Mise-en-scene:
-Costume - What they are wearing
-Setting/Location - Where they are
-Props - What props are in shot
-Lighting - What lighting is being used
-Body language and blocking - What the actors body language is like and where they are all positioned
-Makeup
Lighting:
-Key light - Main bright ceiling light
-Fill light - Fills in shadows from the side
-Back light - Lighting from the back (creates a silhouette)
-High key lighting - Bright
-Low key lighting - Dark
Camera work
Shot composition:
-Two shot - Two people in the shot
-180 degree rule - Camera can only film on one side of the line established between the characters
-High angled/birds eye view shot - Can make the people look either small or vulnerable
-Low angled shot - Gives the person power
-Eye level
-Tilted angle - Tilted shot makes the audience feel disorientated
Camera work:
-Panning - When the camera pivots from side to side
-Tilt - Camera goes up and down
-Tracking - When the camera follows someone/thing
-Reverse tracking - Tracking backwards
-Dolly shot - Small smooth movements
-Crane shot - When the camera is mounted on a crane
-Zoom
Editing
Continuity Editing:
-Invisible editing - Makes the action flow smoothly
-180 degree rule
-Eye line match
-Cross cutting - Cuts from two different scenes can show whats going on at the same time
-Action match - Cutting from a wide shot to a close up two different shots
-Graphic match - Two shots chosen for graphic similarities e.g orange and a clock both round
-Shot-reverse-shot - Used during conversation camera cuts back and forth from each person
Transition:
-Cuts/hard cut - One image stops and the other starts immediately
-Dissolve/cross fade - Images on top of each other
-Fade in/out
-Jump cut - Scenes of a cut put together which can show someone being impatient or fidgety
-Montage - Shots chosen for the thematic action often used to show development and crunch time.
Sound:
-Diegetic - Sound from within the story (The actors and audience can hear it)
-Non-diegetic - Sound that has been added (Only the audience can hear it)
-Soundtrack (score) - Music chosen to go with a scene
-Sound effects - Added in post production (Gun fire, explosions, laughter)
-Theme music - Soundtrack for a show or a specific person e.g Eastenders and James Bond
-Ambient sound - Natural sounds from the environment (diegetic)
-Dialogue - What the actors are saying
-Sound bridge - Sound track that bridges together two different scenes.
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