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Lecture 06: Editing

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Monday and Wednesday 3:30 pm 5:00 pm. Fall 2003. http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/academics ... Objects become more vivid and sharp than in stationary framings ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 06: Editing


1
Lecture 06 Editing
IS 246Multimedia Information
Prof. Marc Davis UC Berkeley SIMS Monday and
Wednesday 330 pm 500 pm Fall
2003 http//www.sims.berkeley.edu/academics/cours
es/is246/f04/
2
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

3
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

4
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Brooke Maury on Bordwell
  • After considerable effort, it seems that one
    could build annotation that describes the basic
    components of mise-en-scene (setting, costume,
    lighting and staging), yet is it possible to
    describe the whole system of the mise-en-scene
    in metadata? It seems that much of the
    mise-en-scene deals with human perception. Can
    the elements of mise-en-scene be described
    sufficiently to understand how viewers are
    supposed to experience the film?

5
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Brooke Maury on Bordwell
  • Is there a truly objective measure of function in
    film generally, and mise-en-scene and framing in
    particular? One can observe that a certain
    technique or prop or character serves a certain
    function in a film, but can the function of a
    framing technique or other film element be
    derived from the hard facts of a film? Or will
    this always require subjective interpretation?

6
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Narrative Form and Narration
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

7
Mise-en-scene
  • Literally putting into the scene
  • Theatrical origins
  • Setting (location and props)
  • Costume and makeup
  • Lighting
  • Staging (behavior and movement of actors)
  • In film theory
  • What appears in the film frame
  • What the director stages for the camera

8
Mise-en-scene and Screen Space
  • Mise-en-scene contributes to our construction of
    the screen space
  • How we construct 3D mental space from 2D
    projected images
  • What we pay attention to
  • We are attuned to various changes in
    mise-en-scene
  • Movement
  • Color differences
  • Balance of distinct components
  • Variations in size

9
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

10
Cinematography
  • The shot
  • 1 n frames of images captured sequentially (or
    designed to appear so)
  • Photographic properties of shots
  • Film stock
  • Exposure
  • Lens
  • Focus
  • Filters
  • Framing of the mise-en-scene

11
Cinematography
  • Cinematographic properties of shots
  • Frame rate
  • Apparent speed can be affected by difference in
    capture frame rate and playback frame rate
  • Slow-motion (assuming a constant playback rate
    capture more frames per second than the playback
    rate)
  • Fast-motion (assuming a constant playback rate
    capture fewer frames per second than the playback
    rate)
  • Movement of camera and and/or camera support
  • Lens
  • Tripod
  • Truck

12
Static Framing
  • Size and shape of the frame
  • Aspect ratio
  • Masks
  • Framing defines onscreen and offscreen space
  • Offscreen space
  • Space beyond each of the four edges of the frame
  • Space behind the set
  • Space behind or near the camera

13
Static Framing
  • Framing controls the vantage point onto the
    mise-en-scene
  • Angle
  • Level
  • Height
  • Distance

14
Functions of Camera Movement
  • Often increases information about the space of
    the image
  • Objects become more vivid and sharp than in
    stationary framings
  • Often reveals new objects or figures
  • Provides new perspectives on objects and figures
    adding to our information about them and their
    3-dimensionality
  • Camera movement appears to be a substitute for
    our movement
  • Unlike zooming or scaling, in genuine camera
    movement we see different sides of objects and
    backgrounds
  • When the camera moves, we sense our own movement
    through space
  • Whereas when the lens zooms, a part of the space
    seems magnified or demagnified

15
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

16
Editing
  • Editing joins shots
  • Shots are one or more frames recorded in
    continuous time and contiguous space
  • There are various joins for Shots A and B
  • Cut
  • Shot A then Shot B
  • Fade-out
  • Gradually darkens end of Shot A to black
  • Fade-in
  • Gradually lightens from black to Shot A
  • Dissolve
  • Briefly superimpose end of Shot A on beginning of
    Shot B
  • Wipe
  • Shot B replaces Shot A by means of a boundary
    line moving across the screen

17
Dimensions of Film Editing
  • Graphic relations between Shot A and Shot B
  • Rhythmic relations between Shot A and Shot B
  • Spatial relations between Shot A and Shot B
  • Temporal relations between Shot A and Shot B

