Cinematic techniques

This article contains a list cinematic techniques that are divided into categories and are shortly explained.

Basic definitions of terms

Aerial shot
A shot taken from an airborne device, generally while moving.
Backlighting (lighting design)
The main source of light is behind the subject, silhouetting it, and directed toward the camera.
Bridging shot
A shot used to cover a jump in time or place or other discontinuity. Examples are falling calendar pages, railroad wheels, newspaper headlines and seasonal changes.
Camera angle
The point of view or viewing position adopted by the camera with respect to its subject. Most common types are
Close-up
a framing depicting the human head or an object of similar size
Cut
An editorial transition signified by the immediate replacement of one shot with another.
Cross-cutting
Cutting between different events occurring simultaneously in different locations. Especially in narrative filmmaking, cross-cutting is traditionally used to build suspense or to suggest a thematic relationship between two sets of actions.
Continuity editing
An editorial style that preserves the illusion of undisrupted time and space across editorial transitions (especially cuts).
Deep focus
A technique in which objects in the extreme foreground and objects in the extreme background are kept equally in focus.
Dissolve
An editorial transition overlapping a fade in and a fade out in such a way that one image gradually disappears while another simultaneously emerges. This transition generally suggest a longer period of narrative elapses than is suggested by cuts.
Camera Dolly
A wheeled cart or similar device upon which a movie camera is mounted to give it smooth, horizontal mobility.
Dollying or Dolly shot
A shot in which the camera moves toward or away from its subject while filming. Traditionally dolly shots are filmed from a camera dolly but the same motion may also be performed with a Steadicam, gimbal, etc. A dolly shot is generally described in terms of "dollying in" or "dollying out". Trucking in and out is also a common synonym.
Editing
The selection and organization of shots into a series, usually in the interest of creating larger cinematic units.
Ellipsis (linguistics)
A term referring to "chunks" of time left out of a narrative, signaled in filmmaking by editorial transitions
Eyeline match
a type of editorial match involving two, subsequent shots in which shot 1 contains an agent (a person, animal, etc.) gazing in the direction of some unseen, off-screen vision, and shot 2 contains an image presumed by the spectator to be the object of the agent's gaze.
Extreme close-up
A shot framed so closely as to show only a portion of the face or of some object.
Extreme long shot
A shot in which the human figure would be extremely insignificant compared to its surroundings.
A panoramic view photographed from a considerable distance and made up essentially of landscape or distant background.
Fade in/out
An editorial transition in which the image either gradually appears out of ("fade in") or gradually fades into ("fade out") a black screen.
Fill light
An auxiliary light placed to the side of the subject that softens shadows and illuminates areas not lit by the key light (see "key light").
Flashback
A scene or sequence inserted into a scene set in the narrative present that images some event set in the past.
Flashforward
A scene or sequence inserted into a scene set in the narrative present that images some event set in the future.
Focus
The optical clarity or precision of an image relative to normal human vision. Focus in photographic images is usually expressed in terms of depth.
Framing
The organization of visible phenomena with respect to the boundaries of the image.
Intertitle
A piece of filmed, printed text edited into the midst of (i.e. inter-) the photographed action at various points. Most commonly used in silent movies to convey elements of dialgue and other commentary.
Iris in/out
An editorial transition popular during the silent period utilizing a diaphragm placed in front of the lens and which, when opened (iris in) or closed (iris out), functions like a fade in or fade out. A partially opened iris can also be used to focus attention on a detail of the scene in the manner of vignetting.
Jump cut
An editorial transition between two shots in which the illusion of temporal continuity is radically disrupted.
Key light
The main light on a subject, usually placed at a 45 degree angle to the camera-subject axis. In high-key lighting, the key light provides all or most of the light in the scene. In low-key lighting, the key light provides much less of the total illumination.
Long shot
A shot in which the human figure would be relatively insignificant compared to its surroundings.
Master shot
A shot, often a long shot, usually placed at the beginning of a scene to establish the general location of the action to follow.
Match cut
One of various editorial devices used to preserve a sense of spatio-temporal integrity or continuity between cuts.
Medium close-up
A shot depicting the human figure from approximately the chest up.
Medium shot
A shot depicting the human figure from approximately the waist up.
Mise en scène
Everything that has been placed in front of or is revealed by the camera while shooting.
Pan
A shot in which the camera is made to pivot left or right on its horizontal axis while filming. Pans are always described in terms of "panning left" or "panning right". It is incorrect to discuss pans in terms of the vertical, "up"/"down" axis, which is properly called tilting
Point of view shot
(Often abbreviated as 'pov'). A shot which shows an image from the specific point of view of a character in the film.
Racking focus
A shot employing shallow focus in which the focal distance changes so that the background is gradually brought into focus while the foreground is gradually taken out of focus or visa versa.
Reverse angle
In a dialogue scene, a shot of the second participant understood as the opposing or "reverse" view of the shot showing the first participant.
Scene
A unit of narration generally composed of a series of shots that takes place in a single location and concerns a central action.
Shot
  • 1.) The image produced by a motion picture camera from the time it begins shooting until the time is stops shooting
  • 2.) (in an edited film) the uninterrupted record of time and space depicted between editorial transitions.
Steadicam
A lightweight, highly-mobile camera transportation and stabilization device developed by inventor / cinematographer Garrett Brown which permits hand-held filming with an image steadiness comparable to tracking or dolly shots. The device involves 1.) a vest redistributing the weight of the camera to the hips of the cameraman and, 2.) a spring-loaded arm working to minimize the effects of camera movement. A video tap simultaneously frees the camera operator from the eyepiece, who is then free to travel through any walkable terrain while filming.
Story board
A series of drawings and captions (sometimes resembling a comic strip) that shows the planned shot divisions and camera movements of the film.
Tilt
A shot in which the camera is made to pivot up or down on its vertical axis while filming.
Tracking shot/traveling shot
A shot in which the camera moves alongside or parallel to its subject while filming. Traditionally tracking shots are filmed while the camera is mounted on a track dolly and rolled on dedicated tracks comparable to railroad tracks, In recent years, however, parallel camera moves performed with a Steadicam, gimbal, etc. may also be called a tracking shot. Tracking shots often "follow" a subject while it is in motion: for instance, a person walking on a sidewalk seen from the perspective of somebody walking on a parallel path several feet away. Shots taken from moving vehicles that run parallel to another moving object are also referred to as tracking or traveling shots. A tracking shot may also be curved, moving around its subject in a semi-circular rotation.
Two shot
A shot in which the frame encompasses two people, typically but not exclusively a medium shot.
Whip pan
A type of pan shot in which the camera pans so quickly that the resulting image is badly blurred. It is sometimes used as an editorial transition and is also known as a swish pan or "flash pan."
Wipe
An optical editorial transition in which an image appears to be pushed or "wiped" to one aside of the screen to make way for the next.
Zoom
A shot taken from a stationary position using a special zoom lens that magnifies or de-magnifies the center of the image. This creates an illusion that the camera is moving toward or away from its subject by making the subject more or less prominent in the frame. Not to be confused with dollying in which the camera itself actually physically moves closer to or further away from its subject.

