Camera Movement - Post 11
Camera Movement
I found the information in this blog post on the video titled, "Ultimate Guide to Camera Movement - Every Camera Movement Technique Explained [The Shot List Ep6]" on YouTube
- Static Shot: Has no camera movement at all, and is used by a tripod settled in a still position.
- Pan Shot: The rotation of thee camera horizontally while remaining still. It can either build anticipation or heighten energy in a scene.
- Tilt: The vertical direction of the camera in a still position, upward or downward. It can show dominance or vulnerability in a character.
- Push-in: When the camera moves towards the subject to appear zooming in on them. It is used to emphasize a particular moment that has narrative significance.
- Pull-out: The opposite of push-in; to disconnect the subjects on screen.
- Zoom: Not a camera movement, but a change in the camera's lens with the focal length. Can be zoomed in or out to reveal context or draw attention to details.
- Dolly Zoom: Uses both movement and the lens to create the vertigo affect; when the foreground and background are inverted in scale.
- Camera Roll: The rotation of the camera on its long axis with the same direction of lens. It creates distortion and the feeling of unsettling.
- Tracking Shot: "Physically moves the camera through the scene," and can follow and move with a subject. It generates the curiosity of the audience by wondering where the subject is going and what they will do once they arrive.
- Trucking: Similar to tracking, it moves the camera laterally, and can follow a subject. It introduces the world and its characters in a story-telling type of way, like reading a book.
- Arc Shot: Camera shot that revolves or orbits the subject. It can create high energy when characters stay still.
- Boom: Moves the camera vertically, up or down, by using a crane, pedestal, or jib. Is used to to reveal information with small movements.
- Handheld: Defined by camera movements that are random, shake, and other obvious or subtle movements. It is typically used to create experiences that are subjective or intimate.
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