A shot that is closer than a wide shot and you can see the person from head to toe, but you can still see what's around them. Many times the action is best displayed using this full-body shot.
What is a Long Shot?
A shot that shows someone from just below their waist to just above their head and you are close enough to see actor's expressions but can see what the actors are doing with their hands as well?.
What is a medium shot?
The shot that the camera on its bank axis which slants the horizon and is used to create tension in a scene?.
What is a Dutch Angle?
Part of the preproduction (or planning) process that can include creating a logline, character development, scripting, and sound design.
What is Storyboarding?
When you visually dividing the width and height of the frame into three parts and you try to put the most important object at one of the intersections (top left, top right, bottom left, bottom right).
What is Rule of Thirds?
A shot which is taken from a long way away showing the surroundings and the actor(s).
What is a Wide Shot?
A shot that shows just the head of the person being filmed and you can use this sort of shot when it's important to see someone's expression.
What is a Close-Up Shot?
The shot that the camera is moving into the shot, getting closer to the action? This is similar to zooming in on the action.
What is Dolly?
Include dialog or narration, sound effects, and music.
What is sound design?
When you do not let the horizon (either artistic or geographic) split the frame in half.
What is horizontal placement?
A shot that shows the actors eyes and mouth.
What is an Extreme Close-Up?
A shot that only one actors are in the frame.
What is a One-Shot?
The shot where the lateral movement of the camera and reveals a wide section and follows an actor or an object, so the background is actually moving through the frame?.
What is Trucking?
A cartoon was Walt Disney credited with creating the modern storyboard in 1933.
What is the 3 Little Pigs?
Usually identified by millimeter measurements and has Wide-angle lens: around 12 mm; Normal lens: 24 to 50 mm, and Telephoto lens: 100 to 200 mm.
What is a Camera Lens?
A shot that 3 actors and the angle the camera so that the focal point actor is closest.
What is a three-Shot?
A shot that only two actors are in the frame?
What is a Two-Shot?
The shot where you are rotating the camera on a tripod to slowly reveal a wide section.
What is Pan?
Usually done using one, two, or three panels per page and should include action and dialogue.
What is a storyboard?
The shot by hinting at the new location in the final frame prior to the cut?.
What is Transition?
A shot is an Over the Shoulder and puts focus on the character facing the camera.
What is OTS Shot?
A shot that lets the audience know where the action is taking place and usually, your audience has to understand the setting at or near the beginning.
What is an Establishing Shot?
A 1930's movie that was storyboarded.
What is "Gone with the Wind"?
Allows everyone to share ideas equally and promotes consensus; Cost effective, accurate planning; Communication with client funding the project;
What are the benefits of Storyboarding?
Stephen Spielberg, George Lucas, Cohen Brothers
What are present day directors?