Suspense and Thrills in Movies

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Working with Cinematic Techniques Ms. Claytor & Mrs. Sberna.
Advertisements

The Visualization of a Script
No Entry Task: just get out your journal, and writing utensil, and then be prepared to start immediately. “Entry Task” 1/6/15.
Cinematography & Direction
2.12 Cinematic Techniques Film can be analyzed by understanding both literary elements and cinematic techniques that create effects for the audience. To.
Film Analysis Appendix A: Glossary of Film Terminology.
Film Unit. Storyboard "There was not much written on the chase in the script. We had one page written on the sequence, but I wanted it to be seven to.
Working with Cinematic Techniques Ms. Dedwylder English I Pre-AP Modified SB
WARM UP Decide which of the following are TRUE for you: ( ) I have nightmares when I see a horror movie. ( ) Old movies are not so interesting because.
CA0932a Multimedia Development Lecture 11 Language of film and the visual narrative.
>>0 >>1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >> 15 Film and Cinema By: Prof.Bautista Chapter 15.
FILM & LITERATURE Film Terminology & Cinematic Effects.
Working with Cinematic Techniques. Film Analysis  Much like how a writer uses stylistic devices to achieve specific effects in their writing, directors.
Cinematic Level. The items that make a movie a movie! What you see on film cannot be seen anywhere else!
Classic Hollywood Film Language Alfred Hitchcock: Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
Film Terminology Shots and Framing Camera Angles Camera Movements
Filming Techniques Mrs. Schlichting/Media B. Camera Angles Flat shot – The subject and the camera are at the same angle High angle – The camera is at.
Film Techniques Year 10. Parallel Action Two or more actions that are linked by the film to appear simultaneous. Two or more actions that are linked by.
Film Techniques Year 10.
FILM: TECHNIQUES AND TERMS. The Shot The Shot is the picture on the screen it is a single, uninterrupted piece of film it is the image seen on screen.
Welcome Back! Please take out your notebook and a pen/pencil for notes today.
YEAR 10 MEDIA. PRODUCTION and STORY ELEMENTS EDITING Editing is the process of placing images and sounds in an order that tell the story Establishes.
FILM PRODUCTION ELEMENTS How to study a film. PRODUCTION ELEMENTS Production elements are all the different things that go into making a film come to.
Working with Cinematic Techniques English 9 Perry High School.
CINEMATIC TECHNIQUES ENGLISH 12 Q4 Film. FILM ANALYSIS Much like writers use stylistic devices to achieve specific effects in their writing, directors.
FILM Techniques Adapted from Dirks, T. (2012) AMC Film Site. Film Glossary.
FILM TERMINOLOGY Film Notes. Framing/Shots Long shot (LS): a shot taken from some distance; shows the full subject and perhaps the surrounding scene as.
Camera Work. Lighting. Editing. Sound. Author of this ppt. unknown
Jeopardy Shots Composition EditingDeveloping Director Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
THE LANGUAGE OF FILM. THE SHOT The shot is the building block all filmmaking It is a single, uninterrupted piece of film; the image that is seen on screen.
Cinematic Techniques. How movies are made Cinematic techniques the methods a director uses to communicate meaning and to evoke particular emotional responses.
FILM TERMINOLOGY AND CINEMATIC EFFECTS
Film Techniques with help from.
SB Review of Film Terms Objectives:
Cinematic Techniques And their Effects.
Film Terminology and Cinematic Effects
Turn in HW: P121 Story Diagram
Film and Literature Mrs. Thomas Austin Catholic High School
Working with Cinematic Techniques
Visual Cinematic Techniques, Their Meaning, and Literary Connections
FILM TERMINOLOGY AND CINEMATIC EFFECTS
INSIDE THE MIND OF A DIRECTOR
Film Studies Visual Literacy
Introduction and examples
Camera Work. Lighting. Editing. Sound.
Working with Cinematic Techniques
Media Terminology Rachel Dean.
Film Studies Need to Know (Or what I should have gotten 1st Semester)
Editing and Camera Terms
Cinematic Elements …as they relate to Film.
Film Terminology.
Working with Cinematic Techniques:
Film Introduction Year Nine English.
Film Techniques Quiz.
Working with Cinematic Techniques:
Basic Film Terms Part 2.
Cinematic Techniques.
Cinematic Techniques.
FILM Key Terms.
Working with Cinematic Techniques:
Working with Cinematic Techniques
Working with Cinematic Techniques
The Terms You Need to Talk About What You See
Camera and Lighting Techniques
Visual Literacy & Film As Literature Analysis of Motion Pictures
Chicago (2002) dir. Rob Marshall
Working with Cinematic Techniques
Film Language Media Studies 120 Ms. White.
CAMERA MOVEMENTS.
Working with Cinematic Techniques
Presentation transcript:

Suspense and Thrills in Movies Language Arts 8

Suspense in Movies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCnrJ45GRY

Film Vocabulary Framing The image that is seen on-screen until it is replaced by another image through some type of editing technique; how the object will be positioned within the shot, or how much of the movie screen the object will occupy. Long shot Close shot Medium shot

Film Vocabulary Focus A change of the field in focus taking the viewer from one object to another that was previously out of focus Soft focus (making an object slightly unclear for effect) Rack focus (changing the focus of the lens during a shot) Deep focus (when the background, foreground, and middle ground are all in focus)

Film Vocabulary Camera Angle Where the camera will be placed in relation to the subject Low angle (looking up at the characters) High angle (looking down on the characters) Eye level Dutch angle (camera is set at an angle so the images are slightly unlevel)

Film Vocabulary Sound The dialogue, music, sound effects, as well as pitch, timbre, direction, location on screen, etc. of the sounds included in the film Diagetic sound (sound whose source is visible on the screen) Nondiagetic sound (sound whose source is not visible on the screen) Internal diagetic sound (sound within a character’s mind)

Film Vocabulary Camera Movement How and where the camera will move while recording a shot Pan (camera stays in a fixed position but moves side to side horizontally) Tilt (camera stays in a fixed position but moves up and down vertically) Zoom (camera shot appears to move closer/farther from a fixed object) Tracking/Dolly Shot (camera moves along side an object in motion)

Film Vocabulary Lighting The role that light plays in creating a particular effect desired by a director Low-key lighting (not a lot of light; indicates negative emotion) High-key lighting (lot of light; indicates positive emotion) Neutral lighting (natural lighting, as seen in real life) Bottom/side lighting (dark background with light appearing from the bottom or side; creates mysterious, fearful, or suspenseful mood) Front lighting (lot of light coming from the front, creates no shadows; upbeat/calm mood)

Film Vocabulary Editing The methods by which a director chooses to move from one shot to another Fade (images slowly disappear into a black screen) Dissolve (images gradually dissolve from one to another in a shot) Crosscut (camera cuts away from one scene to another; creates suspense) Flashback/flashforward (scene cuts to a character’s memory from the past, or forward to a premonition) Eye-line match (the camera becomes the characters “eyes” so we can see what they are looking at) Editing rhythm and duration (how long a camera holds a shot, and how/when it changes the shot)