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Wikipedia

Film transition

A film transition is a technique used in the post-production process of film editing and video editing by which scenes or shots are combined. Most commonly this is through a normal cut to the next shot. Most films will also include selective use of other transitions, usually to convey a tone or mood, suggest the passage of time, or separate parts of the story. These other transitions may include dissolves, L cuts, fades (usually to black), match cuts, and wipes.

A video editing suite

Shot transitions

 
A film editor at work in 1946.

Every film today, whether it be live-action, computer generated, or traditional hand-drawn animation is made up of hundreds of individual shots that are all placed together during editing to form the single film that is viewed by the audience. The shot transition is the way in which two of these individual shots are joined together.[1]

Caesura

Principally a literary term denoting a rhythmical pause and break in a line of verse. In poetry, the caesura is used to diversify rhythmical progress and thereby enrich accentual verse.[2]

Some applications

The term first gained significance in motion-picture art through the editing experiments of Sergei Eisenstein. In applying his concept of montage as the "collision of shots", Eisenstein often included caesuras – rhythmical breaks – in his films. The acts of The Battleship Potemkin (1925) are separated by caesuras that provide a rhythmical contrast to the preceding action. The intense, frenetic action of the mutiny, for example, is followed by the lyrical journey of a dinghy to the shore. The three Burt Bacharach musical sequences in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) provide contrasting caesuras that separate the major actions of the film. Several intense action sequences in Master and Commander (2003), including a raging sea storm and fight scenes, are followed by caesuras – quiet, scenic interludes that are often accompanied by melodic cello music.[2]

Continuity

The continuity is the development and structuring of film segments and ideas so that the intended meaning is clear, and the transitions employed to connect the film parts. In a more specific meaning, "continuity" refers to the matching of individual scenic elements from shot to shot so that details and actions, filmed at different times, will edit together without error. This process is referred to as "continuity editing". To maintain continuity within sequences, the editor will often cut on character action so that the scene flows together without noticeable jump-cuts (see below). Lapses in the flow of action can be avoided by transition and cutaway devices (see below). Music and sound are often utilized to provide a sense of continuity to a scene or sequences that may contain a variety of unmatched shots taken in different locations. For example, in Rocky (1976), the song "Getting High" served as a continuity device during the highly fragmentary sequence showing Rocky in the various training preparations for his title fight. The song connected the numerous brief shots so that they appeared as a single and complete unit within the film.[3]

Cut

Le type de transition de tir le plus basique, lacoupeest le moyen le plus courant de joindre deux plans. En substance, c’est la continuation de deux plans différents dans le même temps et le même espace. C’est le plus basique en ce sens que le film ne subit aucun processus spécial pour effectuer une coupe; Les deux bandes de film sont simplement jouées l’une après l’autre. En regardant le film, c’est là qu’une image à l’écran est instantanément remplacée par une autre, souvent sous la forme d’un changement d’angle de caméra. Bien que simple dans la construction, le sujet de chaque côté du montage peut avoir des implications profondes dans un film. YouTube (chaîne)[4][1]

Le tir A se termine brusquement et le tir B commence brusquement.[5]

Cutaway

A shot edited into a scene that presents information that is not a part of the first shot. The cutaway shot is usually followed by a return to the original shot, and is often used to condense time in a scene by eliminating undesired action or to cover a loss of continuity in the action. For example, a series of shots of a woman smoking a cigarette may not match correctly in editing because of the varied lengths of cigarette ash from shot to shot. A cutaway to a mantel clock, ticking away the time, would provide enough distraction to cover the loss of continuity. Or the cutaway of the clock could be inserted between a shot of the woman smoking a cigarette and one of the woman reading a book. The cutaway would permit the editor to advance the action in time.[6]

Cut-in

A shot that presents material in a scene in greater detail, usually through a close-up shot. A cut-in isolates and emphasizes an element of the mise-en-scène for dramatic or informational value. Each progressive movement through the shot sequence, from long shot to close-up, constitutes a form of cut-in. A cut-in made from a long shot to a big close-up can have a startling effect on the viewer because of this immediate magnification. This technique is frequently an editing method of suspense films.

