Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Cinematography and Machinima

We've spent some time thinking about game aesthetics and structure, and let's now turn to the moving image outside its interactive role, whether it be in cut scenes in a game, or a film/movie/animation. We'll use the example of machinima as one form of moving image creation and capture. After we get past the setup, many of the principles of cinematography and editing are the same as for any moving image, and you can follow or break the rules as you wish. Here are the notes for today's class, so you can concentrate on the ideas and the activities.

MISE-EN-SCENE: What's in the shot

Setting

Costume

Lighting

Figure Expression and Movement

LIGHTING: 3 POINT LIGHTING: key, fill, back



















MACHINIMA: Environment lighting, and also lighting kits, or lights you make












PHOTOGRAPHIC QUALITIES OF THE SHOT

Look of an image

balance of dark and light

depth of space in focus

relation of background and foreground

use of color, saturation, tone

focus

lenses to change depth in a shot (either fixed with a telephoto or fish eye, or rack or zoom shots)

FRAMING

Angle

Height of the camera

Canted angles

Following shot (moving camera):PANNING, TRACKING, TILTING, CRANING

Point of view shot


SCALE/PROXIMITY

ELS: landscape, crowd, building--establishing shot

LS: Standing human figure is height of screen (roughly)--character and surroundings

MLS: knees/mid-thigh up (shot Americain bc of its use in cowboy pictures)

MCU: chest up--get to see the face, gestures

CU: head

ECU: small object, part of the body












CAMERA MOVEMENT

crane

handheld, steadycam

pan

tilt

tracking shot

whip pan

For Machinima: Space Navigator 3-d mouse














What to do with those shots!

EDITING AND MONTAGE

Editing can be based on rhythm, time, space, tone, theme

"The Kuleshov Effect" With his experiment, Kuleshov learned 3 things:

1) a cut could serve a narrative function (eyeline match, flashback, what a character is thinking)

2) also it could generate an intellectual response—(metaphor, contrast, parallel)

3) emotional cut: rhythmic, tonal (increasingly dark or light0, form cut (match cut), directional cut

a single cut can function on all three levels: narrative, intellectual, emotional

Straight cut

Jump cut

Cross cut (or parallel cut)

Contrast cut

Form cut (match cut)

TRANSITIONS:

Fade-out

Fade-in

Dissolve

Synecdoche (part for a whole)

Form dissolve

Wipe

Iris


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