Monday, 27 September 2010

Pre-lim Filming.



Shot 1
Establishing Shot.
- Shows main location (Long Road)
- Gives the viewers an overview of where the scene is set.
- Shows a stereotypical character (student at long road) not necessarily in the actual film. depending on students outside at the time.



Shot 2
Close-up shot.
- Creates tension and the audience are unaware of whats happening. 
- Not much shown in the scene (only a hand) so nothings obvious and you can't see in the room.
- Can't see the character, suspense.
- Representing the character as sly.





Shot 3
Match on action shot
- Shot shows the same movement form two different angles
- Shows viewers whats happening and an acknowledgment of whats going to happen
- Keeps the film flowing
- Giving us information on the characters e.g. full view of what they look like, where they are going, who they are going to see etc. 









Shot 4
Reaction shot
- Lets the audience know whats going on and can confuse them (why is he shocked?)
- Makes people jump and grabs attention
- Shows reaction of character (gives off personality traits, e.g. facial expression)





Shot 5
Long shot
- Shows location, overall view of whats happening
- Could show power or status.
- Characters appearance and posture




Shot 6
Shot reverse shot (conversation)
- Shows speech, facial expression, hand movement (a lot of detail)
- Brings out emotion (sad, happy, moody, angry)
- Filmed using 180 degree rule.
- Shows character traits (make-up, costume, what they are saying)


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