Friday, 21 June 2013

T3: Continuity Exercise

1. Tape Logging
Tape logging involved capturing the clips that were on the camera and uploading them onto final cut. I did this by getting the camera and plugging it to the iMac, after I did this I waited to find the name of the camera on there and clicked on it. When this was done I captured the video and pressed space when  I was finished cutting the scenes that I want and when the clips are cut and divided in different sections they are put in the 'keep fit in dance' section like shown below. When the clips go through to this box you can drag any of them into the lines at the bottom to make the clip.





2. Edit decision lists
Edit decision list was used to decide who was doing what in the tasks asked. This was decided easily because there were just four topic scenes we had to film so Carina and myself decided to split it in two sections. Carina did the beginning and I did the ending.

3. Uploading the footage
When uploading the footage to my blog I went onto my YouTube account and searched for my video, I found it by typing the name "Continuity Exercise Animatic. After this all the results with this title came up and I picked the one that said "By Yvonne Kameni" next to the video. After this i clicked on the video and scrolled down and clicked on the "share" column and then pressed embed, after pressing this a link of the video comes at the bottom of the screen in the link box. I then copied the link below and pasted it to my blog


4. Organising/labelling clips in bins
My clips were labelled in the bin. I labelled them so that it would be easier to find some clips and so that if I do not want to use a clip I label it as "don't use".

5. Using a range of editing tools e.g. cropping, transitions, layering
while I was editing my film I used a range of editing tools which involved cropping and adding transitions between the shots, that way it would blend into the next shot.

6. Audio mixing
In my continuity exercise there was no audio mixing needed because it was a continuity exercise and all the sound we recorded were used as there were conversations in certain parts of it.

7. Uploading to YouTube
When uploading to YouTube I made a YouTube account and I clicked on the upload video clip and then a box at the bottom came up, I then renamed the video posted it on top YouTube. To make sure that my video was uploaded I refreshed the YouTube page and typed in the name of my video to see if it would come up and work and it did.

Below are the steps you need to upload from Final cut Express to Youtube 


1. Make sure that the work is completed and saved.
2. File - Export - Using Quick Time Conversion
3. Click "options"
4. Change the following settings 

Video Settings 

Settings
- Compressor Type > MPEG4 > Video
- Key Frames > Automatic 
- Compressor > Medium 
- Date Rate > Limited to 600 

5. Click "Ok" 

Size setting 
Compressor Native > (choose from downdrop menu) 320 x 240 QVGA 
6. Click "OK" 

Sound Settings 
Sound format > AAC
Channels > Mono 

7. Click "Ok" then "Ok" 
8. Name the file something you will recognise 
9. Save 


8. Uploading to BLOG!!
When uploading to my blog I copy the link from YouTube and click on the "HTML" button at the top left corner of the page. I then scroll down on the page to where I want to put the video and paste the video by right clicking the mouse and clicking paste, 3 rows down.


T2: Continuity Exercise

1. Director
Director is the person that is in charge of  an activity, department or organisation. In this case the person was was in charge of directing and guiding the characters to where they are suppose to be etc. Carina Monteiro was the person in charge of directing the shots.

2. Camera Operator
Camera Operator is someone that is responsible for physically operating the camera and maintaining composition and camera angles throughout a given scene or shot. In narrative film making the operator will collaborate with the director, director of photography, actors and crew to make technical and creative decisions. The Camera Operator for this task was Carina Monteiro.

3. Sound Operator
Sound Operator is the the person responsible for the overall and total execution of all sound related aspects of a theatrical performance. This job includes operating a mixing console and sound reinforcement system, as well as co-ordination sound effects and mixing microphones. The sound operator in this task was Jacob La Jolie.

4. Editor
The Editor is the person who is in charge of and determines the final outcome of the material for publication. In this task Carina Monteiro and myself were both editors. She edited the beginning and I edited the end.

5. Record the production process using a still digital camera
Below are pictures taken while we were on the scene of our preliminary task. All including the back shot, side shots, up close and the scenery.




Wednesday, 5 June 2013

T1: Continuity Exercise


Task One

Using the template provided by your teacher plan a short sequence that demonstrates your understanding of continuity editing.  Including:

  • 180 degree rule



The 180 degree rule is a basic guideline that states that two characters (or other elements) in the same scene should always have the same left/right relationship to each other. If the camera passes over the imaginary axis connecting the two subjects, it is called crossing the line. Above is an image of the 180 degree rule.

  • action match






Action match is matching the action (movement or motion) of characters or objects in one shot to the action in the next shot where the action continues. Above are two examples of how the actions match and how the camera flows with the motion as it moves to the next shot

  • eye line match
An eye-line match is a film editing technique associated with the continuity editing system. It is based on the premise that the audience will want to see what the character on-screen is seeing. The eye-line match begins with a character looking at something off-screen, followed by a cut to the object or person at which he is looking. For example a man is looking off-screen to his left, and then the film cuts to a television that he is watching. Above is an example of an eye line match.


