Discontinuous editing
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Discontinuous editing describes the deliberate or accidental violation of rules of continuity when editing films. As a deliberate technique, it may be used to connote authenticity or to create alienation. The viewer's expectation of continuity can be violated by such methods as changing image size or tone between shots, changing direction or changing shots before the viewer has time to recognize what is happening .[1] It is also known as montage editing, and employs a series of often rapid and non-matching cuts which creates a style the audience is conspicuously aware of,[2] or alternatively that create uneven and unpredictable rhythms and emphasize the rapidity of movement between images [3]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Goldman, Robert; Stephen Papson (August 1994). "Advertising in the Age of Hypersignification (reprint)". Advertising in the Age of Hypersignification," Theory, Culture & Society 11,3: pp. 23-53.
- ^ http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/jeanrenoir/Film%20&%20Narrative%20handout.htm
- ^ hyperreal encoding