18
Graphic and Rhythmic Relations
  • Graphic relations
  • Editing together any two shots permits the
    interaction, through similarity and difference,
    of the purely pictorial qualities of these two
    shots
  • Rhythmic relations
  • Shot duration (long, short)
  • Shot duration patterns (acceleration,
    deceleration)

19
Spatial Relations
  • Editing lets an omniscient range of knowledge
    become visible as omnipresence
  • Editing permits any two points in space to be
    related through similarity, difference, or
    development
  • Editing enables the construction of spaces

20
Constructing Space
  • Situate location of Shot B with establishing Shot
    A
  • Construct illusion of spatial contiguity through
    joining of Shot A and Shot B (Kuleshov Effect)
  • Create physically impossible or ambiguous spaces
  • Establish two discontiguous spaces through
    parallel editing (i.e., crosscutting)

21
Temporal Relations
  • Temporal order
  • Flashback
  • Flashforward
  • Temporal duration
  • Temporal ellipsis
  • Temporal expansion
  • Temporal frequency
  • Shot repetition

22
Temporal Duration
  • Temporal ellipsis
  • Punctuation
  • Dissolve, wipe, fade
  • Empty frames
  • Shot A (character exits frame, then empty frame)
  • Shot B (empty frame, then character enters frame)
  • Cutaway
  • Temporal expansion
  • Overlapping editing

23
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

24
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Shane Ahern on Bordwell
  • What implications does the editing style of a
    film have for multimedia information systems? Are
    films that obey the classic narrative continuity
    style which ensures a smooth flow from shot to
    shot inherently more simple to encode for reuse
    and retrieval? Are films that use discontinuities
    of temporal order, duration and frequency in
    their editing style more problematic? What are
    some approaches one could take in designing a
    multimedia information system that accommodates
    both standard and non-standard editing styles?

25
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Shane Ahern on Bordwell
  • The Kuleshov effect allows a media producer to
    inter-cut shots from disparate sources by causing
    the viewer to infer a spatial relationship
    between the elements of two unrelated shots.
    However, to edit two shots together, the media
    producer will want to preserve the editing style
    of the overall work. For example, if they are
    following the classic narrative continuity style,
    they will want to preserve spatial continuity
    using the 180-degree system from shot to shot.
    How could a multimedia information system that
    allows the reuse of media from disparate sources
    facilitate the retrieval of shots that not only
    contain the narrative elements desired by the
    producer, but also meets the editing requirements
    of the producer?

26
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Megan Finn on Bordwell
  • Eisenstein... believed that only through being
    forced to synthesize such conflicts could the
    viewer participate in actively understanding the
    film (page 340)
  • ...what I call 'new brutalism' in cinema... is a
    form of naivete, because it's made by people who
    I think don't really have a grasp of cinema's
    history. It's the MTV kind of editing, where the
    main idea is that the more disorienting it is,
    the more exciting. And you see it creeping into
    mainstream cinema... It is a way to artificially
    generate excitement, but it doesn't really have
    any basis to it. And I find it kind of sad,
    because it's like an old man trying to dress like
    a teenager. -- John Boorman (page 312)
  • Boorman gives the example of Armageddon and MTV
    using new brutalism what other modern
    examples of breaking continuity editing are
    there? What parts of continuity editing are
    being violated in TV and some modern cinema
    (temporal or graphic discontinuities, spacial
    editing)? What is the function of these
    violations? How is breaking or ignoring the rules
    of continuity editing hurting and/or enhancing
    the cinematic experience?

27
Discussion Questions (Bordwell)
  • Megan Finn on Bordwell
  • What is the role of DV in editing? How has the
    evolution of the editing process changed the
    filming process? What is the role of metadata
    here?

28
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Mise-en-scene
  • Cinematography
  • Formalist Media Theory
  • Editing
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

29
Readings for Next Time
  • Wednesday 09/20
  • Readings
  • Kuleshov, L. Kuleshov on Film Writings by Lev
    Kuleshov. University of California Press,
    Berkeley, 1974 pp. 41-55. (Gökçe)
  • Isenhour, J.P. The Effects of Context and Order
    in Film Editing. AV Communications Review, 23
    (1) pp. 69-80. (Simon)
  • Burch, N. Theory of Film Practice. Princeton
    University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1981 pp.
    3-16. (Alison)
  • Barthes, R. Action Sequences. in Strelka, J. ed.,
    Patterns of Literary Style. State University of
    Pennsylvania Press, University Park,
    Pennsylvania, 1971 pp. 5-14. (Jaiwant)
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