T1: Continuity Exercise

1. 180 degree rule is used in the video when we are having a conversation when on the bench


2. Match on action is shown when we were walking towards the bench and it was video'd from behind and then it was video'd from the front where we were walking towards  the bench


3. Eye-line match is used in the video when we were both looking at each other the camera showed what the person was looking at.

In the video below we got given a task to show the 180 degree rule, match on action and the eye line match. We did this



4.Storyboard
Below is the storyboard for my continuity exercise, this is an example of the shots that we will be filming in order.



5. Animatic
Below is an animatic version of my storyboard, i drew my sketches of what every shot would look like and i took pictures of each shot and made it into an animatic video.



6. Shooting Schedule


Day
Scene
Location
Equipment
Costumes
Props
Cast +Crew

180 degree rule
Match on action
Robert Clack Garden
Camera
Tripod
Tape
Microphone


Carina Monteiro
Jacob Lajolie
Yvonne Kameni



Wednesday, 8 May 2013

T3: Editing Key Conventions

1. Speed of editing - The Bourne Ultimatum, Sleepless in Seattle
In a film each scene may last a matter of seconds, or it could continue for minutes but the length of each sequence establishes the pace of the film moving the action along. The speed of editing will help to determine the mood of what is taking place on screen.

If the audience was to feel anxiety and suspense the editing will be quick and the scenes/shots changing frequently. For example in an action sequence like 'The Bourne Ultimatum'



2. No editing - one shot - Russian Ark
In the Russian Ark there is no edit and everything is captured in one shot. It was filmed entirely in the Winter Palace of the Russian State Hermitage Museum using a single 96 minute Steadicam sequence shot (one shot). The film was entered into the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. The storyline starts on  winters day, a small party of men and women arrive by horse-drawn carriage to a minor side entrance of the winter palace. The narrator (the man giving his point of view that is always in the first person) meets another spectral but visible outsider "The European" and follows him through numerous rooms of the palace. Each room represents different periods of Russian history, however the periods are not in chronological order.





3. Trailers - The Man in Iron Mask
A trailer is the same as a preview, this is an advertisement or a commercial for a feature film that will be shown in the future at a cinema. The term "trailer" comes from their having originally been shown at the end of a feature film screening. That practice did not last long because patrons tended to leave the theatre after the films ended, but the name has stuck. Trailers are now shown before the film begins.

An example of a trailer that was released in 1998 is The Man in The Iron Mask which is shown below. The Man in the iron mask is an adventurous film which was filmed and released at least three time, first in 1939 later it was filmed in 1977 and then it was directed, produced and written again in 1998 by Randall Wallace. This film was more successful the third time filmed because Leonardo DiCaprio was in it and at that time he was famous for being in the film “Titanic”. The film attempts to explain the mystery of the Man in The Iron Mask, using a plot more closely related to 1929 Fairbanks’ version (The Iron Mask) and the 1939 by James Whale. This film was about King Louis XIV of France who bankrupted the country with his unpopular wars and it was about his identical twin.

The story line is three musketeers sneak into an island prison and arrange the escape of a mysterious prisoner; a man in an iron mask. They replace him with a corpse in a matching iron mask and pretending it’s a plague ridden, burn it so the guards will not know the face behind the iron mask. They take the young man to a safe house in the countryside and unmask him Philippe, the identical twin of King Louis. While he is identical to his brother Philippe is compassionate and gentle. Aramis reveals that Philippe was sent away by his father, King Louis XIII to save France from dynastic warfare. Later, when Louis discovered of Philippe’s existence he was too superstitious to have his own brother murdered so instead he devised a way to keep him hidden. Aramis, at time still serving as a musketeer and clad in black uniform, the only thing Philippe remembers, was the one who took him away to prison, an act which has haunted him ever since.




4. Opening of films - Spiderman
Spiderman is an American superhero film that was released in 2002, the film was directed by Sam Raimi and written by David Koepp. Spiderman was based on Marvel Comics character of the same name, the film stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker, a high-school student who turns to crimefighting after developing spider-like powers. The filming of Spiderman took place in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York City from 8th January to 30th June 2001 and was later released on May, 3rd 2002. The film became a critical and financial success with $821.7 million worldwide, it was 2002s third highest-grossing film and is the thirty third highest-grossing film of all times. This film was one of the most successful in 2002, the film reached $100 million in its first weekend, the largest opening weekend gross of all time and the most successful film based on a comic book. After the first Spider-Man there were two more sequels Spider-Man 2 and Spider-Man 3, a reboot titled The Amazing Spider-Man was released on 3rd July 2012



5. Action sequences - Psycho (shower scene)
An action sequence is an expression that resolves to a sequence of actions. In this video the woman's shocked face indicated that she is scared and someone is trying to do something to her and in this case, she is getting attacked while she is in the shower and is shocked because she didn't see it coming.

