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Introduction to Cinema Techniques. Outline. Editing Shots and Their Functions Overview of Professional Production Double-System Shooting Lighting Sound. Editing. Editing Terms. Shot Scene Sequence Overall Film Structure. Shot. A single piece of continuous action. Scene.
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Outline • Editing • Shots and Their Functions • Overview of Professional Production • Double-System Shooting • Lighting • Sound
Editing Terms • Shot • Scene • Sequence • Overall Film Structure
Shot • A single piece of continuous action.
Scene • An assembly of shots which gives the impression of continuous space and time.
Sequence • A collection of scenes
Intrascene Editing • Cutting shots together within a scene. • Involves the notion of “continuity.”
Two Dimensions of Continuity • “Temporal Continuity” gives the impression that time is continuous. • “Spatial Continuity” gives the impression that space is continuous.
Types of Absolute Temporal Continuity • Single-shot Scene • Matching Action
Single-shot Scene • Where a scene is recorded in a single shot.
Matching Action • Action must be photographed from more than one angle. • Action must be on the screen at the moment of the cut. • The cut between one angle (shot) and another must match.
“Errors” in Matching Action • Jump Cuts • Overlapping Action
Jump Cut • Where a portion of the action is missing at the cut.
Overlapping Action • Where a portion of the action repeats itself at the cut.
Cutaways • Allow screen time to be condensed
Cutaways • Allow screen time to be expanded
Special Kinds of Cutaways • Inserts
Reaction Shots • Act as cutaways to condense or expand screen time. • Guide the audience’s emotional response to the main action. • Establish relationships between the characters involved in the main action and those doing the reacting.
Spatial Continuity • Spatial continuity allows the audience to keep oriented from one shot to another within a scene. • Spatial continuity gives the impression that real space and screen space are the same. • In spatial continuity there is no equivalent to “absolute temporal continuity,” since screen space, unlike real space, is always bounded by the frame.
Spatial Continuity • The framelines separate “onscreen space” from “offscreen space.”
180 Degree Rule • Provides continuity of movement. • Provides continuity of direction. • Provides continuity of screen position.
30 Degree Rule • Changes from one shot to another should be significant, but not too great.
Opticals • Wipe • Iris • Fade-out and fade-in • Dissolve
Scene Structure • Mise en scene • Montage
Film Structures • Narrative (dramatic) • Rhetorical • Categorical • Abstract
Two levels of meaning • Connotation • Denotation
Shots, like words... • have a “denotative” meaning. • have a “connotative” meaning.