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Losing%20the%20edit:%20shots%20in%20sequence

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Title: Losing%20the%20edit:%20shots%20in%20sequence


1
Losing the edit shots in sequence
  • Emma Bull
  • Secondary Education Adviser,
  • Film Education

2
  • Overview and outcomes
  • Defining the process what is editing?
  • Exploring techniques mechanics and aesthetics
  • Editing in-camera what is it? Why use it?
  • Modelling the process
  • Case study, Parkside Community College
    examining in-camera editing in context
  • Further applications

3
What does editing mean in the context of your
subject or classroom?What are students learning
when they engage in this process?
Editing as Process
4
Controlling content
Collaborative process
Creative re-invention
Grammatical exercise
5
  • Editing is the process of preparing language,
    images, or sound through correction,
    condensation, organization, and other
    modifications in various media... Editing is,
    therefore, also a practice that includes creative
    skills, human relations, and a precise set of
    methods.

Wikipedia
6
Early film 1895-1903
  • Short length, single shots
  • Early tripods very simplistic
  • Camera movement static camera on moving
    platform or vehicle
  • Experimental tricks and techniques
  • Narrative and continuity editing, multi-shot
    films - 1902 onwards

7
Editing film
  • In filmmaking, the task of selecting and joining
    camera takes.
  • In the finished film, the set of techniques that
    governs the relation among shots.
  • (Bordwell and Thompson)

8
Juxtaposition and meaning
  • Edwin S. Porter, The Great Train Robbery, 1903
    Shots in sequence create meaning for audiences
  • From exterior shots to set, audience is
    encouraged to believe the events they see are
    immediately sequential

Interior train carriage
Exterior, roof of train
Exterior, train pulls away
Cut to
Cut to
9
  • The Kuleshov Effect
  • Lev Kuleshov, circa 1920 intercut an actors
    face with unrelated footage taken later
  • Audiences interpreted emotional responses on the
    actors face based on the juxtaposition of images
  • Whilst much of the moving image we see uses this
    effect, it does not usually draw attention to it

10
  • An authentically new language did not emerge
    until filmmakers started to break up the film
    into successive scenes, until the birth of
    montage, of editing. It was here, in the
    invisible relationship of one scene to the next,
    that cinema truly sired a new language...
  • this seemingly simple technique generated a
    vocabulary and grammar of unbelievable diversity.
    No other medium boasts such a process

11
The language of filmWhat conventions are used
to show-time passing-characters thoughts,
memories or dreams-simultaneous events in
different locations?
Film language and grammar evolve quickly
inventive techniques can quickly become clichéd
12
Great Expectations, 1946
13
Hamlet, 1948
14
Romeo Juliet, 1996
15
Industrial practice
  • Film/TV usually shot out-of-sequence using
    multiple cameras
  • Commonly use continuity editing for realism
  • Hollywood productions1000-2000 shots, action
    movies 3000
  • Post-production editing essential for creating
    meaning

16
In-camera editing (Burn and Durran) constructing
a film by taking shots in sequence, with no
subsequent editing
  • Four main functions of film editing
  • make sure that the production is the required
    length or time
  • to remove unwanted material or mistakes
  • to alter if necessary the way or the sequence in
    which events will be portrayed
  • to establish the particular style and character
    of a production (OSullivan, Dutton and Rayner)

17
In-camera edit exampleTea
18
  • Why edit in-camera?
  • Disciplined approach to filmmaking
  • Economical with time and resources
  • Careful planning enhances decision-making and
    organisational skills
  • Understanding of the filming process and the
    process filmed
  • PLTS and beyond

19
  • Technical requirements
  • Basic DV camera, tape, tripod
  • Super-budget webcam or mobile device
  • Optional extra separate microphone
  • Essential paper, pens and brains for careful
    and detailed planning
  • Controlled environment to ensure continuity of
    sound, lighting and action

20
Modeling the process projector as shared
viewfinder
Demonstrate shot types and visual grammar using
  • Camera
  • Tripod
  • Firewire
  • Projector

21
Possible applications
  • Economical approach for cross-curricular projects
    or filming live events
  • Creating short filmed texts poems, myths
  • Demonstrating technique or process
  • Exploring genre
  • Creating atmosphere
  • Understanding continuity editing
  • Revision activity

22
They are revising basic shot types, distances
and angles, but the main emphasis is on how shots
work in sequence to create the illusion of
contiguous action over time James Durran,
Parkside Federation
23
Case study Parkside School
  • Media taught in discreet sessions from Year 8
  • Genre taught through Hospital Dramas scheme
  • Production element uses in-camera technique

24
James Durran, AST - The Parkside Federation
Cambridge
it promotes imaginative ownership of editing
decisions. Each one has to be fully realised
mentally before the record button is pressed
25
Storyboard examples
  • Arrange shots in logical sequence
  • Add shots, aid meaning
  • Arrange shots to disrupt narrative continuity?

26
(No Transcript)
27
Electrical Accident
28
Storyboards created from still shots, after
filming
These can be made more detailed duration notes
on camera movement audio etc.
29
View the QuickTime movies Stage Fall and Roof
Dare
  • Narrative
  • Shot choices
  • Continuity
  • Understanding of conventions
  • Impact of sequence
  • Follow-up activities?

30
Stage Fall
31
Roof Dare
32
Edit in-camera to recreate
  • Title/credits sequence
  • Fade in/out transition using auto focus
  • Black shot using lens cap
  • Colour transition
  • Appear/disappear

33
In-camera the end of the process?
  • Improving quality of filmed outcomes makes
    editing easier
  • In-camera edited films as a starting point
  • Possibilities for adding sound, transitions,
    intertitles

34
References
  • - Film Art an introduction Bordwell and
    Thompson, (Eighth Edition, 2008)
  • - Media Literacy in Schools Practise,
    production and progression, Burn and Durran,
    2007
  • Parkside Community Colleges Media page
    http//www.parksidefederation.org.uk/parkside_medi
    a/
  • The Secret Language of Film, Jean-Claude
    Carriere, 1994
  • Studying the Media an Introduction, O
    Sullivan, Dutton and Rayner, 1998
  • - Great Expectations, David Lean, 1946
  • - Hamlet, Laurence Olivier, 1948
  • - Romeo and Juliet, Baz Luhrmann, 1996
  • - Versions of the Kuleshov experiment and scenes
    from The Great Train Robbery can be viewed by
    searching online video sources
  • - Examples of in-camera edited films from
    YouTube
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vEIiaP9g0G-g
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vcHa-zc2DsR4
  • - Still and moving images from Teachers TV film
    Teaching Media Media Production in the
    Classroom http//www.teachers.tv/video/2553
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