 


6. Slow to fast editing - The good, the bad and the ugly
In the good, the bad and the ugly it starts of at a slow edit where the two characters stare at each other and gradually gets fast. This way of editing allows the audience to know that something is going to happen, when it gradually starts getting faster.

The good, the bad and the ugly is an italian film that was made released in 1996. The storyline of the film revolves around three gunslingers competing to find a fortune in buried Confederate gold amid and the violent chaos of the gunfights, hangings, American Civil War battles and prison camps. The film was a co-production between companies in Italy, Spain and West Germany.




7. Style of editing - straight cut
The most common type of edit, the straight cut results in one image being replaced instantly by another. Straight cuts are often used when two or more characters are talking, cutting back and forth between individuals.



8. Dissolves
A dissolve is a gradual transition from one image to another. A dissolve overlaps two shots for the duration of the effect, usually at the end of one scene and the beginning of the next, but may be used in montage sequences also. The use of dissolving is generally held to indicate that a period of time has passed between the two scenes.



9. Fades
A video fade is when a shot gradually fades to (or from) a single colour, usually black or white. A fade is different to a cross fade, which is a transition directly between two shots rather than one shot to a colour.

A fade occurs when the picture gradually turns to a single colour, usually black or when a picture gradually appears on screen. Fade ins generally occur at the beginning of a film or act while fade outs are usually found at the end of a film or act.

The "fade from black" and "fade to black" are ubiquitous in film and television. They usually signal the beginning and end of a scene. The timing of the fades indicates the importance of the change in time and/or location between scenes — a slower fade with more time spent on black indicates a more significant end/beginning. A fairly quick fade to and from black could indicate a time lapse of a few minutes or hours, whereas a long drawn-out fade indicates a much bigger change.


10. Example - Citizen Kane - identify dissolves, fades, straight cuts

Dissolves
A lap dissolve is a gradual transition from one image to another with a moment of both images superimposed over each, sometimes is used to create a more poetic mood, or a passage of time. The traditional transition for flashbacks. Jump dissolve are the same as a jump cut but using dissolve instead of a straight cut.

Fade to Black & White
A fade to black and white is a dissolve in which an image slowly dissolves to black screen. It creates a strong sense of closure to a scene.

Straight cuts
Straight cuts are the most common type of edit, the straight cut results in one image being replaced instantly by another.



11. Wipes - Star Wars
A wipe involves one shot replacing another, traveling from one side of the frame to another. A common type of wipe of this creates the illusion of a camera passing through the ceiling of the bottom floor of a multi-story house to the floor above. in this case shot A would consist of the camera rising to the ceiling, and shot B would have the camera rising from the ground. A wipe transition give the impression the camera is passing between the floors of a house. A very good example of wipes is from the Star Wars film, this shows all the wipes that have been used in the film. It shows one image being wiped which resembles an eye opening or closing.



12. Jump cut - a bout de soufflé (Jean Luc Godard)

A jump cut is where the audience's attention is brought into focus on something very suddenly, this occurs by breaking the continuity editing  this is known as discontinuity making it appear as if the section of the sequence has been removed.

A bout de souffle is a 1960 French film directed by Jean-Luc Godard, It was his first feature-length work and one of the earliest, most influential of the French New Wave. At the time, the film attracted much attention for its bold visual style and the innovative use of jump cuts. A fully restored version of the film was released in the U.S for the 50th anniversary of the film in May 2010.When originally released in France, the film had 2,082,760 cinema views.



13. Graphic match - Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock) A space Odyssey, Schindler's list, war of the worlds, raiders of the lost ark 
Graphic match is used to continuously transition two successive shots. A graphic match creates a cut between two shots that juxtapose their graphically similar images. The successive shots have compositional elements that match, this could include shapes, colours, movements, linear etc, therefore the cut can establish a link between the shots graphically and metaphorically.

Psycho is an American suspense/horror 1960s film. The shower scene in the film is one of the best-known in all of cinema. This scene was shot from December 17th to December 23rd 1959 and features 77 different camera angles. The scene runs 3 minutes and includes 50 cuts, most of the shots are extreme close ups, except for medium shots in the shower directly after the murder. The combination of the close shots with their short duration makes the sequence feel more subjective than it would have been if the images were presented alone or in a wider angle.

 



14. Montage - Lev Kuleshov
A great effect that montage editors use was developed by Kuleshov. The Kuleshov effect refers to matching the eye-line of different characters, in different shots to help viewer connect the shots in terms of space and time. Montage contains many different images, quickly edited together, images do not provide a sense of the narrative moving forward but are still full of meaning. Rapid cuts force the viewer to consider the connections between the images being shown, there may be no obvious connections or they might be deliberately unconnected. Montage editing is often used to reflect chaos, tension or disturbance a characters state of mind perhaps. It might have an overall thematic or visual connection.  



