Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Camera , editing , sound ,mise-en-scene

     

What is camera editing and mise-en-scene broken down?

Camera: 

camera usually refers to -

Angles: low angle, high angle 

Movement:  track, pan, zoom, tilt 

Shots: Establishing shot, close-up shot, extreme-close-up shot, wide shot, mid-shot, birds-eye view, etc. 

Compositions: rule of 3rd, the 180-degree rule where people are placed in the shot, focus.


Editing : 

Transitions: wipe, crossfade, fade to black, jump-cut, etc.  

Juxtaposition:  meaning being contradicted. 

Shot duration: how long the shot is going to last and why it is lasting that long. 


Sound : 

diegetic sound - Sound that can be heard by the characters as well as the viewers in the film. 

non-diegetic sound -  this is sound that can also be heard by the audience and not by the characters in the film.

sound bridge - this is sound that can be carried between two scenes.

Parallel sound - Sound that matches what is shown on screen. 

Contrapuntal sound - this sound can make you feel disorientated as it doesn't easily match what is being shown on screen. 

Pleonastic sound - Sound that is exaggerated.

Asynchronous sound- doesn't match the visual 

synchronous - matches what is on screen.  

Mise en Scene: 

Props 

Lighting - Natural lighting, high key lighting, low key lighting  

costume 

movement and performance - actor's movement, facial expressions, gaze. 



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