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Setting Up Your Shots

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by Jeremy Vineyard




  “Jeremy Vineyard’s Setting Up Your Shots breaks down the prep for shooting with excellent visual accompaniments. The book’s many illustraions explain how and why each shot was chosen and the effect it creates for the audience. Shots is a great asset for conceptualizing setups and for learning more about filmmaking.”

  — Ross Otterman, director, June Cabin

  “Setting Up Your Shots is a great starting place to learn the rules of the road in visual storytelling. And if you’re striving for avant-garde and want to break the rules, it helps to know what they are. This book lays out the basics and with examples. Quick and easy read and reference.”

  — Paul Clatworthy, CTO, PowerProduction Software, www.powerproduction.com

  “Jeremy Vineyard, with wonderful illustrations by Jose Cruz, simplifies complicated shots and takes you beyond amateur filmmaking, into the realm of professional filmmaking. Before you shoot anything — read this book.”

  — Matthew Terry, screenwriter and teacher, www.hollywoodlitsales.com

  “Setting Up Your Shots makes a complicated — and intimidating — subject easy enough for a novice to understand. By reducing the art to concrete terms and combining them with simple illustrations (by Jose Cruz), Vineyard has crafted a primer that can help filmmakers up their game to a higher performance level.”

  — Catherine Clinch, Publisher, www.MomsDigitalWorld.com

  “This ‘widescreen’ — as in horizontal format — tome is a quick-and-easy tutorial on the cinematic language. Supported by excellent storyboards, framing, camera movement and editing techniques are conceptualized simply, along with the emotional and psychological impact behind each choice. A wide variety of movies are cited as examples for you to check out yourself. This is a great reference for beginners and pros alike.”

  — Douglas Bankston, Managing Editor, DV Magazine / DV.com

  Setting Up Your Shots

  Great Camera Moves Every Filmmaker Should Know

  2nd Edition

  Published by Michael Wiese Productions

  12400 Ventura Blvd. #1111

  Studio City, CA 91604

  (818) 379-8799, (818) 986-3408 (FAX).

  mw@mwp.com

  www.mwp.com

  Cover design by The Art Hotel

  Printed and manufactured by McNaughton & Gunn

  Copyright 2008 by Jeremy Vineyard

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review.

  ISBN 978-1-932907-42-1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Vineyard, Jeremy, 1977-

  Setting up your shots : great camera moves every filmmaker should know / Jeremy Vineyard. -- 2nd ed.

  p. cm.

  Includes index.

