Graphic Org - Film Techniques Definitions
Graphic Org - Film Techniques Definitions
Graphic Org - Film Techniques Definitions
Instructions:
1. Research to find the various techniques used in film making.
2. You should NOT copy/paste, but include information in your own words to show comprehension.
3. Visit several websites and documents to collect comprehensive information.
Category
1. Diegetic: this type of sound is the sound that is visible on the screen, like a sound
that goes with an action.
Sound
Focus
Framing
(Shots)
2. Non-Diegetic: Sounds that are not exactly visible on the screen, like a sound that
does not go with an action.
3. Internal diegetic: only one of the characters can hear the sound.
1. Long-Shot The object seems small or is seen from a distance. If a person is in the
shot, it is the entire body and a great deal of background visible.
Camera
Angles
Lighting
3. Close-up: this shot only keeps the face in the frame, and it builds a dramatic edge to
the storytelling. Takes up 80% of the screen.
4. Medium shot, mid-shot: usually from the waist up and is extremely common.
6. Establishing shot: It is usually the first shot at the beginning of a scene to show the
setting of that scene.
2. High angle: the camera looks down on a character or whatever the scene is trying to
portray.
3. Eye-level angle: the camera is equal with the character, almost like the views are
standing right in front of the characters.
1. Side Lighting lighting from the side that leaves the subject half in light and half
in the shadows.
Camera
Movement
and
Transitions
3. Low key lighting: shadows and harsh lighting, perfect for horror.
4. Bottom lighting: lighting comes from the bottom up, puts subject in half light, half
in shadows.
1. Zoom: camera is stationary, zooming in and away from the object, shirk or grow.
The purpose is to add drama, depth and show the object that
is being talked about or too. To focus attention or a
person or object.
4.
5. Crane: the camera to mounted on a crane enabling the camera to take an overhead
shot
7.
Editing
1. Fade a scene fades to black (or any other color) for a very short time as is slowly
replaced with another image; may start the next scene or change subjects
2. Dissolve: the image slowly fades away but does not go completely black.
3. Crosscut or parallel: showing clips of other places and quickly moving from one to
another that takes place at the same time, but not necessarily in the same place.
4. Eye-line match: a shot of the characters and a shot of what the character sees.
6. Cut: joining of two separate shots so that the first is instantaneously replaced by the
second, two pieces of film are spliced together.
7. Wipe transition: a new image wipes off the previous image, can move vertically,
horizontally, or diagonally.