15. Kuleshov experiment
Kuleshov's theories are closely related to that of Eisenstein in the sense that they both believed that the essence of the cinema is a juxaposition of editorial decisions  to support his theories Kuleshov developed an experiment known as the "Kuleshov Experiment". The experiment consisted of shots of an actor inter-cut with shots of a bowl of soup, a seductively dresses women and a deceased child, the shots were edited to create the illusion that the actor was looking at these objects. The film was screened before an audience who believed the actors facial expression changes throughout the sequence, depending on what the actor was seeing. However the actors expression doesn't change and is in the fact the same shot repeated. Kuleshov designed this experiment to indicate the importance of cinema editing and the effects it can have on an audience.



16. Soviet Montage - Sergei Eisenstein Strike and Battleship Potemkin
Sergei Eisentein is credited for making developing the use of montage in film sequences. He describes five montage theories including metric, rhythmic, tonal, overtonal and intellectual which are based on the idea that montage originates in the collision between two different shots in an illustration of the idea of thesis and antithesis. Montage is found where there is conflict in the juxtaposing two images. Eisenstein felt that his collision manipulates the emotions of the audience and create film metaphors.


17. Montage - Team America: World Police
Montage is used for creating message by cutting together short lengths of film rather than telling the whole story. montage sequences are different from continuity editing and are often used to explain time passing or narrative information in a condensed fashion. Usually a song plays in the background that enhances the mood and reinforces the message of time passing. They can also include shots where there are multiple images on the screen.

In the film Team America it uses the sports training sequence where Rocky trained over a long period of time, getting better by the end of the sequence. The filmmakers show the conventions of a montage while utilising one.




18. Continuity editing
Continuity editing is used to smooth over the inherent discontinuity of the editing process and to establish a logical coherence between shot. Continuity editing can be divided into two categories; temporal continuity and spatial continuity. Within each category, specific techniques will work against a sense of continuity. In other words, techniques can cause a passage to be continuous, giving the viewer a concrete physical narration to follow or discontinuous causing viewer disorientation, pondering or even subliminal interpretation or reaction as in the montage style. An example of continuity editing is shown below.



19. Eye-line match
An eye-line match is a film editing technique associated with the continuity editing system. It is based on the premise that the audience will want to see the character on-screen is seeing. The eye-line match begins with a character looking at something off-screen, followed by a cut to the object or person at which he is looking. For example a man is looking off-screen on his left, and then the film cuts to a television that he is watching.

20. Match on action
Action match is matching the action (movement or motion) of characters or objects in one shot to the action in the next shot where the action continues. Above are two examples of how the actions match and how the camera flows with the motion as it moves to the next shot

    T3: Editing Key Conventions


    Task Three – Editing Key Conventions

     Continuity 
    The purpose of continuity editing is to smooth over the inherent discontinuity of the editing process and to establish a logical coherence between shots. Continuity editing can be divided into two categories: temporal continuity and spatial continuity. Within each category, specific techniques will work against a sense of continuity. In other words, techniques can cause a passage to be continuous, giving the viewer a concrete physical narration to follow, or discontinuous, causing viewer disorientation, pondering, or even subliminal interpretation or reaction, as in the montage style.



    Montage 
    Montage is a technique in film editing in which a series of short shots are edited into a sequence to condense space, time, and information. Montage technique relies on symbolic association of ideas between shots rather than association of simple physical action for its continuity. Montages are used in movies like Rocky IV and Avengers Assemble. 



    Jump-cutting
    A jump cut is a cut in film editing in which two sequential shots of the same subject are taken from camera positions that vary only slightly. This type of edit causes the subject of the shots to appear to "jump" position in a discontinuous way. For this reason, jump cuts are considered a violation of classical continuity editing which aims to give the appearance of continuous time and space in the story-world by de-emphasizing editing. Jump cuts, in contrast, draw attention to the constructed nature of the film.

    Parallel editing 
    parallel editing is a method of cutting in film editing between a couple of scenes or stories that are happening at the same time.

    180o rule 
    The 180o rule is a guideline regarding the on-screen spatial relationship between a character and another character or object within a scene. An imaginary line called the axis connects the characters and by keeping the camera on one side of this axis for every shot in the scene, the first character will always be in the frame right of the second character, who is then always frame left to right. if the camera passes over the axis, it is called crossing the line or jumping the line.

    There is a scene in 'The Hunger Game' where the 180o rule is taking place. When the girl walks into the room the bed is on the left hand side of the room and then the next time we see the bed it is on the right hand side of the room. This was a 180o rule. Below is an example of how a 180o rule works.





    Transitions
    Transitions are the way that one shot is linked to another shot. An example of this is in Britain’s got Talent 
    which uses transitions of fade to black then fade in to the next shot each time they go from shot to shot in 
    most clips. Transitions could be a cut, dissolve, fade, wipe; cutaways; points if view and shot-reverse-shot. 


    Editing rhythm
    Editing rhythm is what editors use to keep pace of the film up to match the action that is going on in the film. Slow cuts edits has a calming, bordering feel to the edit, were as a fast cut edits has lively, aggressive feel  to the edit.  Below is an example of this is in the first episode of ‘Dead Set’  it uses fast cut edit to create a loud, breathless feeling.



