FILM 2000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: 30-Degree Rule, Continuity Editing, Long Shot
Document Summary
Process by which different images or shots are linked together. Sketches out each shot of a film in similar fashion. Crosscutting alternating between two or more strands of simultaneous action. Parallel editing alternating between two or more strands of simultaneous action. Used by showmen to project successive images and create illusions of the supernatural. Intercut interspersed; cut back and forth between two or more scenes. Editing that maximizes the effect of the juxtaposition of disparate shots. An independent idea is formed in the mind of the viewer based on the collision of different shots. Gives the viewer the impression that the action unfolds with spatiotemporal consistency. Each shot has a continuous relationship to the next shot. It uses cuts and other transitions to establish verisimilitude and tell stories efficiently. Editing visibly disrupted continuity by creating ruptures in the story, radically condensing or expanding time, or confusing the relationship among past, present, and future.