Pre-Production: Introduction of Camera Movement in Film

 Camera movement is the way a camera shifts to visually narrates and forms a viewer's perspective of a scene. It is important to cinematography because it provides a sense of forwarding momentum, adds energy and pace to a scene, and helps the viewer to feel as though they are a part of the action. The person who is responsible for camera movement in a film is the Two camera movements that I already knew before we started to talk about them in class static and zoom. Static is where the camera does not move at all while in zoom the camera does stay in the same position but you are zooming in or zooming out to make it seem like you are moving closer or farther away from the subject in the scene. 












I did Camera movement, Static , Roll and Push-in Shots


https://www.nfi.edu/camera-movements/#:~:text=A%20camera%20movement%20refers%20to,viewer's%20perspective%20of%20a%20scene 

https://onpointvideo.ca/best-practices/the-importance-of-camera-gimbals-and-drones/#:~:text=Camera%20movement%2C%20following%20the%20action,adds%20impact%20to%20key%20scenes

https://confluence.cc.lehigh.edu/display/LKB/Camera+Movement+-+Video+Basics#:~:text=tilt%2C%20and%20tracking.-,Zoom,or%20stop%20the%20zoom%20smoothly

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Genre and Iconography Preliminary Exercise

Welcome to My AICE Media Studies Blog