    Crosscutting
    This is an editing technique most often used in films to establish action occurring at the same time in two different locations. In a cross-cut, the camera will cut away from one action to another action, which can suggest the simultaneity of these two actions but this is not always the case.


    Cutting to soundtrack
    Cutting to soundtrack is what it tells you it’s a technique means that edit point would determined by the soundtrack that is used. The most conmen way that this technique is used is when a editing to a song. An example of is in ‘Glee’ where in most of this clip the use the beat of the music to determined the editing points.

    T2: Editing Key Conventions

    1&2. Storytelling (Engaging the viewer)
    Story telling develops your imagination. It also develops your powers of description. Every film needs to be able to tell a story in order to interest the audience. It is essential as the attention of a viewer must be captured during the films running time. Story-telling goes hand in hand with editing if the edit is poor then telling the story becomes difficult.

    3. Development of drama
    Often in drama films it uses certain elements that backfires at the protagonist, like cancer, death, war, murder etc. The story is usually built around the overall element which contains various sub-elements; such as in 'The Family Stone' where the overall element is a couple going to a family Christmas and the sub-elements include things such as the family disliking their son's new girlfriend, a gay couple, mother has cancer (but this isn't realised until later on e.g. withholding information), lazy brother comes onto his brother's new girlfriend and sister.



    4. Relationship to genre 
    Different genres of film have different conventions when it comes to editing, different techniques and styles are used to illustrate the genre.

    Action
    in an action film there is a lot of fast filming, this is to show the fast pace of the movie, in most action films there is a car chase or a fight scene, so fast editing is frequently used. Long shots are also used to establish the scene. An example of this is the car chasing scene in fast and furious 5.



    Horror - Scream 4 
    In horror films fast editing is used, this is to scare viewers. The audience are anxious as they do not know what is coming next and are waiting to be scared by the next quick shot. Low shots are also used to create fear, it shows the characters intimidation and authority over the other characters. An good example of this is in 'Scream 4'



    Romantic Comedy - The Ugly Truth
    In a rom-com the editing makes the audience know its a romantic comedy, the sound is always upbeat and happy, the editing is always at a slow pace. An example of this is in 'The Ugly Truth'



    5. Creating motivation 
    In order to create motivation you have to make the edit motivated this is done by making the continuity of the project looks smooth, checking that one shot to another doesn't jerk and that the position is in the same place for a perfect edit, or as close as can possibly get.

    A conversation is a good example of creating motivation, instead of keeping one shot and seeing the back of the head of one of the people involved and boring the audience with one long shot, you can cut using the 180 degree rule to keep the shots cutting to the person speaking and keeping the audience interested.

    6. Combining shots into sequences 
    Combining shots into sequences is the process of putting together all shots and making them flow. Once all of the shots have been individually edited they can they be place together in a sequence a successful edit mean the sequence will look good, the edit needs to look invisible and so the audience can only see one long sequence. An example of this is the final fight scene from the film Mr and Mrs Smith this is an example of different shots combined together to make a sequence.



    7. Creating pace
    Creating pace is used to give the tension of the movie or scene, there is no point in having slow shots and movement in a car chase scene in an action movie, this is not to say that action movies can't have a slow pace at all. For example in a romance scene where a male protagonist and a women are talking and starring at each other the shots and movements would be a slow pace.

    Another way of creating pace is using music, a good example of this is Jaws, the camera movements and shots are good when the shark is about to attack and does, but the music creates the pace letting the audience know the shark is coming, how close its getting and, how fast it is and then the moment of attack, it builds a lot of tension having the audience on the edge of their seat. This is shown below.


    Sunday, 5 May 2013

    T2: Editing For A Purpose


    · STORYTELLING

          Editing is used for many different things, one of the purposes is storytelling. A good edit means a good piece of footage. Any sequence needs to be able to tell a story to enable the audience to be engaged and entertained. The viewer needs to be drawn into the story and to do that it needs to be told well. the first step of this is editing.

          Storytelling helps to engage the viewers because adverts range from 30 seconds to two minutes which mean they are quick so you should put everything that you need to say that could capture the viewers emotionally with something that they can relate to and storytelling is good because a video is worth a thousand more words. 



    · CREATING MOTIVATION

          Creating motivation is vital when producing a film or  a television programme as this is the main aspect in keeping the target audience interested in your product.  To successfully edit a film or programme together an editor must always look for motivation in their cuts and this affects and determines how the audiences feels. 


    ·  COMBINING SHOTS INTO SEQUENCES

          Combining shots into sequences is the process of putting together all shots and making them flow. Once all of the shots have been individually edited they can they be place together in a sequence a successful edit mean the sequence will look good, the edit needs to look invisible and so the audience can only see one long sequence. examples of combining shots into sequences are Mr & Mrs Smith and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallow Part 2. With the Harry Potter one it keeps us in suspense making the audience want to urgently know whats going to happen next.




