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Video 1 Checklist Video 1 Checklist _____Download Pictures and Videos for each of the Film Terms to I-MOVIE Program. _____Add a TITLE at the beginning of the movie and CREDITS at the end of the movie. _____ Take a 5-10 second video in front of the Green Screen and Download it into a different I-Movie Program. Merge it with a picture and use the Share Function to convert it into a video. _____ Import your Green Screen Video into your original I-Movie. _____Using Microphone record when and/or why you would use each. _____ Label Each Clip using the Text Button. _____ DOWNLOAD MUSIC and put it on your movie. _____Add a different EFFECT onto each clip. _____Put a different TRANSITION between each clip and between the clips and beginning/ending. _____Shorten each clip to 15 SECONDS or less. _____ SAVE the movie to your file.

Video 1 Checklist

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_____Download Pictures and Videos for each of the Film Terms to I-MOVIE Program. _____Add a TITLE at the beginning of the movie and CREDITS at the end of the movie. _____ Take a 5-10 second video in front of the Green Screen and - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Video 1 Checklist

Video 1 ChecklistVideo 1 Checklist• _____Download Pictures and Videos for each of the Film Terms to • I-MOVIE Program.• _____Add a TITLE at the beginning of the movie• and CREDITS at the end of the movie.• _____ Take a 5-10 second video in front of the Green Screen and • Download it into a different I-Movie Program. Merge it with a picture• and use the Share Function to convert it into a video. • _____ Import your Green Screen Video into your original I-Movie.• _____Using Microphone record when and/or why you would use each.• _____ Label Each Clip using the Text Button. • _____ DOWNLOAD MUSIC and put it on your movie.• _____Add a different EFFECT onto each clip.• _____Put a different TRANSITION between each • clip and between the clips and beginning/ending.• _____Shorten each clip to 15 SECONDS or less.• _____ SAVE the movie to your file.

Page 2: Video 1 Checklist

Video 1 - Final ProductVideo 1 - Final Product

• Title – First and Last Names and Folder the Video is in.• Extremely Long Shot (Establishing Shot)• Long Shot (LS)• Medium Shot (MS)• Close Up (CU)• Extreme Close Up (ECU)• Over the Shoulder• Birds Eye• High Angle (h/a)• Low Angle (l/a)• Point of View-Must be a Video• Eye Level• Green Screen-Video• Ending

The final video should be in this order.

Page 3: Video 1 Checklist

Basic Film Terms

Page 4: Video 1 Checklist

Frame

• Dividing line between the edges of the screen image and the enclosing darkness of the theater

• Single photo of film

Page 5: Video 1 Checklist

Types of Shots• Cinematic shots are defined by the

amount of subject matter within the frame

• Shots can vary in duration– Shots vary in time from subliminal (a

few frames) to quick (less than a second) to “average” (more than a second but less than a minute) to lengthy (more than a minute)

Page 6: Video 1 Checklist

Establishing Shot (or Extreme Long Shot)

• Shot taken from a great distance, almost always an exterior shot, shows much of locale

• ELS

Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom

Page 7: Video 1 Checklist

Long Shot (LS)

• (A relative term) A shot taken from a sufficient distance to show a landscape, a building, or a large crowd

Austin Powers andthe Spy Who Shagged Me

Page 8: Video 1 Checklist

Medium Shot (MS)

• (Also relative) a shot between a long shot and a close-up that might show two people in full figure or several people from the waist up

The Talented Mr. Ripley

Page 9: Video 1 Checklist

Close-Up (CU)

• A shot of a small object or face that fills the screen

• Adds importance to object photographed

Under Pressure

Page 10: Video 1 Checklist

Extreme Close-Up (ECU)

• A shot of a small object or part of a face that fills the screen

The Saint In London

Rocky Horror Picture Show

Page 11: Video 1 Checklist

Over the Shoulder Shot

• Usually contains two figures, one with his/her back to the camera, and the other facing the camera

Hollow ManCast Away

Page 12: Video 1 Checklist

Types of Angles• The angle is determined by where

the camera is placed not the subject matter – Angles can serve as commentary on the

subject matter

Page 13: Video 1 Checklist

Bird’s Eye View

• Camera is placed directly overhead

• Extremely disorienting

• Viewer is godlike

Beverly Hills Girl Scouts

Page 14: Video 1 Checklist

High Angle (h/a)

• Camera looks down at what is being photographed

• Takes away power of subject, makes it insignificant

• Gives a general overview

Without Limits

Page 15: Video 1 Checklist

Low Angle (l/a)

• Camera is located below subject matter

• Increases height and powerof subject

The Patriot

Page 16: Video 1 Checklist

Point of View (POV)

• A shot taken from the vantage point a particular character, or what a character sees

Page 17: Video 1 Checklist

“Eye-Level”

• Roughly 5 to 6 feet off the ground, the way an actual observer might view a scene–Most common

Page 18: Video 1 Checklist