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Lesson: Camera Angles and Framing

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Framing

Extreme long shot – panoramic view of environment, character is small in the frame

Long shot – character’s full body is visible, as is the environment


Medium – character is seen roughly from the waist up


Close-up – the character’s face fills most of the frame

Extreme close-up – a small part of the character’s body fills the frame

Focus

Shallow depth of field – only the subject is in focus

Deep depth of field – the subject and the background are in focus

Separation – definition between the subject and the background, enhanced by lighting and distance

In a rack focus shot, the focus changes between the subject and the background or between two multiple points of interest in the frame.

Angles

Low angle – the camera looks up at the subject from below

High angle – the camera looks down at the subject from above

Perspective/point of view – the camera sees what a character in the scene would see

Canted/dutch angle – the subject is angled in the frame

Cinematography principles

Rule of thirds – placing important objects or characters along the “thirds” marks of a frame

Leading lines – visual elements in the frame draw the eye to important information

Symmetry – symmetry can have a number of effects on the composition of a frame, but it is always deliberate; it can also be deliberately broken

Insert/cutaway shot – footage of what the character is looking at off-screen

Eye line – the direction a characters eyes are looking off screen – in a dialog sequence, these should match

180 degree rule – this is the basic principle that characters in dialog should stay on opposite sides of the screen during a sequence; if you imagine a line between the characters, the camera should stay on one side of that line

One of the most common cinematic techniques is the shot/reverse shot, in which one character is shown, then the character they are addressing. For a shot/reverse shot sequence to make sense, the 180 degree rule should be followed.

[gdoc link=”https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/e/2PACX-1vRWOXJHDGEh2YoQmOAZt1fy4BedkQryMTaSB1sIUoeTBRO43Xf5TLwNTD13HJSOkhiFaYXXYD9ezR1C/pub?start=false&loop=false&delayms=3000″ height=”800″]

https://youtu.be/g6PDcBhODqo
What cinematic techniques are used in this scene and what do they convey?