Camera angles, shots, movement and positions

Post on 22-Apr-2015

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description

A presentation of these different aspects, their definitions and picture examples.

Transcript of Camera angles, shots, movement and positions

Camera Angles, Shots, Movement and Positions.

Created by Hannah Scholefield

Establishing Shot

Establishes the context for a scene: showing where and when the film is set.

Low Angled Shot

A shot of an object from below looking up. Used to increase the height of an object, making it seem powerful and threatening.

High Angled Shot

A shot of an object from above looking down. Used to make an object seem smaller and/or vulnerable.

Close-up

A shot of a part of the body with a little background.

Medium Close-up

A shot of a person from the mid-chest to the top of the head.

Extreme Close-up

A shot magnifying a part of the body (e.g. the eyes) showing no background.

Long Shot

A shot of a object/person from a distance, showing the whole of their body from head to toe.

Medium Long Shot

A shot of a person from the waist up.

Two/Three Shot

A shot including two or three people

Aerial Shot

A shot taken from a birds eye view, establishing a setting.

Point Of View

A shot of what the subject can see.

Panning

A movement that scans a scene horizontally.

Tilting

A movement that scans a scene vertically.

Tracking

A shot taken by a person following the subject with a camera

Dollying

Involves a track being laid on set for the camera to follow/move on.

Zoom in/out

A shot of the subject where the camera appears to move closer/further away from it.

Hand Held Shot

A shot taken by a hand held camera. This is used to make the viewer feel like they are in the scene.

Focus Pull

A shot that maintains image sharpness on the subject being filmed.

Canted Angle

A shot used to suggest point of view shots (i.e. When the camera becomes the eyes of one particular character, seeing what they see)

Rule of 3rds

A concept in video/film production in which the frame is divided into nine imaginary sections.