1 / 8

Editing in Film

Editing in Film. Transitions, Continuity, and Rhythm. what is editing?. The work of selecting and joining shots together to create a finished film. Most of the editing occurs during post-production (after the filming has been done)

aulani
Télécharger la présentation

Editing in Film

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Editing in Film Transitions, Continuity, and Rhythm

  2. what is editing? • The work of selecting and joining shots together to create a finished film. • Most of the editing occurs during post-production (after the filming has been done) • The work is done by an editor (usually works with director, sound editor, etc.) • Editing shots creates a sequence

  3. Transitions • the technique of juxtaposing shots together • in other words, how the shots are joined

  4. Transitions • Cut: one shot is instantly replaced on the screen by another shot • Fade In: the screen is black and a shot fades in (starts light and gets darker) • Fade Out: the shot gets lighter, then the screen is black • Dissolve: one shot fades in as another fades out; at one point, the shots are both on screen (superimposed; i.e. Psycho)

  5. Transitions • Wipe: one shot is pushed off screen by another shot; a line is usually visible • Iris: a circle closes down over or opens up on a shot

  6. Continuity • Continuity editing: • Creates a smooth flow to the film • Makes visual and narrative sense • Establishes the story for the viewer • Created through: • Match Cuts: joining two cuts that have similar compositions (arrangements of elements in the frame; i.e. drain to eye in Psycho) • Shot-Reverse-Shot: joining different shots to tell story; common in conversations

  7. More Editing Stuff • Cross-Cutting: cutting back and forth quickly to show that things are happening at the same time • Sequence Shot • Along take with no editing (no cut or other transition) • Montage • Many brief shots are joined together so there is an emotional impact or visual design (shower scene in Psycho) • Errors in Continuity • Disruption in the flow; actions don’t match or props are out of place • Jump Cut • Leaves out parts of the action • Disrupts the continuity

  8. More Editing Stuff • Split Screen: the screen is divided into different shots • Cutaway Shot: interruption of a shot by showing something else (similar to a shot reverse shot, but usually not close-ups/conversation) • Compressed Time: the shortening of time through editing (cuts, fades, dissolves) • Subjective Time: time in a film as felt/experienced by the character(s) • Flashback: story goes back in time to tell a part of the story that happened before • Flash-forward: story jumps ahead to show something in the future; rarely used

More Related