editing powerpoint

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Editing

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Page 1: Editing Powerpoint

Editing

Page 2: Editing Powerpoint

CUT

Page 3: Editing Powerpoint

CUT

Is the joining of two separate shots

Page 4: Editing Powerpoint

CUT

Is the joining of two separate shots

So that the first shot is instantaneously replaced by the second

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HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

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HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s

Page 7: Editing Powerpoint

HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s - Lumiere Brothers invented the Cinematograph

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Lumiere Bros. Cinematograph: camera, projector, developing machine

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HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s

- Lumiere Brothers invented the Cinematograph

- Lumiere Bros. (Auguste & Louis) early films contained no editing

Page 10: Editing Powerpoint

HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s

- Lumiere Brothers invented the Cinematograph

- Lumiere Bros. (Auguste & Louis) early films contained no editing

- Single-shot recordings (sequence shots)

Page 11: Editing Powerpoint

HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s

- Lumiere Brothers invented the Cinematograph

- Lumiere Bros. (Auguste & Louis) early films contained no editing

- Single-shot recordings (sequence shots)

- Lasted the duration of one roll of film (1-2 minutes)

Page 12: Editing Powerpoint

HISTORICAL AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENTS IN EDITING

MID 1890s

- Lumiere Brothers invented the Cinematograph

- Lumiere Bros. (Auguste & Louis) early films contained no editing

- Single-shot recordings (sequence shots)

- Lasted the duration of one roll of film (1-2 minutes)

-The duration of the shots and the event were equal

Page 13: Editing Powerpoint

George Melies created episodic films by connecting shots: cutting to continuity

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George Melies created episodic films by connecting shots: cutting to continuity

- Editing and camera placement still based on live theatre

Page 15: Editing Powerpoint

George Melies created episodic films by connecting shots: cutting to continuity

- Editing and camera placement still based on live theatre

- Camera is stationary, outside of the action

Page 16: Editing Powerpoint

George Melies created episodic films by connecting shots: cutting to continuity

- Editing and camera placement still based on live theatre

- Camera is stationary, outside of the action

-Similar to curtain coming down and opening in a new location

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“Continuity cutting tries to preserve the fluidity of an event without literally showing all of it” (Giannetti)

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1903-Edwin S. Porter made Life of an American Fireman and The Great Train Robbery

Page 20: Editing Powerpoint

1903-Edwin S. Porter made Life of an American Fireman and The Great Train Robbery

- Porter used editing to create parallel action

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1903-Edwin S. Porter made Life of an AmericanFireman and The Great Train Robbery

- Porter used editing to create parallel action

- Shots are not linear - shot B does not pick up where shot A left off – linked instead by the continuity of an IDEA

The Great Train Robbery (1903), Edwin S. Porter

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1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”- D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

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1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting

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1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting

-Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

Page 25: Editing Powerpoint

1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting

-Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

-Expand visual explanation-

Page 26: Editing Powerpoint

1915 “The Father of Filmmaking” -D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting -Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

-Expand visual explanation--juxtaposing long shots,

Page 27: Editing Powerpoint

1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting -Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

-Expand visual explanation--juxtaposing long shots, -medium shots, close ups, etc.

Page 28: Editing Powerpoint

1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting -Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

-Expand visual explanation--juxtaposing long shots, -medium shots, close ups, etc. - varying the length of shots

Page 29: Editing Powerpoint

1915 “The Father of Filmmaking”-D. W. Griffith makes The Birth of a Nation

-Classical cutting -Editing within scene to vary dramatic intensity

-Expand visual explanation--juxtaposing long shots, -medium shots, close ups, etc. - varying the length of shots -shifting the attention within a scene

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CONTINUITY EDITING:

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CONTINUITY EDITING:

Designed to make editing INVISIBLE

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CONTINUITY EDITING:

Designed to make editing INVISIBLE

- cutting on action: action begins in one shot and ends in another

Page 33: Editing Powerpoint

CONTINUITY EDITING:

Designed to make editing INVISIBLE

- cutting on action: action begins in one shot and ends in another

- cutting on dialogue: motivated by whoever is talking (or listening)

Page 34: Editing Powerpoint

CONTINUITY EDITING:

Designed to make editing INVISIBLE

- cutting on action: action begins in one shot and ends in another

- cutting on dialogue: motivated by whoever is talking (or listening)

- cut on the glance: edit follows the eyes of a character

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CONTINUITY EDITING:

Master shot: A long shot of the entire action without cuts.

Page 36: Editing Powerpoint

CONTINUITY EDITING:

Master shot: A long shot of the entire action without cuts.

The action is then repeated a number to times using medium shots, close ups, etc.

Page 37: Editing Powerpoint

CONTINUITY EDITING:

Master shot: A long shot of the entire action without cuts.

The action is then repeated a number to times using medium shots, close ups, etc.

Without a master shot editors many not have adequate footage

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This end the 1st part of the editing lecture

• The slides after this will be covered in the second week of editing.

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• The Russians *scene 6

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Moscow Film School used film as propaganda

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Moscow Film School used film as propagandaTheir editing style was in direct opposition to American classical cutting

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Moscow Film School used film as propaganda

Their editing style was in direct opposition to American classical cutting

Soviets believed that the power was in the juxtaposition

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Moscow Film School used film as propagandaTheir editing style was in direct opposition to American classical cuttingSoviets believed that the power was in the juxtapositionCuts called attention to themselves

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Moscow Film School used film as propagandaTheir editing style was in direct opposition to American classical cuttingSoviets believed that the power was in the juxtapositionCuts called attention to themselvesThe meaning was made in the edit

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1920s- Lev Kuleshov, Soviet film theorist

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1920s- Lev Kuleshov, Soviet film theorist

- Experimented with juxtaposition

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1920s- Lev Kuleshov, Soviet film theorist

- Experimented with juxtaposition

- Shots cut together to create ideas not contained in either shot on its own

= meaning through editing

Page 48: Editing Powerpoint

1920s- Lev Kuleshov, Soviet film theorist

- Experimented with juxtaposition

- Shots cut together to create ideas not contained in either shot on its own

= meaning through editing

MONTAGE EDITING

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MONTAGE EDITING

Sergei Eisenstein

Sergei Eisenstein

- shots COLLIDE to make meaning

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MONTAGE EDITING

Sergei Eisenstein

- shots COLLIDE to make meaning

-often fragmenting time and space

Page 58: Editing Powerpoint

MONTAGE EDITING

Sergei Eisenstein

- shots COLLIDE to make meaning

-often fragmenting time and space

- montage calls attention to itself, unlike Continuity editing

-the contrast and conflict of images

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SHORT ATTENTION SPAN:MTV/30 SEC. COMMERCIAL INFLUENCES

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SHORT ATTENTION SPAN:MTV/30 SEC. COMMERCIAL INFLUENCES

- “MTV Generation” - grew up watching 30 second TV commercials, and rapidly-edited music videos

Page 61: Editing Powerpoint

SHORT ATTENTION SPAN:MTV/30 SEC. COMMERCIAL INFLUENCES

- “MTV Generation” - grew up watching 30 second TV commercials, and rapidly-edited music videos

- Shots often last a second or two (or less)