Related, there is the insert shot, which is a shot containing visual detail that is inserted into a scene for informational purposes or to provide dramatic emphasis. A close-up view of printed material in a book, intercut as a character reads, is a type of informational point-of-view insert. The intercutting of a close-up view of a gun resting on a desk within a room where a violent argument is occurring constitutes a type of dramatic insert. Detail shot is another term for insert short.[6]

Contrast cut

An editor can strategically cut to juxtapose two subjects. For instance, somebody dreaming of a beautiful field of flowers, shot A, may suddenly wake up inside a burning building, shot B. The sound would be serene and peaceful in shot A, and suddenly loud and painful in shot B. This contrast between peace and chaos is intensified through the sudden transition.[1]

Dynamic cutting

The dynamic cutting is an approach to film editing in which the cutting from one shot to the next is made abruptly apparent to the viewer. In matched cutting or invisible editing, the cuts are not as obvious to the viewer because these approaches adhere to continuity procedures designed to hide the edit -for instance, cutting on action. Dynamic cutting, on the other hand, is self-conscious and will often startle the viewer by moving abruptly in time or space or by rapid cutting within a scene for expressive as well as narrative purposes. Bob Fosse's All That Jazz (1979), Richard Rush's The Stunt Man (1980), and Oliver Stone's JFK (1991) and Natural Born Killers (1994) employed dynamic cutting extensively. Dynamic cutting is a featured editing element in the films of Quentin Tarantino, from Reservoir Dogs (1992) to Django Unchained (2012).[7]

Direct cut

Related to the dynamic cutting, the direct cut is an instantaneous change of shots, usually to a new locale or time frame, and executed without an optical transition device. The direct cut serves to replace, dynamically, one shot with another.[8]

L cut

An L Cut is an editing technique that results in a cut occurring at a different time for audio than for video. For example, we may hear characters' voices a few seconds before we see them on film. In order to achieve this effect, the editor had to make an L-shaped cut on the filmstrip itself. Even today with the advent of computerized non-linear editing systems, the digital representation of the film in the program still takes on this L-shaped appearance.[9]

Match cut

The match cut joins together two pieces of film that contain two similarly shaped objects in similar positions in the frame. One of the most famous examples of this is the edit in 2001: A Space Odyssey where the bone thrown by a prehistoric ape cuts to a futuristic space station.[1]

Invisible cut

Like the match cut, the invisible cut attempts to join two shots with similar frames together. The invisible cut, however, is designed to completely hide the transition from the audience. The audience can deduce a cut has occurred, but they would have a hard time pinpointing the exact moment. E.g., should a character walk towards the camera, completely covering it, the cut is introduced when the back of the character is shown walking away. The invisible cut can also be hidden by a whip pan, entering/leaving a very dark or very light environment, or by an object crossing the screen.

Parallel editing cut

For example, imagine an action scene where a villain is chasing the hero of the film. To spend the entire chase scene trying to keep both the hero and the villain in the frame at the same time will become very difficult and un-engaging after a while. A better way to approach this problem is through the use of parallel cutting. In this example, the scene would consist of several shots of the hero running in one direction, and some shots of the villain running in the same direction. Perhaps the hero looks back, out of frame, at his pursuer. At this point, the editor would insert a shot of the villain. Neither character occupies the same screen space, yet the audience still understands that one is chasing the other.[10] This technique is parodied in the film "Naked Gun 2½" where the editing swaps between showing the hero and the villain firing at each other, then finally in a long shot we realize they are in fact only about four feet away from each other.[11]

Jump cut

A jump cut is usually the result of a continuity error, and not a stylistic choice by the director. A jump cut occurs when a cut, designed to act merely as a camera angle change (less than 30-degrees), reveals a continuity discrepancy between the two shots. For instance, if a character has their hand over their mouth in a medium shot, and not in their close-up, this little detail, which probably was not noticed on set, is now painfully obvious to the viewers.[10]

Defocus transition

The defocus transition is a type of transition accomplished by rolling the lens focus until the scene becomes blurred. Passage of time within a scene can be suggested by refocusing the shot after alterations are made in the scene: change of costume, lighting, and other continuity elements. The defocus device has also been frequently employed in transitions to dream or fantasy sequences.[12]

Fade in/out

A fade occurs when the picture gradually turns to a single color, 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 typically found at the end of a film or act.[13]

Dissolve

A dissolve transition between two still images

Like the fade, a dissolve involves gradually changing the visibility of the picture. However, rather than transitioning from a shot to a color, a dissolve is when a shot changes into another shot gradually. Dissolves, like cuts, can be used to create a link between two different objects, a man telling a story, and a visual of his story, for instance.[13]

Ripple dissolve

A ripple dissolve is a type of transition characterized by a wavering image that is usually employed to indicate a change to flashback material, commonly a character's memory of an event. Sometimes the ripple dissolve is used as a transition to an imagined event or action. A series of three ripple dissolved appeared in Mamma mia! (2008) as Donna (Meryl Streep) discovers her three former lovers in the attic of her Greek villa. The brief ripple dissolved transport each man visually back in time to reveal their 1960's "hippy", "love children" appearances as Donna remembers them.[14]

Washout

The washout is an optical transition used for editing purposes that is similar to the fade. Unlike the fade-out, where the images fade to black, in a washout the images suddenly start to bleach out or to color until the screen becomes a frame of white or colored light. A new scene will then follow.