  ISBN-13: 978-1-932907-42-1

  ISBN-10: 1-932907-42-4

  1. Cinematography. I. Title.

  TR850.V56 2008

  778.5'3--dc22

  2008009566

  Contents

  Acknowledgements

  How to Use This Book

  Introduction

  Basic Cinematic Techniques

  Pan

  Tilt

  Dolly

  Tracking Shot

  Mechanical

  Pull Focus

  Zoom

  Transition

  Montage

  Framing Terms

  Exercises

  Composition Techniques

  Camera Height

  Dramatic Angle

  Extreme Angle

  Bird’s-Eye View

  Screen Direction

  Tilted Horizon

  Canted Angle

  Extreme Close-Up

  Staging

  Deep Staging

  Planar Staging

  Lead the Eye

  3’s and 4’s

  Interior Frame

  Layers

  Multi-Layer Action

  Exercises

  Crane Techniques

  Crane Up, Move Away

  Crane Down, Move Toward

  Searching Crane

  Rise Up

  Fall Down

  Crane Front-to-Top

  Crane Up Entrance

  Crane Up Expression

  Crane Up, Look Down

  Crane Down, Look Up

  Exercises

  Techniques of Movement

  Character Dolly

  Discovery

  Pull Back Retraction

  Pull Back Reveal

  Open Up

  Close Out

  Draw In

  Draw Out

  Spin Around

  Fly Over

  Depth Dolly

  Dolly Up

  Dolly Down

  Spin Look

  Track Through Solid

  Vertigo

  Expand Dolly

  Contract Dolly

  Collapse Dolly

  Long Shot

  Long Take

  Delayed Revelation

  Exercises

  Techniques of Perspective

  POV

  Inventory POV

  POV Object

  POV Projectile

  Tension Away

  Tension to Camera

  Broken Wall

  Voyeur

  Dark Voyeur

  Mask

  Vignette

  Screen

  Reflection

  Portal

  Shadow

  Silhouette

  Subjective

  Exercises

  Camera Techniques

  Whip Pan

  Whip Cut

  Whip Zoom Look

  Search Up

  Back to Front

  Focus Out, Pass Out

  Focus Transition

  Overexpose Fade

  Underexpose Fade

  Ceiling Twist

  Flip Over

  Shifting Angle

  Sleepover

  Exercises

  Editing Techniques

  Jump Cut

  Match Cut

  Impact Cut

  Impact Move

  Thematic Cut

  Thematic Move

  Subliminal Cut

  Cross Cut

  Cutaway

  Freeze Frame

  Look At

  Multi-Take

  Cut Zoom In

  Cut Zoom Out

  Montage Sequence

  Jump Cut Sequence

  Split Screen

  Sub-Clip

  Superimpose

  Fill, Reveal Frame

  Walk, Reveal Frame

  Collage

  Camera Snap

  Photo to Scene

  Impact Flash

  Flashed Cut

  Flashed Jump Cut

  Exercises

  Miscellaneous Techniques

  Cinematic Reality

  Slow Motion

  Fast Motion

  Motion Mixer

  Image Harmony

  Image Dissonance

  Icon

  Particles

  Biomass

  Split Focus

  Lighting

  Color

  Chroma Keying

  Color Seep

  Journey Through Eye

  Rear Projection

  Global Zoom

  Time Slice

  Strobe

  Thematic Filter

  Negative

  Imagery

  Kinetic Imagery

  Lens

  Mixed Media

  Mixing Stocks

  Sound Design

  Voiceover

  CGI Cinema

  X-Files

  Exercises />
  Summary

  About the Authors

  Movies Index

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I found the Internet Movie Database to be invaluable when researching this book. The IMDB is an online reference tool with information on thousands of films, television shows, actors, directors, writers, and more. It can be found at imdb.com.

  Netflix is another good option for those of you who want to keep up on everything from art films to new releases. Again, an easy find at netflix.com.

  Thanks again to Jose Cruz for all his hard work and to Michael Wiese Productions for sending the royalty checks on time. I would also like to thank the many readers who purchased and supported the first edition of this book, making it a top seller in its field. I hope you enjoy the second edition as well.

  HOW TO USE THIS BOOK

  If you are an aspiring filmmaker, this book is an ideal first choice to begin your studies. You can browse through the pages in any order, discovering new cinematic techniques. You can use these techniques in your own short films, watch the movies listed to see how the professionals use them, and expand the domain of your filmmaking knowledge.

  If you are a film buff, you’ll find that this book is easy to understand, even for those who don’t know anything about the film industry. If you want to know more about how movies work, study the techniques and watch for them in your favorite films. The movie-going experience can be made more enjoyable by understanding how cinema works.

  If you are an experienced filmmaker, a storyboard artist, or an animator, use this book as a reference. It is the culmination of years of research. Why should you have to spend that amount of time when it’s already been done for you?

  Stir lightly and enjoy what simmers.

  INTRODUCTION

  This book began in the late ’90s. I couldn’t afford film school so my only option was to teach myself how movies work. How do you go about that? Well, you sit down and watch hundreds of films and you take notes. I started to re-view every scene I had previously watched and enjoyed as a viewer and tried to approach it with an analytical eye.

  There are many common cinematic techniques that are shared across all films. Filmmakers rely on a set of proven “cinematic brush strokes” to communicate specific ideas/emotions to the audience. If these techniques can be categorized, it should help those who are diving into the realms of filmmaking knowledge for the first time.

  Each cinematic technique has been given a unique name — a condensed version of the element’s purpose and description. These names are arbitrary— you can call them whatever you want. The advantage to a label is that it gives you a tool to identify techniques used in the films you watch. This skill will greatly enhance your ability to learn from actively watching films, rather than only passively enjoying them. I have listed example films for many of these techniques, as well as storyboards. If you are interested in a particular technique, why not rent one of the example films?

  Filmmaking is more than a technical skill. It’s about establishing relationships with the cast and crew, becoming a leader, and pursuing your vision. Technical knowledge alone won’t guarantee that you’ll become a great filmmaker, but it will help you become more fluent in the language of your craft.

  NOTES ON THE SECOND EDITION

  As the result of years of research, the second edition has a lot more detail and information. I have added references to over 200 new films (350+ films referenced in total) and several new filmmaking techniques. Even if you already own the first edition, the volume of additional content makes this new version a valuable upgrade.

  The criticisms for the first edition very commonly referred to the book as “too simplistic.” It seems that those who make this claim are missing the point. This book is intended to be a “fast-and-easy” mechanism to quickly gain an overview on filmmaking. Sure, there are several in-depth monster texts out there, but why should everyone be forced to slog through reams of material to get to the “good stuff”? Authors often inflate their egos by including irrelevant and unnecessary information, simply to boost “word count.” Not my thing.

