Writing in movement
Comparative difference between the darlets and the lightest areas of the frame
Crucial way to alter the tonalities, filters would e used to he[ with the affect toning too
Difficult to achieve, sometimes they want unbalanced
Using blue filters in sunlight
The level of intensity of a colour
Tinting = dipping the already developed into a bath of dye
Toning = dye added during the developing of the positive print
24fps but today is somewhere between 8 and 64fps
distance from the centre of the lens to the point where the light rays converge to a point of focus on the film
middle - Little distortion of perspective relations – Scene appears roughly as human eye would see it
Short - Exaggerates depth – distances between foreground and background seem greater than they are – figures moving toward or away from camera appear to cover ground more quickly
Long - Allows closer shots of distant objects
Has flattening effect – Distance between foreground and background seems greatly reduced
Figure moving toward or away from camera seems to take longer time to cover distance than we might expect
A property of the lens
Range of distances before the lens within which objects can be photographed in sharp focus
Matter of mise en scene involving how the scene is arranged
all elements of an image—foreground, middleground, and background—are all in sharp focus
Selective is on the left where it’s only us concentrating on her face and the background is blurred
Pulling focus switch our attention between foreground and background
Frame width to frame height
Top and bottom of the film frame are masked to create widescreen
The areas that are not shown inside the frame can help create suspense
Angle
Level
Height
Distance of framing
Framing tipped to one side or the other
ECU a part of the human face is in focus
Close up the human face fills the shot
MCU closer should up
Medium shot waist up (also like cowboy)
MLS knee up
LS full body in view nearly dills the frame from top to bottom
ELS human body dwarfed up or is not in shot (a lot of the time in opening shots)
Hand shot
Pan
Tilt
Tracking or dolly shot
Crane shot
Steadicam something stable holding it usually body worn
Short panning or tilting movements used to adjust for movements of the subjects
Long take - uninterrupted take
Long shot - full body shot
Loudness- the sounds we hear results from vibrations in the air
Pitch- perceived highness or lowness of the sound
Timbre- the harmonic components of sounds give it a certain colour or tone quality
Speech
Music
noise
Filmmakers continues a line of dialogue across a cut smoothing over the change of shot
Combining sounds after shooting is done during the mixing process, the mixer controls the volume, duration and time quality of each sound weaving them in and out.
Can subtly compare scenes, trace patterns of development and suggest implicit meanings
film technique that syncs the accompanying music with the actions on screen, "Matching movement to music"
The extent to which the sound is faithful to the source as we conceive it
Helps with transitions when needed, its purely a matter of expectation
Can be presented through the soundtrack or visual track
Internal comes from the inside of the character (subjevtive)
External the sound has a physical source ub the scene (objective)
The closer it is, the louder , the further vice versa
audio that lines up precisely with what's happening on screen
Nonsimultaneous: sound from earlier in story than image.
Simultaneous: images and sound takes place at the same time.
occurs when the sound of the next scene begins while images of the last scene remain on-screen or when a sound lingers as the next scene appears.
Group style use or techniques across the work of several filmmakers
Provide firm basis for reinforcing our prior assumption
What techniques the film relies on
Do the right thing 'point of view' or P.O.V shots, close ups, over-the-shoulder, wide-angle shots, special effects (FX) and sound
makes use of expressionist architecture and expresses interior reality through exterior means with its use of extreme distortion in its production design
inspiration because it abandoned the slavish imitation of a real, objectively perceived world to present a subjective vision.
dead end because
It projected the character’s vision primarily through the film’s mise-en-scéne, that is, its two-dimensional painted sets, a means borrowed from the theatre.
Location shooting in urban settings
Rough, documentary style cinematography
Frequently used novice actors
Stories of poor and working class characters
Looser narrative form
Neorealist scenarios focus on common, even banal events in the lives of humble working-class people. For some reason, the depiction of lives of workers or the poor strikes us as more real than the depiction of the more insulated lives of the rich.
Squeezing out, anti bourgeois, crudely apinted forms and vibrant colours
Freud's psychoanalysis on hysteria
oblique camera angles, distorted bodies and shapes, bizarre and incongruous settings that are almost Gothic in their look and framing.
a visual style which came about as a result of political circumstance and cross-fertilization.
specific location or setting, its high-contrast lighting as well as its low-key lighting,
often side-lighted to enhance the pro fi le from one side and leaving the other half of the face in the dark, thus pointing to the moral ambiguity of this main character who is neither inheretily bad or knight in shining armour
The power the femme fatale exerts over the hero is his own doing, because he has over-invested in his construction of her sexuality at the expense of his own subjectivity
femme fatale and privileges her as active, intelligent, powerful, dominant and in charge of her own sexuality – at least until the end of the fi lm when she pays for it (through death or submission to the patriarchal system).
Furthermore, the masochistic sexual fantasies implicit in the threat the femme fatale poses for the male protagonist are, in this respect, tied up with questions of (male) identity.
(Barry Jenkins, USA, 2018, 119m)
(Spike Lee, USA, 1989, 120m)
(Sebastian Schipper, Germany, 2015, 138m)
(Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly, USA, 1952, 103m)
(Fritz Lang, Germany, 1931, 113m)
(Billy Wilder, USA, 1944, 107m)
(Ladri di biciclette, Vittorio De Sica, Italia, 1948, 93 m)