Also, the washout is the most extreme form of overexposure, which is the act of exposing each frame of film to more light or for a longer period of time than would be required to produce a "normal" exposure of the same subject. There is little or no visible detail in the highlights - the bright areas of the picture - and images appear bleached, more or less washed out. The effect is accomplished by directing the camera at a bright light source that would wash out most, if not all, of the frame area, or by having the effect processed in the film laboratory. While in 2014 some motion-picture directors were still opting for film emulsion-based photographic materials rather than digitally retrieved imagery, the number doing so was rapidly decreasing.[15]

Some applications

Ingmar Bergman made extensive use of the washout in this psychological film Cries and Whispers (1972). Bergman varied the technique for both the purposes of transition and for continuing his expressive use of color in the picture. The washouts would bring a single, rich color to the end of a scene to symbolize the emotions and psychological passions at work in the story. Washouts were also effectively employed in the fantasy sequences of Catch-22 (1970). Monster (2003) concludes with a washout as Aileen Wuornos (Charlize Theron) leaves the courtroom after she is sentenced to death. Similarly, a slow washout to white brings Hours (2012) to a tearful but happy conclusion in a shot where a father (Paul Walker) cuddles his premature daughter, whose life he has saved in a New Orleans hospital without electricity while Hurricane Katrina rages.[16]

Wipe

A wipe involves one shot replacing another, traveling from one side of the frame to another. Think of a vertical line passing from the right side of the frame to the left. On the left side of this line, we have shot A, and on the right side of this line is shot B. When this line reaches the left edge of the frame, shot B will completely fill the scene, and the transition is complete. This example describes a vertical line wipe, though this is but one type of wipe.

Another common type of wipe uses objects in the scene, rather than an invisible vertical line. One interesting application of this creates the illusion of a camera passing through the ceiling of the bottom floor of a multi-story house to the ground of 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 gives the impression the camera is passing between the floors of a house.

Natural wipe

A transition technique accomplished by an element within the mise-en-scène rather than by a laboratory process. A character or an object is brought to the lens of the camera and wipes away the scene by completely blocking or blurring the frame. A closing door often serves as a natural wipe. The natural wipe is followed by a new scene. A head-on, tail-away transition is a type of natural wipe that is used to end one scene and to reveal another.[17]

Iris wipe

The wipe shape can also be circular through the use of the camera's iris. By closing the iris, a blurry circle sweeps inwards to the middle of the frame, drawing attention to the subject occupying this center space.[1]

Morph

Although not always confined to shot transitions, a morph can be thought of as a dissolve combined with a visual effect. Rather than simply blending the colors together, a morph is able to gradually reshape an object to become another object, creating a much stronger connection than a simple dissolve can provide. One famous example of this can be found towards the end of the film Saving Private Ryan. The face of young private Ryan (played by actor Matt Damon)[18] is slowly morphed back to an older private Ryan (played by Harrison Young),[18] while at the same time the background is dissolved from a besieged city during World War 2, into a graveyard set in the modern day; there is no doubt in the audience's mind about the two men being one and the same.

Sound effects

Overlapping sound

An overlapping sound is usually a sound effect or speech that continues briefly from one shot into the next. Overlapping sound may be a sound advance, where a speech or sound effect in an incoming shot is heard briefly in the outgoing shot. Overlapping sound may be used to connect, dynamically, two separate pieces of dramatic action or to enhance the pace of story development.[19]

Sound advance / sound bridge

It is the advancement of a sound, to be heard in a new shot or scene, taken from the end of the preceding scene. Sound advances, common in modern films, are actually combined with cut transitions to pull the action of the story forward in a dynamic manner.[20]

Some applications

Alfred Hitchcock fairly well patented the sound advance in his 1929 classic Blackmail. A young woman (Anny Ondra) wandering the streets of London in shock after killing a man, comes upon a drunk lying on the pavement, his arm extended in the same manner as the artist just murdered by the woman in his studio apartment. The image of the arm seems to precipitate a scream from the young woman. A cut, however, reveals that the scream is coming from a landlady who has just discovered the dead artist's body in his apartment. The sound advance also has conceptual, satirical, and dramatic possibilities. In Five Easy Pieces (1970), the unexpected sound of a bowling ball rolling down a bowling lane is heard in the final seconds of a scene in a motel room where Jack Nicholson has taken a girlfriend. Just as the ball strikes the tenpin, a cut is made to a new scene where Nicholson is bowling with the woman. The combined sound advance and the cut transition together serve as a sexual metaphor.[20]

Asynchronous sound

An asynchronous sound is a term for sound that has not been synchronized with the screen image. Asynchronous sound also includes aesthetic use of sound for expressive purposes. Because of the composite nature of film art, the element of sound (music, dialogue, sound effects) is highly manipulative. The sounds of a clucking chicken can be juxtaposed with a shot of a ranting politician for satirical effect.

