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Cinematography

Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

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Page 1: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Cinematography

Page 2: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Framing: Aspect Ratiosratio of width to height

Rules of the Game, Jean Renoir, 19391.33:1 (4 to 3) actually 1.37:1

Aliens, James Cameron, 19861.85:1

Rebel Without A Cause, Nicholas Ray, 19552.35:1 (Cinemascope)

Page 3: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Framing: aspect ratios• Academy ratio = 1.37:1, but often said to be 1.33:1• Note how framing affects balance, visual

information,• & relationship of on- & off-screen space

2.2 to 1 Pan & Scan; 1.33 to 1

Page 4: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Widescreen vs. Pan and scan inBlade Runner, Ridley Scott, 1982

Page 5: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Aspect Ratios (when shooting digital)

– A. 4:3 - composition well suited for a close-up

– B. 16:9 - loss of focus - i.e., frame includes “extraneous” information

– C. 16:9 - letter boxed - face is smaller

– D. 16:9 - to command attention - i.e., fill-up the frame - face is cropped

fig. 2-16 (A&P, 96)

Page 6: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

framingCamera Angles

high angleTouch of Evil (Orson Welles, 1958)

Page 7: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

framingCamera Angles

straight angle; straight onRebecca (Alfred Hitchcock, 1940)

Page 8: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

framingCamera Angles

low angleBride of Frankenstein (James Whale, 1935)

Page 9: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Tokyo Story (1953) Yasujiro Ozu

Page 10: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

framinglevel of framing:

canted framing (a.k.a. Dutch angle) Bride of Frankenstein (James Whale, 1935)

Page 11: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Canted Framing

• Canted framing– Camera not level / not

horizontal– Often suggests

tension, trouble, distress, etc.

Natural Born Killers, Oliver Stone, 1994

Page 12: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

framingCamera/Shot Distance or “Type of Shot”

Bordwell & Thompson1. extreme long (ELS)2. long (LS)3. medium long shot

(MLS)4. medium (MS)5. medium close-up

(MCU)6. close-up (CU)7. extreme close-up (ECU)

Ascher & Pincus

1. long shot2. medium shot =

medium long

1. close-up = med close-up

2. big close-up = CU3. extreme close-up

Page 13: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

extreme long shot (ELS) The Conversation

Page 14: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

long shot (LS) Bride of Frankenstein

Page 15: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Medium long shot(knees or shins to head; a.k.a. American shot or knee

shot) Ascher & Pincus call Medium Shot

Page 16: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

medium shot (MS)The Big Heat (Fritz Lang, 1953)

Page 17: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

medium close-up (MCU)Touch of Evil

A & P call this a CU?

Page 18: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

close-up (CU)Touch of Evil

(A & P: big close-up)

Page 19: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

extreme close-up (ECU) Dracula (Tod Browning, 1931)

Page 20: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Other "shots" that aren’t named for their shot distance:

• establishing shot• master shot • two shot• reverse shot or reverse-angle shot• point-of-view (POV) shot (a.k.a. subjective shot)

Page 21: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing1. A

ctual Movements of Camera

2. Zooms, where Camera doesn’t move, but the frame changes as the lens focal length is changed: Zoom In or Zoom Out. (Magnifies)

3. Laboratory and animated mobile framing.

4. Computer-generated shots: for ex: “fly-bys,” “rotations.” Computers, like traditional animation, can potentially generate any movement.

Page 22: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing:Camera Movements

• pans = rotates horizontally, side to side (B & T confusing: “camera rotates on vertical axis”)

• tilts = vertical pivot/rotation, up and down

• in pans & tilts, camera doesn’t change position, it pivots or rotates. Usually tripod mounted.

