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Movement, Shots, and Angles

Rhetorical Analysis of Media. Movement, Shots, and Angles. What is the story being told here?. Mise -En-Scene. Pronounced “ mees-ahn-sahn ” - ick Translation: “put in the scene” Everything that goes into a shot NOT editing/post-production.

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Movement, Shots, and Angles

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  1. Rhetorical Analysis of Media Movement, Shots, and Angles

  2. What is the story being told here?

  3. Mise-En-Scene • Pronounced “mees-ahn-sahn” - ick • Translation: “put in the scene” • Everything that goes into a shot • NOT editing/post-production

  4. Let’s see another great example… • Pay close attention: • Mise-en-scene • How does this scene play out? • Why? • What elements help support the story?

  5. Movement • Early cameras were fixed, but today they move.

  6. Zoom • The movement of an image only through the lens • The camera doesn’t move, but the lens does. • Allows the audience to move toward and away from images. • Zoom IN & Zoom OUT

  7. Pan versus Tilt • Each features movement along ONE axis • PAN: The camera pivots left or right, left to right, or right to left on a horizontal axis

  8. Pan versus Tilt • Each features movement along ONE axis • TILT: The camera pivots up or down on a vertical axis

  9. Boom or Crane Shot • The camera moves through the air • The camera is lifted vertically with a boom or crane

  10. Shot • A single length of film produced by continuous running of the camera • Can be as short as one frame (example from The Graduate?) or as long as an entire film! Time Code

  11. Tracking Shot • Also known as a “dolly” shot : each named for the mechanical devices used in filmmaking

  12. Tracking Shot • Camera follows action through space • The entire camera moveshorizontally with, toward, or away from the subject • Subject = focal point (character, object, landscape, etc.)

  13. Some Famous Tracking Shots • A Touch of Evil: Orson Welles, 1958 • Boogie Nights: Paul Thomas Anderson, 1997

  14. Two Great Tracking Shots! 2006 - Alfonso Cuaron (Y tu Mama Tambien, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban)

  15. Shot Size • Shots are defined by the size of the subject within the film frame. • A LOT can happen in one shot. • The size of a subject can vary within a single shot.

  16. Long Shot • Shows the entire figure

  17. Close Up • Part of the subject takes up much of the entire screen

  18. Medium Shot • The midpoint between long and close up • It shows the body from about the waist up

  19. Extreme Close Up • Part of the subject takes up all of the entire screen

  20. Medium Close Up • Mid-point between Medium shot and Close up

  21. Extreme Long Shot • Subject is fully seen in the distance of the shot

  22. Camera Angles • Camera is usually at eye level, but can vary for particular effect • Often Objective POV (though can be Subj. or Indirect-Subj.) • Offers “normal” view of the world

  23. High Angle • High angle - taken from above subject • The Shining (1980) • What effect does this image have on the audience?

  24. Low Angle • Low angle - taken from below subject • Equilibrium (2002) • What effect does this image have on the audience?

  25. Add the word “EXTREME”… • EXTREME HIGH ANGLE: • Pink Floyd’s The Wall (1982)

  26. Add the word “EXTREME”… • EXTREME LOWANGLE: • The Shining (1980)

  27. The Camera is your FRIEND! Think about how you can manipulate it to striking effect in your own movie!

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