- Leave time for errors.
- Know my target audience fully.
- Plan thoroughly.
- Organise my time well.
- Have enthusiasm, dedication and passion for my work.
- Develop very good directorial skills such as being assertive.
- Find reliable performers.
- Make the lip-syncing (if any) as convincing as possible.
- Obtain a good research background.
- Utilize everyone's skills to my advantage.
- Use various suitable locations to make my video unique.
- Frequently use an outsiders perspective of my work in progress.
Shots to be used:
-Extreme Long Shot.
-Long Shot.
-Medium Long Shot.
-Medium Mid-Shot.
-Medium Close-Up.
-Close-Up.
-Extreme Close-Up.
-Over the shoulder shot
-Long Shot.
-Medium Long Shot.
-Medium Mid-Shot.
-Medium Close-Up.
-Close-Up.
-Extreme Close-Up.
-Over the shoulder shot
FRAMING- Where people, props etc. are placed within the frame (the composition)
ANGLES- High angle/ birds eye view (filmed from above)
Low angle/ worms eye view (filmed from below)
MOVEMENT- pan/ panning (Camera moves on pivot, left and right)
Tilt (Camera moves up and down on its pivot, pan up/ pan down)
Track/ Tracking Shot (Camera attached to moving object to 'follow the action')
Shot reverse shot ( a shot that views the action from the opposite side of the previous shot, giving the effect of looking from one actor to the other)
Short take (Shot lasts for a short time)
Short take (Shot lasts for a short time)
Long Take (Camera lingers on the frame)
Editing:
Quick cuts- Shot moves rapidly from one frame/ shot to the next.
Fade- One shot fades away to black then another fades in.
Dissolve- One shot fades away as another fades in.
Wipe- A shot is literally wiped off screen by another.
Slow/ Fast motion- A sequence is slowed down/ sped up.
Flashback -A scene or sequence that is inserted into a scene in "present" time and that deals with the past. The flashback is the past tense.Focus- The sharpness of the image. A range of distances from the camera will be acceptably sharp. Possible to have deep focus, shallow focus.
Focus in, focus out: a punctuation device whereby the image gradually comes into focus or goes out of focus.
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