A popular variation of asynchronous sound in contemporary filmmaking has been in the use of sound advances in the editing scenes. An asynchronous sound advance can occur when the editor shows the face of a character screaming in horror, and instead of using the natural sound of the character's horrified voice, inserts the piercing, shrill siren of a police car, to be seen in the following scene. The device of the sound advance combines asynchronous and synchronous sound in a uniquely cinematic way. Francis Ford Coppola made extensive use of combined synchronous-asynchronous sound in the baptism scene of The Godfather (1972). Near the end of the film, shots of a solemn religious ceremony are juxtaposed with scenes of a vendetta occurring simultaneously in various parts of the city. The sounds of the grand church music and priestly intonations of the baptismal rite continue uninterrupted as the gunmen carry out their tasks. Phone Through the use of synchronous-asynchronous sound, and visual crosscutting, an ironic, psychological linking of past, present, and future occurs. Asynchronous sound can serve to create irony between sound and image, to satirize and parody dramatic situations, and to link separate moments of time in expressive ways.[21]

Psychological time

Psychological time is a term referring to the use of filming devices that, in the continuity of a motion-picture narrative, suggest not chronological time but time as it is perceived by a character's mind. A dissolve (see above) for example, most commonly reveals a passage of time when used within an ongoing scene. The dissolve, by tradition, serves to include intervening time and action. If however, a dissolve rather than a cut is used in a continuing uninterrupted action, its unconventional placement carries psychological implications. Subjectively inspired psychodramas by experimental filmmakers, such as Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) by Maya Deren, often exploit the psychological dissolve for a mind's-time effect. Psychological time can also be suggested by the repeated use of a piece of action. The condemned traitor's final, desperate effort in An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge (1962) to reach his wife is conveyed in psychological time by a repeated telephoto shot of the man running down the road to his home. He appears suspended in time and place, which in fact he is; shortly after these shot repetitions the viewer discovers that the traitor's entire flight has been a fantasy revealed through an extended use of psychological time. A particularly engaging and sometimes bewildering use of psychological character perception accurs in Memento (2000), a film about a man who is searching for his wife's murderer. The search is complicated by the fact that the man has lost his short-term memory. Events come and go on the screen without their meaning being clear at first revelation. Psychological time is a distinguishing element in Shane Carruth's 2013 experimental science-fiction film Upstream Color. Avoiding a well-made narrative structure, the plot of Upstream Color centers on a man and woman who are targets of parasitic engineering and whose lives dissolve into mental and psychological disarray. Time is rendered in abrupt, discontinuous fragments, with daily reality intermingling with mental apparitions and abstract imagery.[22]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bernard F. Dick (2010). Anatomy of Film - Sixth Edition. Bedford/St.Martin's. ISBN 978-0-312-48711-9.
  2. ^ a b Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  3. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  4. ^ jeux vidéo, jeux vidéo. [le mayeur jeux vidéo "le mayeur jeux vidéo"]. youtube. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  5. ^ Ascher, Steven, and Edward Pincus. The Filmmaker's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide for the Digital Age. New York: Plume, 1999.
  6. ^ a b Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  7. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  8. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  9. ^ "Bright Hub - What is an L Cut?". Retrieved March 20, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Timothy Corrigan, Patricia White (2009). The Film Experience, An Introduction - Second Edition. Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0-312-55533-7.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on March 8, 2011. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
  12. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  13. ^ a b William H. Phillips (2009). Film, An Introduction - Fourth Edition. Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0-312-48725-6.
  14. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  15. ^ Beavery, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  16. ^ Beavery, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 284–285. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  17. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  18. ^ a b "IMDB - Saving Private Ryan". Retrieved March 20, 2011.
  19. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. p. 203. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  20. ^ a b Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 247–248. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  21. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.
  22. ^ Beaver, Frank (2015). Dictionary of Film Terms. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 222–223. ISBN 978-1-4331-2727-4.

External links

  • Adobe Premiere Pro Help | Video effects and transitions

film, transition, film, transition, technique, used, post, production, process, film, editing, video, editing, which, scenes, shots, combined, most, commonly, this, through, normal, next, shot, most, films, will, also, include, selective, other, transitions, u. A film transition is a technique used in the post production process of film editing and video editing by which scenes or shots are combined Most commonly this is through a normal cut to the next shot Most films will also include selective use of other transitions usually to convey a tone or mood suggest the passage of time or separate parts of the story These other transitions may include dissolves L cuts fades usually to black match cuts and wipes A video editing suite Contents 1 Shot transitions 1 1 Caesura 1 1 1 Some applications 1 2 Continuity 1 3 Cut 1 3 1 Cutaway 1 3 2 Cut in 1 3 3 Contrast cut 1 3 4 Dynamic cutting 1 3 5 Direct cut 1 3 6 L cut 1 3 7 Match cut 1 3 8 Invisible cut 1 3 9 Parallel editing cut 1 3 10 Jump cut 1 4 Defocus transition 1 5 Fade in out 1 5 1 Dissolve 1 5 2 Ripple dissolve 1 6 Washout 1 6 1 Some applications 1 7 Wipe 1 7 1 Natural wipe 1 7 2 Iris wipe 1 8 Morph 1 9 Sound effects 1 9 1 Overlapping sound 1 9 2 Sound advance sound bridge 1 9 2 1 Some applications 1 9 3 Asynchronous sound 1 10 Psychological time 2 References 3 External linksShot transitions Edit A film editor at work in 1946 Every film today whether it be live action computer generated or traditional hand drawn animation is made up of hundreds of individual shots that are all placed together during editing to form the single film that is viewed by the audience The shot transition is the way in which two of these individual shots are joined together 1 Caesura Edit Principally a literary term denoting a rhythmical pause and break in a line of verse In poetry the caesura is used to diversify rhythmical progress and thereby enrich accentual verse 2 Some applications Edit The term first gained significance in motion picture art through the editing experiments of Sergei Eisenstein In applying his concept of montage as the collision of shots Eisenstein often included caesuras rhythmical breaks in his films The acts of The Battleship Potemkin 1925 are separated by caesuras that provide a rhythmical contrast to the preceding action The intense frenetic action of the mutiny for example is followed by the lyrical journey of a dinghy to the shore The three Burt Bacharach musical sequences in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 provide contrasting caesuras that separate the major actions of the film Several intense action sequences in Master and Commander 2003 including a raging sea storm and fight scenes are followed by caesuras quiet scenic interludes that are often accompanied by melodic cello music 2 Continuity Edit The continuity is the development and structuring of film segments and ideas so that the intended meaning is clear and the transitions employed to connect the film parts In a more specific meaning continuity refers to the matching of individual scenic elements from shot to shot so that details and actions filmed at different times will edit together without error This process is referred to as continuity editing To maintain continuity within sequences the editor will often cut on character action so that the scene flows together without noticeable jump cuts see below Lapses in the flow of action can be avoided by transition and cutaway devices see below Music and sound are often utilized to provide a sense of continuity to a scene or sequences that may contain a variety of unmatched shots taken in different locations For example in Rocky 1976 the song Getting High served as a continuity device during the highly fragmentary sequence showing Rocky in the various training preparations for his title fight The song connected the numerous brief shots so that they appeared as a single and complete unit within the film 3 Cut Edit Le type de transition de tir le plus basique lacoupeest le moyen le plus courant de joindre deux plans En substance c est la continuation de deux plans differents dans le meme temps et le meme espace C est le plus basique en ce sens que le film ne subit aucun processus special pour effectuer une coupe Les deux bandes de film sont simplement jouees l une apres l autre En regardant le film c est la qu une image a l ecran est instantanement remplacee par une autre souvent sous la forme d un changement d angle de camera Bien que simple dans la construction le sujet de chaque cote du montage peut avoir des implications profondes dans un film YouTube chaine 4 1 Le tir A se termine brusquement et le tir B commence brusquement 5 Cutaway Edit Main article Cutaway filmmaking A shot edited into a scene that presents information that is not a part of the first shot The cutaway shot is usually followed by a return to the original shot and is often used to condense time in a scene by eliminating undesired action or to cover a loss of continuity in the action For example a series of shots of a woman smoking a cigarette may not match correctly in editing because of the varied lengths of cigarette ash from shot to shot A cutaway to a mantel clock ticking away the time would provide enough distraction to cover the loss of continuity Or the cutaway of the clock could be inserted between a shot of the woman smoking a cigarette and one of the woman reading a book The cutaway would permit the editor to advance the action in time 6 Cut in Edit A shot that presents material in a scene in greater detail usually through a close up shot A cut in isolates and emphasizes an element of the mise en scene for dramatic or informational value Each progressive movement through the shot sequence from long shot to close up constitutes a form of cut in A cut in made from a long shot to a big close up can have a startling effect on the viewer because of this immediate magnification This technique is frequently an editing method of suspense films Related there is the insert shot which is a shot containing visual detail that is inserted into a scene for informational purposes or to provide dramatic emphasis A close up view of printed material in a book intercut as a character reads is a type of informational point of view insert The intercutting of a close up view of a gun resting on a desk within a room where a violent argument is occurring constitutes a type of dramatic insert Detail shot is another term for insert short 6 Contrast cut Edit An editor can strategically cut to juxtapose two subjects For instance somebody dreaming of a beautiful field of flowers shot A may suddenly wake up inside a burning building shot B The sound would be serene and peaceful in shot A and suddenly loud and painful in shot B This contrast between peace and chaos is intensified through the sudden transition 1 Dynamic cutting Edit The dynamic cutting is an approach to film editing in which the cutting from one shot to the next is made abruptly apparent to the viewer In matched cutting or invisible editing the cuts are not as obvious to the viewer because these approaches adhere to continuity procedures designed to hide the edit for instance cutting on action Dynamic cutting on the other hand is self conscious and will often startle the viewer by moving abruptly in time or space or by rapid cutting within a scene for expressive as well as narrative purposes Bob Fosse s All That Jazz 1979 Richard Rush s The Stunt Man 1980 and Oliver Stone s JFK 1991 and Natural Born Killers 1994 employed dynamic cutting extensively Dynamic cutting is a featured editing element in the films of Quentin Tarantino from Reservoir Dogs 1992 to Django Unchained 2012 7 Direct cut Edit Related to the dynamic cutting the direct cut is an instantaneous change of shots usually to a new locale or time frame and executed without an optical transition device The direct cut serves to replace dynamically one shot with another 8 L cut Edit Main article L cut An L Cut is an editing technique that results in a cut occurring at a different time for audio than for video For example we may hear characters voices a few seconds before we see them on film In order to achieve this effect the editor had to make an L shaped cut on the filmstrip itself Even today with the advent of computerized non linear editing systems the digital representation of the film in the program still takes on this L shaped appearance 9 Match cut Edit Main article Match cut The match cut joins together two pieces of film that contain two similarly shaped objects in similar positions in the frame One of the most famous examples of this is the edit in 2001 A Space Odyssey where the bone thrown by a prehistoric ape cuts to a futuristic space station 1 Invisible cut Edit Like the match cut the invisible cut attempts to join two shots with similar frames together The invisible cut however is designed to completely hide the transition from the audience The audience can deduce a cut has occurred but they would have a hard time pinpointing the exact moment E g should a character walk towards the camera completely covering it the cut is introduced when the back of the character is shown walking away The invisible cut can also be hidden by a whip pan entering leaving a very dark or very light environment or by an object crossing the screen Parallel editing cut Edit For example imagine an action scene where a villain is chasing the hero of the film To spend the entire chase scene trying to keep both the hero and the villain in the frame at the same time will become very difficult and un engaging after a while A better way to approach this problem is through the use of parallel cutting In this example the scene would consist of several shots of the hero running in one direction and some shots of the villain running in the same direction Perhaps the hero looks back out of frame at his pursuer At this point the editor would insert a shot of the villain Neither character occupies the same screen space yet the audience still understands that one is chasing the other 10 This technique is parodied in the film Naked Gun 2 where the editing swaps between showing the hero and the villain firing at each other then finally in a long shot we realize they are in fact only about four feet away from each other 11 Jump cut Edit Main article Jump cut A jump cut is usually the result of a continuity error and not a stylistic choice by the director A jump cut occurs when a cut designed to act merely as a camera angle change less than 30 degrees reveals a continuity discrepancy between the two shots For instance if a character has their hand over their mouth in a medium shot and not in their close up this little detail which probably was not noticed on set is now painfully obvious to the viewers 10 Defocus transition Edit The defocus transition is a type of transition accomplished by rolling the lens focus until the scene becomes blurred Passage of time within a scene can be suggested by refocusing the shot after alterations are made in the scene change of costume lighting and other continuity elements The defocus device has also been frequently employed in transitions to dream or fantasy sequences 12 Fade in out Edit A fade occurs when the picture gradually turns to a single color 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 typically found at the end of a film or act 13 Dissolve Edit source source source source source source A dissolve transition between two still images Main article Dissolve filmmaking Like the fade a dissolve involves gradually changing the visibility of the picture However rather than transitioning from a shot to a color a dissolve is when a shot changes into another shot gradually Dissolves like cuts can be used to create a link between two different objects a man telling a story and a visual of his story for instance 13 Ripple dissolve Edit A ripple dissolve is a type of transition characterized by a wavering image that is usually employed to indicate a change to flashback material commonly a character s memory of an event Sometimes the ripple dissolve is used as a transition to an imagined event or action A series of three ripple dissolved appeared in Mamma mia 2008 as Donna Meryl Streep discovers her three former lovers in the attic of her Greek villa The brief ripple dissolved transport each man visually back in time to reveal their 1960 s hippy love children appearances as Donna remembers them 14 Washout Edit The washout is an optical transition used for editing purposes that is similar to the fade Unlike the fade out where the images fade to black in a washout the images suddenly start to bleach out or to color until the screen becomes a frame of white or colored light A new scene will then follow Also the washout is the most extreme form of overexposure which is the act of exposing each frame of film to more light or for a longer period of time than would be required to produce a normal exposure of the same subject There is little or no visible detail in the highlights the bright areas of the picture and images appear bleached more or less washed out The effect is accomplished by directing the camera at a bright light source that would wash out most if not all of the frame area or by having the effect processed in the film laboratory While in 2014 some motion picture directors were still opting for film emulsion based photographic materials rather than digitally retrieved imagery the number doing so was rapidly decreasing 15 Some applications Edit Ingmar Bergman made extensive use of the washout in this psychological film Cries and Whispers 1972 Bergman varied the technique for both the purposes of transition and for continuing his expressive use of color in the picture The washouts would bring a single rich color to the end of a scene to symbolize the emotions and psychological passions at work in the story Washouts were also effectively employed in the fantasy sequences of Catch 22 1970 Monster 2003 concludes with a washout as Aileen Wuornos Charlize Theron leaves the courtroom after she is sentenced to death Similarly a slow washout to white brings Hours 2012 to a tearful but happy conclusion in a shot where a father Paul Walker cuddles his premature daughter whose life he has saved in a New Orleans hospital without electricity while Hurricane Katrina rages 16 Wipe Edit Main article Wipe transition A wipe involves one shot replacing another traveling from one side of the frame to another Think of a vertical line passing from the right side of the frame to the left On the left side of this line we have shot A and on the right side of this line is shot B When this line reaches the left edge of the frame shot B will completely fill the scene and the transition is complete This example describes a vertical line wipe though this is but one type of wipe Another common type of wipe uses objects in the scene rather than an invisible vertical line One interesting application of this creates the illusion of a camera passing through the ceiling of the bottom floor of a multi story house to the ground of 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 gives the impression the camera is passing between the floors of a house Natural wipe Edit A transition technique accomplished by an element within the mise en scene rather than by a laboratory process A character or an object is brought to the lens of the camera and wipes away the scene by completely blocking or blurring the frame A closing door often serves as a natural wipe The natural wipe is followed by a new scene A head on tail away transition is a type of natural wipe that is used to end one scene and to reveal another 17 Iris wipe Edit The wipe shape can also be circular through the use of the camera s iris By closing the iris a blurry circle sweeps inwards to the middle of the frame drawing attention to the subject occupying this center space 1 Morph Edit Main article Morphing Although not always confined to shot transitions a morph can be thought of as a dissolve combined with a visual effect Rather than simply blending the colors together a morph is able to gradually reshape an object to become another object creating a much stronger connection than a simple dissolve can provide One famous example of this can be found towards the end of the film Saving Private Ryan The face of young private Ryan played by actor Matt Damon 18 is slowly morphed back to an older private Ryan played by Harrison Young 18 while at the same time the background is dissolved from a besieged city during World War 2 into a graveyard set in the modern day there is no doubt in the audience s mind about the two men being one and the same Sound effects Edit Overlapping sound Edit An overlapping sound is usually a sound effect or speech that continues briefly from one shot into the next Overlapping sound may be a sound advance where a speech or sound effect in an incoming shot is heard briefly in the outgoing shot Overlapping sound may be used to connect dynamically two separate pieces of dramatic action or to enhance the pace of story development 19 Sound advance sound bridge Edit It is the advancement of a sound to be heard in a new shot or scene taken from the end of the preceding scene Sound advances common in modern films are actually combined with cut transitions to pull the action of the story forward in a dynamic manner 20 Some applications Edit Alfred Hitchcock fairly well patented the sound advance in his 1929 classic Blackmail A young woman Anny Ondra wandering the streets of London in shock after killing a man comes upon a drunk lying on the pavement his arm extended in the same manner as the artist just murdered by the woman in his studio apartment The image of the arm seems to precipitate a scream from the young woman A cut however reveals that the scream is coming from a landlady who has just discovered the dead artist s body in his apartment The sound advance also has conceptual satirical and dramatic possibilities In Five Easy Pieces 1970 the unexpected sound of a bowling ball rolling down a bowling lane is heard in the final seconds of a scene in a motel room where Jack Nicholson has taken a girlfriend Just as the ball strikes the tenpin a cut is made to a new scene where Nicholson is bowling with the woman The combined sound advance and the cut transition together serve as a sexual metaphor 20 Asynchronous sound Edit An asynchronous sound is a term for sound that has not been synchronized with the screen image Asynchronous sound also includes aesthetic use of sound for expressive purposes Because of the composite nature of film art the element of sound music dialogue sound effects is highly manipulative The sounds of a clucking chicken can be juxtaposed with a shot of a ranting politician for satirical effect A popular variation of asynchronous sound in contemporary filmmaking has been in the use of sound advances in the editing scenes An asynchronous sound advance can occur when the editor shows the face of a character screaming in horror and instead of using the natural sound of the character s horrified voice inserts the piercing shrill siren of a police car to be seen in the following scene The device of the sound advance combines asynchronous and synchronous sound in a uniquely cinematic way Francis Ford Coppola made extensive use of combined synchronous asynchronous sound in the baptism scene of The Godfather 1972 Near the end of the film shots of a solemn religious ceremony are juxtaposed with scenes of a vendetta occurring simultaneously in various parts of the city The sounds of the grand church music and priestly intonations of the baptismal rite continue uninterrupted as the gunmen carry out their tasks Phone Through the use of synchronous asynchronous sound and visual crosscutting an ironic psychological linking of past present and future occurs Asynchronous sound can serve to create irony between sound and image to satirize and parody dramatic situations and to link separate moments of time in expressive ways 21 Psychological time Edit Psychological time is a term referring to the use of filming devices that in the continuity of a motion picture narrative suggest not chronological time but time as it is perceived by a character s mind A dissolve see above for example most commonly reveals a passage of time when used within an ongoing scene The dissolve by tradition serves to include intervening time and action If however a dissolve rather than a cut is used in a continuing uninterrupted action its unconventional placement carries psychological implications Subjectively inspired psychodramas by experimental filmmakers such as Meshes of the Afternoon 1943 by Maya Deren often exploit the psychological dissolve for a mind s time effect Psychological time can also be suggested by the repeated use of a piece of action The condemned traitor s final desperate effort in An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge 1962 to reach his wife is conveyed in psychological time by a repeated telephoto shot of the man running down the road to his home He appears suspended in time and place which in fact he is shortly after these shot repetitions the viewer discovers that the traitor s entire flight has been a fantasy revealed through an extended use of psychological time A particularly engaging and sometimes bewildering use of psychological character perception accurs in Memento 2000 a film about a man who is searching for his wife s murderer The search is complicated by the fact that the man has lost his short term memory Events come and go on the screen without their meaning being clear at first revelation Psychological time is a distinguishing element in Shane Carruth s 2013 experimental science fiction film Upstream Color Avoiding a well made narrative structure the plot of Upstream Color centers on a man and woman who are targets of parasitic engineering and whose lives dissolve into mental and psychological disarray Time is rendered in abrupt discontinuous fragments with daily reality intermingling with mental apparitions and abstract imagery 22 References Edit a b c d e Bernard F Dick 2010 Anatomy of Film Sixth Edition Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 0 312 48711 9 a b Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 39 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 64 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 jeux video jeux video le mayeur jeux video le mayeur jeux video youtube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Ascher Steven and Edward Pincus The Filmmaker s Handbook A Comprehensive Guide for the Digital Age New York Plume 1999 a b Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 75 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang pp 96 97 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 84 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Bright Hub What is an L Cut Retrieved March 20 2011 a b Timothy Corrigan Patricia White 2009 The Film Experience An Introduction Second Edition Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 0 312 55533 7 TV Tropes Naked Gun Series Archived from the original on March 8 2011 Retrieved March 20 2011 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 77 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 a b William H Phillips 2009 Film An Introduction Fourth Edition Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 0 312 48725 6 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 233 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beavery Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 105 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beavery Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang pp 284 285 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 193 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 a b IMDB Saving Private Ryan Retrieved March 20 2011 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang p 203 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 a b Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang pp 247 248 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang pp 21 22 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 Beaver Frank 2015 Dictionary of Film Terms New York Peter Lang pp 222 223 ISBN 978 1 4331 2727 4 External links EditAdobe Premiere Pro Help Video effects and transitions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Film transition amp oldid 1129821479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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