Communication Process
SHOT SIZES
CAMERA MOVEMENT
CAMERA ANGLE
ROLES IN FILM
100

The person who initiates the communication, having a need or desire to share information.

SENDER

100

Frames the subject from the waist up. This is the standard shot for dialogue or showing character interaction.

MS

100

The camera pivots horizontally left or right, typically on a tripod, to follow action or reveal a scene.

PAN

100

Camera is below the subject looking up, making them appear powerful, heroic, or threatening.

LOW ANGLE SHOT

100

 the "face" of the production who works with directors to create emotionally impactful scenes, primarily by delivering multiple takes of dialogue or actions.

ACTOR

200

 Translating the idea into a message using symbols, words, or gestures that the receiver can understand. (The process where you should think before you communicate)

ENCODING

200

 Frames from the mid-thigh up, originally used in Westerns to show both a cowboy's face and their gun holster.

COWBOY SHOT

200

 The camera pivots vertically up or down, useful for surveying surroundings or creating a subjective viewpoint.

TILT

200

Camera is above the subject looking down, making them appear vulnerable, weak, or submissive.

HIGH ANGLE SHOT

200

 is responsible for physically capturing scenes by managing framing, movement, and technical settings to fulfill the director's vision. They execute specific shots like Handheld (HH) for dynamic movement or Low Angle (L/A) for dramatic effect.

CAMERA OPERATOR

300

The actual information being transmitted, such as thoughts, feelings, or data.

MESSAGE

300

Fills the frame with a specific part of the subject, usually the face, to highlight emotional reactions.

CU

300

The camera moves physically forward or backward toward or away from a subject.

DOLLY

300

Taken from directly above, this provides a top-down, often detached, or grand-scale view of a scene.

Bird's EYE

300

the chief creative decision-maker and visual storyteller, serving as the "CEO" of a film. Their core job is to maintain a unified creative vision by leading all departments (actors, camera, sound, and lighting—towards a single goal )

Director

400

 The method of transmission, including speaking, writing, video, or audio.

Channel/ MEDIUM

400

Taken from behind the shoulder of another character, common in dialogues.

OTS

400

The camera follows a subject, usually parallel to its motion, often using tracks, gimbals, or a Steadicam.

TRACKING

400

 The camera is tilted, creating a disorienting, tense, or psychological effect.

Dutch Angle

400

The person who shapes visual narratives by manipulating story structure, timing, and emotion. They use an interface containing media bins, timelines, and cutting tools to refine raw footage, specifically focusing on building, moving, and cutting scenes to create a cohesive story.

Editor

500

The person or group for whom the message is intended.

RECIEVER

500

Shot from the perspective of a character, showing what they see.

POV

500

The entire camera moves left or right along a track or, in the case of a handheld shot, is carried sideways.

TRUCKING

500

An extreme low-angle shot from ground level, often used for dramatic, exaggerated perspective

Worm Angle

500

creates the foundational blueprint for visual storytelling, organizing narratives into scenes using specific formatting (INT/EXT, scene location, time) to guide production. They write action lines in the present tense and craft dialogue,

SCRIPT WRITER