• dolly/tracking/traveling shots • crane (and “boom” or jib) shots• hand-held and steadicam shots

Page 23: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Camera Movement

• Tilt up– Movement up or down -

vertical scan

• Pan right

Dial M for Murder, Alfred Hitchcock, 1954

Page 24: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing:Camera Movements

• Dolly, Tracking, Traveling shots: all basically the same.• Sometimes people use “tracking shot” to mean a

“following shot” (one that follows an actor or action), wh/ may be taken from a dolly, crane, handheld, or steadicam.

• But name “tracking shot” came from the “tracks” that dollies moved on (see next slide).

• So, dolly and tracking interchangeable terms. • Traveling shot is generally reserved for more expansive

movements, taken from a vehicle.

Page 25: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Dolly Shot, on Tracks

Page 26: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing:Camera Movements

• Crane and Boom/Jib shots:• Boom/jib shots: Camera mounted on

counterweighted boom (similar to booms for microphones); some booms can also telescope in or out. Can use for combinations of pans & tilts, horizontal (tracking), vertical or diagonal moves.

• Crane shots: Shots look the same as boom shot, but often motorized or with hydraulics for movement. Usually cranes have seat for operator, wheels. Some can be driven.

• Motion-control techniques: computer programs to direct elaborate camera movements.

Page 27: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing: Crane Shot

• Crane Shot– Note: Difference from

a tracking shot– Movement through 3-

dimensional space

Carrie, Brian De Palma, 1976

Page 28: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Opening: Welles' Touch of Evil 1958

Page 29: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing:Camera Movements

• Hand-held and Steadicam Shots:• Hand-held & Steadicam shots can pan or tilt or

track. • Hand-held movement is obviously “unsteady”--

which is how we know it’s a hand-held shot. • Steadicam: a patented device wh/ dampens

unsteadiness, producing a relatively smooth movement, even when walking or running. Operators must be trained to use.

• Steadicam first used in Rocky (1976). Early prominent use in Kubrick’s The Shining (1980).

Page 30: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing

• When viewing a film, mobile framing can be hard to spot, because we often follow what is being photographed, rather than how.

• And often, multiple combinations of camera movements:

• Ex: Tracking shots often include some panning.• And combinations of camera movements can

become quite complicated, as in some Crane Shots.• Also, can combine camera movements with zooms.

Page 31: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing

Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958

Page 32: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Mobile Framing

Page 33: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Another Track and Zoom

Goodfellas, Martin Scorsese, 1990

Page 34: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Perspective: Tracking vs. Zooming

• Fig. 4.3– Left:

• move the camera (track in)• short focal length lens • Note: Relation of back/foreground,

changed angles• distortion at edges

– Right: • Camera stationary• Change of focal length (i.e., zoom in)• Relation of back/foreground closer

(telephoto effect of flattening)• No distortion at edges

fig. 4.3 (A&P, 144)

Page 35: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

subjective shot(or point-of-view shot)

• Subjective Shot/Camera: from the position/point of view of a character--as if seeing through character eyes. Also called POV shot. Cinema equivalent of “First Person” in writing.

• Some people make distinction between subjective shots & POV shots: use “POV shots” to include “over-the-shoulder” shots--which give a sense of POV without actually being from the position of the character.

• But easier & better: treat POV and Subjective as the same; over-the-shoulder as different.

Page 36: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

subjective shot(or point-of-view shot)

• Subjectivity/POV is crucial to Classical Hollywood style: shot/reverse shots & eyeline matching are based on the idea of seeing from character’s POV.

• But, shot/reverse shot shows both "subjective" and "objective" views: Hwd (most cinema) mixes both together.

• What happens if subjectivity is taken to extreme? If we see only subjective shots?

Page 37: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Ex: 1947 Detective film The Lady in the Lakeshot entirely from main character's point of view

Page 38: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Ex: 1947 Detective film The Lady in the Lakeshot entirely from main character's point of view

Page 39: Cinematography. cinematography: "writing in movement” Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography, which

Note that moving camera often suggests someone's subjectivity or POV. Consider use of slow track in scene from Antonioni's L'avventura: