vantage point a particular character, or what a character sees

“Eye-Level”

Roughly 5 to 6 feet off the ground, the way an actual observer might view a scene

Most common

Camera Movement

Pan : The camera moves horizontally on a fixed base.

Tilt : The camera points up or down from a fixed base

Tracking (dolly) shot : The camera moves through space on a wheeled truck (or dolly), but stays in the same plane

Boom : The camera moves up or down through space

Zoom : Not a camera movement, but a shift in the focal length of the camera lens to give the impression that the camera is getting closer to or farther from an object

Getting from Scene to Scene

Cut

Transition between scenes when one scenes ends and another one begins

Most common

Dissolve

A gradual transition in which the end of one scene is superimposed over the beginning of a new one.

Fade-out/Fade in

A scene gradually goes dark or a new one gradually emerges from darkness

Wipe

An optical effect in which one shot appears to push appears to push the preceding one from the screen.

Iris

An optical effect in which one shot appears to emerge from a shape on the screen.

What This Means

These are the basic elements of film that a director can use to tell his/her story.

Through editing, these shots are put together to create (hopefully!) a coherent story.

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