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PowerPoint Presentation - Cinematography

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Cinematography vs. Mise-en-Scene Thus, ... etc. Natural Born Killers, Oliver Stone, 1994 framing Camera/Shot Distance or Type of Shot Bordwell & Thompson ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation - Cinematography


1
Cinematography
2
Cinematography
  • cinematography "writing in movement
  • Digital Cinematography and Computer-Generated
    Imagery have brought changes in Cinematography,
    which was traditionally based on
    chemical/photographic images and effects.
  • However many terms and concepts in
    digital/computer-aided cinematography are based
    on, and often replicate, those of film-based
    cinematography.
  • Learning about film-based cinematography is very
    helpful to understanding digital/video
    cinematography.
  • Commonly, Cinematography Everything that has to
    do with cameras and lenses, with film/film stock
    (and its digital equivalents), exposure and
    processing of film/digital images.

3
Cinematography vs. Mise-en-Scene
  • Thus, cinematography can be contrasted to
    mise-en-scene (staging), which refers to what
    is filmed while cinematography refers to how
    it is filmed. (see Bordwell Thompson)
  • Question areas?
  • Visual Special Effects? Often done in
    post-production (esp. digital effects). So, is
    that Cinematography?
  • Lighting? Effects exposure, lens setting, focus,
    etc., Usually under control of Cinematographer
    (Director of Photography). But Lighting, since
    it is part of what is filmed, could also be
    seen as part of a films mise-en-scene.
  • For simplicitys sake, follow Bordwell
    Thompsons distinction between what is filmed
    (mise-en-scene) and how it is filmed
    (cinematography). I.e. special effects part
    of cinematography lighting part of
    mise-en-scene.

4
Elements of Cinematography
  • (1) Composition or Framing and Mobile Framing
  • Frame shape (aspect ratios), camera distance
    (types of shots e.g., CU, Medium Shot), angle,
    level, height, mobile framing (camera movements
    and zooms), perspective, pov.
  • (2) Camera, Lens, Exposure Choices Techniques
    (what used to be called photographic elements)
  • Camera Choices (speed of motion, shutter speed),
    Lens Types (e.g., telephoto, wide angle), Lens
    Settings (focus, aperture, depth of field, etc.),
    Exposure issues.

5
Framing Aspect Ratiosratio of width to height
Rules of the Game, Jean Renoir, 1939 1.331 (4 to
3) actually 1.371
Aliens, James Cameron, 1986 1.851
Rebel Without A Cause, Nicholas Ray, 1955 2.351
(Cinemascope)
6
Framing aspect ratios
  • Academy ratio 1.371, but often said to be
    1.331
  • Note how framing affects balance, visual
    information,
  • relationship of on- off-screen space

2.2 to 1
Pan Scan 1.33 to 1
7
Video Transfers
  • When Widescreen Films transferred to
    full-screen 43 frame (video or television)
    see pp. 87-95 AP on aspects ratios transfers.
  • The controller
  • The person responsible for transferring a film to
    43 video format
  • Becomes default editor
  • What stays within the frame, and what is cut
  • Letterboxing
  • blacked-out bands at the top and the bottom of a
    screen
  • approximate the wider cinematic screen
  • Can limit cinematographic possibilities when
    filmmaker has to shoot for the box (See also
    TV Cutoff, p. 331 AP)
  • Fortunately, newer 169 Monitors are much closer
    to widescreen aspect ratios. 169 1.78 to 1.

8
Widescreen vs. Pan and scan in Blade Runner,
Ridley Scott, 1982
9
Aspect Ratios (when shooting digital)
  • A. 43 - composition well suited for a close-up
  • B. 169 - loss of focus - i.e., frame includes
    extraneous information
  • C. 169 - letter boxed - face is smaller
  • D. 169 - to command attention - i.e., fill-up
    the frame - face is cropped

fig. 2-16 (AP, 96)
10
framingCamera Angles high angleTouch of Evil
(Orson Welles, 1958)
11
framingCamera Angles straight angle straight
onRebecca (Alfred Hitchcock, 1940)
12
framingCamera Angles low angleBride of
Frankenstein (James Whale, 1935)
13
Tokyo Story (1953) Yasujiro Ozu
14
framinglevel of framing canted framing (a.k.a.
Dutch angle) Bride of Frankenstein (James
Whale, 1935)
15
Canted Framing
  • Canted framing
  • Camera not level / not horizontal
  • Often suggests tension, trouble, distress, etc.

Natural Born Killers, Oliver Stone, 1994
16
framingCamera/Shot Distance or Type of Shot
  • Bordwell Thompson
  • extreme long (ELS)
  • long (LS)
  • medium long shot (MLS)
  • medium (MS)
  • medium close-up (MCU)
  • close-up (CU)
  • extreme close-up (ECU)
  • Ascher Pincus
  • long shot
  • medium shot medium long
  • close-up med close-up
  • big close-up CU
  • extreme close-up

17
extreme long shot (ELS) The Conversation
18
long shot (LS) Bride of Frankenstein
19
Medium long shot(knees or shins to head a.k.a.
American shot or knee shot) Ascher Pincus call
Medium Shot
20
medium shot (MS)The Big Heat (Fritz Lang, 1953)
21
medium close-up (MCU)Touch of EvilA P call
this a CU?
22
close-up (CU)Touch of Evil (A P big close-up)
23
extreme close-up (ECU) Dracula (Tod Browning,
1931)
24
Other "shots" that arent 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)

25
Mobile Framing
  1. Actual Movements of Camera
  2. Zooms, where Camera doesnt 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.

26
Mobile FramingCamera 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 doesnt change position,
    it pivots or rotates. Usually tripod mounted.
  • dolly/tracking/traveling shots
  • crane (and boom or jib) shots
  • hand-held and steadicam shots

27
Camera Movement
  • Tilt up
  • Movement up or down - vertical scan
  • Pan right

Dial M for Murder, Alfred Hitchcock, 1954
28
Mobile FramingCamera 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.

29
Dolly Shot, on Tracks
30
Mobile FramingCamera 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.

31
Mobile Framing Crane Shot
  • Crane Shot
  • Note Difference from a tracking shot
  • Movement through 3-dimensional space

Carrie, Brian De Palma, 1976
32
Opening Welles' Touch of Evil 1958
33
Mobile FramingCamera 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 its 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 Kubricks The Shining (1980).

34
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.

35
Mobile Framing
Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958
36
Mobile Framing
37
Another Track and Zoom
Goodfellas, Martin Scorsese, 1990
38
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 (AP, 144)
39
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.

40
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
    characters 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?

41
Ex 1947 Detective film The Lady in the Lakeshot
entirely from main character's point of view
42
Ex 1947 Detective film The Lady in the Lakeshot
entirely from main character's point of view
43
Note that moving camera often suggests someone's
subjectivity or POV. Consider use of slow track
in scene from Antonioni's L'avventura
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