Monday, October 23, 2023

Preliminary Exercise 10: Camera Movement Techniques Organizer

 A camera movement is the way a camera shifts to visually narrate and shape a viewer's perspective of a scene. You can use camera movement to guide the audience through the scene, slowly revealing certain people or objects in order to create suspense or simply control the pacing of the scene. A camera can capture the shot using the movements tilt, pan, push in, and pull out. Different types of camera movements, such as tracking shots or static shots, can create different emotional responses from the audience. For example, a tracking shot can create a feeling of tension or urgency while a static shot can create a sense of stability or contemplation.











Reflection Paragraph

I was introduce to camera movement techniques used in films by being in a Media Studies class. I really had no idea what it was until I got put in the class. My team and I used a power-point presentation to create this assignment. Each person was assigned a slide to do, Jane I did 2 slides, I did 3 slides, and Paul T did 2 slides. We used computers to complete this assignment, each having our own. I would say I was a expert on this because it's not new to me and I'm experienced on using power-point due to me using it in the past. In this exercise, I learned about different camera movement techniques.


https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/different-types-of-camera-movements-in-film/

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Preliminary Exercise 13: Introduction to Sound in a Film (Be a Sound Engineer)

 It is the sound in film that adds contextual information sets the right tone or theme for each scene. It invokes the desired reaction from ...