  Sometimes brevity can be the most effective approach.

  BASIC CINEMATIC TECHNIQUES

  I set out to write this book because I wanted to reach beyond the basic cinematic elements that many filmmaking books describe. One of the best ways to learn about these constructs is to watch as many movies as you can. Unfortunately, not everyone who’s interested in filmmaking can dedicate that kind of time to the process. This book simplifies the ordeal by compiling the most common and distinct filmmaking techniques taken from hundreds of films.

  It can’t hurt to go over the basics before we arrive at the next “plateau” of cinematic techniques. I have attempted to provide methods for conceptualizing each element — a way of visualizing what the technique actually looks like. Visualization skills should allow you to look at the world around you in a new, cinematic context. This new sight is similar to what artists see when they start to recognize lines and colors in the world, allowing them to create abstract representations of reality.

  A NOTE ON CRAFT

  The American film industry is not exactly renowned for its focus on craft. It’s a business-oriented machine, where often the realities of cold hard cash outweigh the desires of individual filmmakers to stretch the boundaries of film with unique and interesting ideas. If you do ever manage to secure the financing for a film of your own, you might have only one good chance to demonstrate your skills as a filmmaker. So be prepared.

  PAN

  What does it look like?

  Pan is the horizontal axis of camera movement. When the camera pans, it turns left and right. To conceptualize a Pan, stare straight ahead and turn your head to the left and to the right. Panning is commonly used to look across a very wide panorama that doesn’t fit within the camera frame — a landscape, for example. This technique can be used within a scene to follow characters or vehicles as they move around. This is known as re-framing the shot.

  Where can I see it?

  In Zulu, the camera Pans across a seemingly endless line of Zulus on a hill, toward the British waiting in the foreground. Robert Redford is discovered at the bar with a simple Pan in The Way We Were.

  Pan

  TILT

  What does it look like?

  Tilt is the vertical axis of camera movement. When the camera tilts, it pivots up and down. Tilting is commonly used to look over tall objects such as a cathedral or an office building.

  To conceptualize a Tilt, stare straight ahead and pivot your head to look up and down. Like the Pan, this technique is used within a scene to follow characters in motion — known as re-framing the shot.

  Tilt

  DOLLY, TRACKING SHOT

  What does it look like?

  Also known as a “Tracking Shot,” Dolly is a very natural technique — the camera simply moves horizontally through space. The energy of this technique is similar to a person walking or riding on a moving platform — a wheelchair, for example. To conceptualize a Dolly, turn your head toward what you are interested in. Then walk forward and watch the world go by. This is how a Dolly movement looks to an audience.

  Dolly movements may or may not use an actual dolly. Generally some kind of platform with wheels, the dolly moves along tracks that determine the direction of movement. Tracks must be used because pushing the platform over uneven ground results in shaky and erratic camera movement. The Steadicam is an alternative device that allows a camera to be carried, without experiencing the bumps and jiggles usually associated with handheld camera work. This makes the camera appear to be “floating” through the air. If a camera operator has a steady grip, handheld cameras can create dolly-like movements as well.

  Dolly

  MECHANICAL

  What does it look like?

  Mechanical techniques include the use of devices that allow filmmakers to create unique and interesting camera movements. These are easier to conceptualize when w
e can move as the camera does — which is possible if a device has a platform that we can sit or stand on.

  Cranes and Jibs are the most common examples of mechanical devices. Each of these devices has a mechanical “arm” on which the camera is mounted. This arm hinges on a pivot that frees the camera to move through space, allowing the creation of sweeping, dramatic camera movements.

  There are many other specialized mechanical devices available. Each device creates a unique type of motion that alters the audience’s perception of a film in some special way.

  Crane Sequence

  PULL FOCUS

  What does it look like?

  Pulling Focus is considered a natural camera technique. The camera lens operates similarly to the way our vision functions. Our eyes continually alter focus whenever we look at objects at alternating distances in our field of view.

  We can either be focused on something close to us or on something far away. Since we generally don’t have the ability to focus on both at the same time, our eyes must Pull Focus to compensate.

  When making a film, Pulling Focus is often necessary because most camera lenses don’t keep the entire scene in focus. As the camera pans, tilts, and dollies, a crew member called a “focus puller” will adjust the focus to match whatever the camera is looking at and to compensate as actors move through the scene.

  To conceptualize this technique, consciously focus on objects at different depths as you look around.

  Where can I see it?

  In Apocalypto, the camera shows a man being chased, then quickly Pulls Focus to reveal the group of men chasing him.

  Pull Focus

  ZOOM

  What does it look like?

 

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