Understanding of Camera shots.
For the Preliminary task, it needs to demonstrate:
Match on action
Shot/reverse shot
The 180-degree rule.
Firstly, the Match on action :
And lastly, 180-degree rule:
What happens if these shots aren't used correctly:
If these shots aren't used correctly then a couple of things can occur. Firstly, if the shots aren't used to the exact description, then the shot will look very silly! It wont fulfill the the effect they're supposed to fulfill, to which will wreck the scene and the camera effect. Secondly, if they aren't carried out properly, then we will get marked down and wont pass our preliminary task.
Match on action
Shot/reverse shot
The 180-degree rule.
Firstly, the Match on action :
- Match on action (or cutting on action) is an editing technique for continuity editing in which one shot cuts to another shot portraying the action of the subject in the first shot.
- This creates the impression of a sense of continuity – the action carrying through creates a “visual bridge” which draws the viewer’s attention away from slight cutting or continuity issues.
- This is not a graphic match or match cut, it portrays a continuous sense of the same action rather than matching two separate things.
- Shot reverse shot is a continuity editing technique used in conversations or simply characters looking at each other or objects.
- A shot showing what the character is supposedly looking at (either a point of view or over the shoulder shot) is followed by a reverse angle shot of the character themselves looking at it, or of the other character looking back at them, for example.Shot reverse shot often ties in with the 180° rule to retain continuity by not distorting the audience’s sense of location of the characters in the shots.
- Shot reverse shot in 28 Days Later.
And lastly, 180-degree rule:
- The 180° rule is a filming guideline that participants in a scene should have the same left-right relationship to each other, with filming only taking place within the 180° angle in which this is maintained in a conversation, for example.
- For example in King Vidor’s The Big Parade (1925), the audience’s viewpoint is constantly southward of the action – the American soldiers walk from left to right to the front lines, and right to left when they return home, creating a continuous sense of direction .
- This allows the audience to have a greater sense of location in the scene in terms of what may be off-screen in some shots, for example in shot reverse shots.
What happens if these shots aren't used correctly:
If these shots aren't used correctly then a couple of things can occur. Firstly, if the shots aren't used to the exact description, then the shot will look very silly! It wont fulfill the the effect they're supposed to fulfill, to which will wreck the scene and the camera effect. Secondly, if they aren't carried out properly, then we will get marked down and wont pass our preliminary task.