    ·  CREATING PACE

          When creating pace, there is usually a slow build up to a big event, which can maybe seen in a running scene or even a chase scene. Pace is usually created with music or slow camera movement where the camera gets closer to either the character or object, this could either be a jolty movement or just a plain smooth movement. Example of this is "The Italian Job" and "The King Speech". 


    This example is a fast pace.


    Wednesday, 20 March 2013

    T1: Development in editing - Part 2

    1. Lumiere Brothers - Sortie d'usine 
    The Lumiere brothers were born in Besancon, France, in 1862 and 1864 and moved to Lyon in 1870 where they bothe attended La Martiniere, the largest technical school in Lyon. Their father Claude-Antoine Lumiere (1840-1911) ran a photographic firm and both his sons worked for him, Louis as physicist and Auguste as a manager. Louis had made some improvements to the still-photgraph process, the most notable being the dry plate process, which was a major step towards moving images.

    When their father had retired in 1892 the brothers began to create moving pictures. They patented a number of significant processes leading up to their film camera. The cinemtographe itself was patented on 13th February 1895 and the first footage ever to be recorded using it was recorded on March 19, 1895. This was how the first film "Sortie d'usine"was made

    Lumiere Brothers made an early film by Thomas Edison (whose family invented a film camera and projector) and others were short films that were one long, static, lock down shot. They also did motion in the shot. motion in the shot was all that was necessary to amuse an audience, the first films simply showed activity such a traffic moving on a city street. This can be seen in the film below"Sortie d'usine"(1895) the first film that the Lumiere Brothers had made.

    This was a significant film because it was the first film ever made.



    2. G.A Smith - The Miller and the Sweep
    George Albert Smith was born on 4th January 1864, London England and died in 17th May 1959 at the age of 95 in Brighton. His occupations were film making and inventing. The first film that he made was called "The Miller and the Sweep"this film was made shortly after Smith had acquired a camera. This film was one of the earliest films to show a clear awareness of its visual impact when projected, a clip from this is featured in Paul Merton's interactive guide to early british silent comedy how they laughed. The Miller and the Sweep was released in July 1897 and the running time for the film was 49 seconds.

    George Albert Smith was a stage hypnotist, psychic, magic lantern lecturer, astronomer, inventor, and one of the pioneers of British cinema, who is best known for his controversial work with Edmund Gurney at the Society for Psychical Research. George's short films from 1897 to 1903 pioneered film editing and close ups and his development of the first successful colour film process, Kinemacolor.

    Below is the first ever film that George Albert Smith had made and it was a great success as it was the first silent but



    3. G.A Smith - The Kiss in the Tunnel
    In 1899 Smith constructed a glass house film studio at St.Ann's Well Gardens. That same year he shot the single scene "The Kiss in the Tunnel" which was seamlessly edited into Cecil Hepworth's view from an engine front train leaving tunnel to enliven the staid phantom ride genre and demonstrate the possibilities of creative editing. This film was released in September 1899 and is 1 minute and 3 seconds long.



    4. Edwin S.Porter - The Life of an American Fireman
    Edwin Stanton Porter was born in April 21st, 1870 and died in April 30, 1941. He most famous as a director with Thomas Edison's company. Of over 250 films created by Porter, the most important films include Life of and American Fireman (1903) and The Great Train Robbery (1903). The Life of an American Fireman is a short, silent film that was made by Edwin S.Porter for the Edison Manufacturing Company. It was shot late in 1902 and released early in 1903, this was one of the earliest American narrative films, it depicts the rescue of a woman and child from a burning building.


     
    5. Edwin S.Porter - The Great Train Robbery
    Edwin was the first American filmmaker who put film editing to use. He worked as an electrician before joining the film laboratory of Thomas Alva Edison in the late 1890s. When Edison's motion picture studio wanted to increase the length of the short films he came to Porter. The Great Train Robbery was an example of early editing form. The film used a number of innovative techniques including composite editing, camera movement and on location shooting. it is common misconception that the film contains cross-cutting, although the technique does not appear in the film. Some prints were also hand colored in certain scenes.



    6. Charles Pathe - The Horse that Bolted
    Charles Pathe was is a major french pioneer of the film and recording industries. He was born on 26th December 1863 and died 25th December 1957. In 1894 Charles and his brother Emile formed Pathe Records, two years later they created the "Societe Pathe Freres" to enter the motion picture production and distribution business. Both companies became a dominant international force in their respective industries. In 1929, Charles sold out his interest in the businesses and retired to Monaco where he dies in 1957.

    7. Cross cutting - D.W. Griffith Birth of a Nation
     David Llewelyn Wark Griffith born January 22nd 1875 and died July 23rd 1948. He was a premier pioneering American film director and was best known as "the director of the epic 1915 film" The Birth of a Nation. The Birth of a Nation was made using advanced camera and narrative techniques. This film was extremely controversial for its negative depiction of African American, White Unionists and Recocnstruction and its positive portrayal on slavery and the Ku Klux Klan. This film was banned in many countries because it intended to show the history of prejudiced thought and behaviour and because of this the film was not a financial success, however was praised by critics.



