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Published byRandolf Newton Modified over 9 years ago
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Why segment a narrative? l The problem of citation: defining large narrative units. l Segmentation helps us understand the basic principles of plot structure and organisation. - In narrative films, the primary level of action and sense is the scene or sequence and their internal organisation, not the shot l Our global understanding of the film system rests not at the level of the image, but through the association and juxtaposition of images. - The organisation of shots into segments, segments into large parts, and parts into acts
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The five s’s l shot: l scene: l sequence: l sequence-shot: l segment: a significant portion of a film’s plot, usually with spatial and/or temporal continuity, and including the beginning and ending of a story action
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How to define a segment l Beginnings and endings of segments are often signalled by “marks of punctuation”: fades, dissolves, wipes, irises, or “hard” cuts. l A segment is often defined by unities of time, place, and action. - a single narrative idea will be followed through from statement to conclusion l Apprehension of formal unity in the ordering of the shots. l Apprehension of formal unity in the context of the film considered as a whole.
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What is editing? “The foundation of film art is editing.” -V.I. Pudovkin, 1928 Editing is: the joining of one shot to another, involving the selection of shots from footage already shot and then the assembling these shots. For commercial films, editing is a post-production phase of the film-making process.
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The cut - a complete and instantaneous change from one shot to another - typically used to join shots where there is no change of narrative time or place (i.e., within scenes)
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The dissolve - a brief super- imposition of one shot onto another (for longer superimpositions: lap dissolve)
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The fade - fade-out, fade-in - an optical effect, executed in the film lab
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Principles of film editing 1.Graphic relations 2. Rhythmic relations 3. Spatial relations 4. Temporal relations
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Graphic continuity The graphic match: the linking of two shots with similarities of shapes, colours, tones, and/or compositional elements
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Graphic discontinuity (mild) Shot / reverse shots: over-the-shoulder shots shot / reaction shots
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Rhythmic relations The number and pattern of cuts, dissolves, or fades determines a film’s rhythm or pace, and the viewer’s experience of time in psychological/emotional terms variations of shot length reduction = increase in tempo lengthening = slowing of tempo
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Spatial relations Analytical breakdown - the breaking down of a pro-filmic space into a number of shots of differing views/scales
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Master shot cutting variation Characters’ physical relations to each other in space are implied by the directions of their looks-- the master shot then “places” them all in an anticipated setting
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The Kuleshov effect Any series of shots that in the absence of an establishing shot prompts the spectator to infer a spatial whole on the basis of seeing only portions of the space. Experiment 1: 1) a young man walks from left to right; 2) a woman walks from right to left; 3) they meet and shake hands. The young man points; 4) a large white building is shown, with a broad flight of steps; 5) the two ascend the steps. The shooting of all five of these shots were done in varied locations, but the spectator perceived as them as a spatial whole.
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Real time v. reel time In very few films does real time = reel time; most films contract real time through: - elliptical editing - the cutaway - the montage sequence Expanding real time: overlapping editing
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