Cinematography


Movement and expression

Movement can be used extensively by film makers to make meaning. It is how a scene is put together to produce an image. A famous example of this, which uses "dance" extensively to communicate meaning and emotion, is the film, West Side Story.

Provided in this alphabetised list of film techniques used in motion picture filmmaking. There are a variety of expressions:

Lighting technique and aesthetics

To achieve the results mentioned above, a Lighting Director may use a number or combination of Video Lights. These may include the Redhead or Open-face unit, The Fresnel Light, which gives you a little more control over the spill, or The Dedolight, which provides a more efficient light output and a beam which is easier to control.[1]

Editing and transitional devices

Special effects (FX)

Lighting

In cinematography, the use of light can influence the meaning of a shot. For example, film makers often portray villains that are heavily shadowed or veiled, using silhouette.

Techniques involving light include backlight (silhouette), and under-lighting (light across a character form).

Sound

Sound is used extensively in filmmaking to enhance presentation, and is distinguished into diegetic and non-diegetic sound:

Sound effects

In motion picture and television production, a sound effect is a sound recorded and presented to make a specific storytelling or creative point, without the use of dialogue or music. The term often refers to a process, applied to a recording, without necessarily referring to the recording itself. In professional motion picture and television production, the segregations between recordings of dialogue, music, and sound effects can be quite distinct, and it is important to understand that in such contexts, dialogue, and music recordings are never referred to as sound effects, though the processes applied to them, such as reverberation or flanging, often are.

Techniques in interactive movies

New techniques currently being developed in interactive movies, introduce an extra dimension into the experience of viewing movies, by allowing the viewer to change the course of the movie.

In traditional linear movies, the author can carefully construct the plot, roles, and characters to achieve a specific effect on the audience. Interactivity, however, introduces non-linearity into the movie, such that the author no longer has complete control over the story, but must now share control with the viewer. There is an inevitable trade-off between the desire of the viewer for freedom to experience the movie in different ways, and the desire of the author to employ specialized techniques to control the presentation of the story. Computer technology is required to create the illusion of freedom for the viewer, while providing familiar, as well as, new cinematic techniques to the author.

See also

References

  1. "Video Lighting – The Pro Way". Video Lighting – The Pro Way. New Wave TV. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
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