    The movie was credited as one of the events that inspired the formation of the "second era" Ku Klux Klan at Stone Mountain, Georgia in the same year. The Birth of a Nation was used as a recruiting tool for the KKK. This was also the first motion picture to be shown at the White House and watched by the President Woodrow Wilson. Because of Griffith's innovative film techniques, it make The Birth of a Nation one of the most important and influential films in the commercial film industry and was considered by many to be one of the greatest films of all time.

    8. Parallel cutting - Francis Ford Coppola The Godfather
    Parallel editing is primarily used to show multiple events happening at the same time, either from different perspectives, or at different locations. In the “Baptism & Murder” sequence, time is compressed to show both the baptism of Michael’s nephew and godson, as well as the planning, build up, and eventual murder of the mafia dons of New York.



    9. Lev Kuleshov - Montage Experiment
    The original images of the Kuleshov ecperiment were a shot of a bowl of soup, then with a child playing with a teddy bear, then with a shot an elderly woman in a casket. When this film was showed to people they praised the actor's acting, the hunger in his face when he saw the soup, the delight in the child and the grief when looking at the dead woman. The simple act of juxtaposing the shots in a sequence made the relationship.



    10. Dziga Vertov - Man with a Movie Camera
    Man with a Movie Camera is a experimental silent documentary film made in 1929 with no story and no actors. It was directed by a Russian director Dziga Vertov and edited by his wife Elizaveta Svilova. This film is famous for the range of cinematic techniques Verov inventes, deploys or develops, such as double exposure, fast motion, slow motion, freeze frames, jump cuts, split screens, Dutch angles, extreme close-ups, tracking shots, footage played backwards, stop motion animations and a self-reflexive style. Sight and Sound poll, film critics voted Man with a Movie Camera the 8th best film ever made in 2012.



    11. Montage Sequence - Rocky Balboa
    Montage editing contains different images, quickly edited together. Images do not provide a sense of the narrative moving forward but are still full of meaning, rapid cuts force the viewer to consider the connections between the images being shown. There may be obvious connections or they might be deliberately unconnected. Montage editing is often used to reflect chaos, tension or disturbance a characters state of mind perhaps. An example of the 'Montage' is a sequence from Rocky Balboa 4 the training scene, which is shown below.



    12. Soviet Montage - Sergei Eisenstein Strike & Battleship Potemkin
    Battleship Potemkin is a silent film that was directed and released by Sergei Eisenstein in 1925. This film represents a dramatised version of the mutiny that occured in 1905 when the crew of the Russian battleship Potemkin rebelled against their officers of the Tsarist regime. Battleship Potemkin was named the greatest film of all time at the Brussels World's Fair in 1958 and has been called one of the most influential propaganda films of all times.

    Sergei Eisenstein was briefly a student of Kuleshov's but the two parted ways because they had differemt ideas of montage. Eisenstein regarded montage as a dialectical means of creating meaning. By contrasting unrelated shots he tried to provoke associations in the viewer, which were induced by shocks.



    Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein born 23rd January 1898, died 23rd July 1948 was a pioneering Soviet Russian film director and film theorist who was often considered to be the "Father of Montage". The film depicts a Strike in 1903 by the workers of a factory in pre-revolutionary Russia, and their subsequent suppression. The film is most famous for a sequence near the end in which the violent suppression of the strike is cross-cut with footage of cattle being slaughtered, although there are several other points in the movie where animals are used as metaphors for the conditions of various individuals. Anothe theme in the film is collectivism in opposition to individualism which was viwed as a convention of western film. Collective efforts and collectivisation of characters were central to both Strike and Battleship Potemkin



    13. Montage example - Apocalypse Now (Francis Ford Coppola)
    In this clip it shows how the animal is being slaughtered while the two men are fighting the cow being slaughtered represents the men fighting, its like a comparison between the two different scenarios. They are the same but different in many ways.



    14. Continuity editing
    Continuity editing remains a sense of realistic chronology and generates the feeling that time is moving forward, it may use flashbacks or flash forwards but the narrative will still be seen to be progressing forward in an expected or realistic way.

    15. Jump cut - A bout de Souffle (Jean-Luc Godard)
    A jump cut is where the audience's attention is brought into focus on something very suddenly, this occurs by breaking the continuity editing  this is known as discontinuity making it appear as if the section of the sequence has been removed.

    A bout de souffle is a 1960 French film directed by Jean-Luc Godard, It was his first feature-length work and one of the earliest, most influential of the French New Wave. At the time, the film attracted much attention for its bold visual style and the innovative use of jump cuts. A fully restored version of the film was released in the U.S for the 50th anniversary of the film in May 2010.When originally released in France, the film had 2,082,760 cinema views.



    16. Eye-line match
    Eye-line match is when we see a character looking at something off screen and then we cut to a shot of what they are looking at.











    17. Match on action
    Match on action is an editing technique for continuity editing in which one shot cuts to another shot portraying the action of the subject in the first shot. This creates the impression of a sense of continuity the action carrying through creates a "visual bridge" which draws the viewer's attention away from slight cutting or continuity issues. This is not a graphic match or match cut, it portrays a continuous sense of the same action rather than matching two separate things. This is shown in the video below.



    18. Graphic match - Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock)
    The filmmaker can choose to place shots in a certain order so as to create a smooth visual transfer from one frame to the next. When two consecutive shots are matching in terms of the way they look this is called a graphic match. This is shown in the example below.



    19. Moviola
    A Moviola is a device that allows a film editor to view film while editing. It was the first machine for motion picture editing when it was invented by Iwan Serrurier in 1924. Moviola the company is still in existence and is located in Hollywood where part of the facility is located on one of the original Moviola factory floors. An example of this is shown below.





    20. Digital editing - Final Cut Pro/Avid
    Today, most films are edited directly on systems such as Avid or Final Cut Pro and bypass the film positive work print altogether. With the advent of digital intermediate the physical negative does not necessarily need to be physically cut and not spliced together; the negative is optically scanned into computers and a cut list is conformed by a DI editor. An example of it is shown below.





    21. Rules of editing (Edward Dmytryk)
    The Hollywood director Edward Dmytryk stipulated seven "rules of cutting" that a good editor should follow;
    
    Rule 1: Never make a cut without a positive reason
    Rule 2: When undecided about the exact frame to cut on, cut long rather than short
    Rule 3: Whenever possible cut 'in movement'
    Rule 4: The 'fresh' is preferable to the 'stale'
    Rule 5: All scenes should begin and end with continuing action
    Rule 6: Cut for proper values rather than proper 'matches'
    Rule 7: Substance first then form

    22. Criteria of editing (Walter Murch)
    According to the director and editor Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now), when it comes to film editing, there are six main criteria for evaluating a cut or deciding where to cut. They are in order of importance, most importnat first with notional percentage values.

    • Emotion (51%) - Does the cut reflect what the editor believes the audience should be feeling at that moment
    • Story (23%) - Does the cut advance the story?
    • Rhythm (10%) - Does the cut occur "at the moment that is rhythmically interesting and 'right'" (Murch, 18)
    • Eye-trace (7%) - Does the cut pay respect to the location and movement of the audience's focus of interest within the frame (Murch, 18)
    • Two-dimensional plane of the screen (5%) - Does the cut respect the 180 degree rule?
    • Three-dimensional space of action (4%) - Is the cut true to the physical/spatial relationships within the diegesis?

    23. In camera editing
    This process take immense amounts of planning so that the shots are filmed are the ones that will be viewed in directly that order. There is no cutting out and editing scenes later on and when the very last scene is filmed by the videographer, the production is completely finished. Below is an example of "In camera editing"



    24. Following the action
    Following the action is when there is movement, or in an action scene the camera would follow the event/action that is taking place. In the extract Mr & Mrs Smith the camera rotates around the gun battle to show more of the action instead of staying at one angle.



    25. Multiple points of view
    Multiple points of views is when the actors are showing each side of a particular point of view, this could also be when one character will show what he/she is seeing and then it will change to the secondary character and do the same. An example of this is Iron Man which is shown below.



    26. Shot variation
    Shot variation is the technique used in filming to create a sequence of images using movement. The shot can be either static or mobile but must be a continuous motion, for example the shot begins as a long or wide shot and ends in close-up. In the following example from The Matrix it begins in long shot, the camera moves in a circular motion and ends in a mid-shot.



    27. Manipulation of diegetic time and space
    Manipulation of Diegetic time and space is when a film uses effects to show an age or time change, either a person, an object or even an environment is shown either getting younger or getting older. There are many films use these techniques but an exampl of this is The Time Machine. The time traveller enters the time machine and the environment changes as he travels through time.



    28. Analogue editing
    Analogue editing is the cutting together of pieces of celluloid film. In the past, film editing was done by Analogue editing in which the editor cuts the film tape with a razor blade, binds the tape over the head and finally tapes the whole thing back together. This method is difficult and time consuming as the cuts must be precise as there is no undo button like there is now.

    29. Video editing
    Video editing is the process of editing segments of motion video production footage, special effects and sound recordings in the post-production process. Most video editing has been superseded by digital editing which is faster and cheaper. Before digital technologies became available magnetic tapes were used to store information these are known as video tapes.

    30. Non-linear editing
    In didgital video editing, non-linear editing is a method that allows you to access any frame in a digital video clip regardless of sequence in the clip. The freedom to access any frame, and use a cut and paste method, similar to the ease of cutting and pasting text in a word processor, and allows you to easily include fades, transitions and other effects that cannot be achieved with linear editing.