This is a good book for screenwriters to familiarize themselves with. When writing a screenplay, it helps to know what kind of shots might be best for each scene. It helps me visualize what I want to show on the screen, and how I want to show it.
Some terms I learned or now have a name for. It'll be a win if I can remember five of these.
Basic techniques - Pan: left/right movement - Tilt: up/down movement - Pull focus: change the focus - Whip zoom: fast zoom - Dolly zoom (vmars s2 finale)
Composition techniques - Camera height (on person's shoes vs legs vs torso vs head) - Screen direction: direction the object is facing the screen - Staging (deep, planar) - Tilted horizon - Lead the eye (long fence, winding road) - 3s and 4s: making triangles with staging to lead eye to a vertex
Techniques of movement - Character Dolly (push in) - Discovery: shot begins away from action and camera reveals a scene - Pull back retraction/reveal: doesn't reveal anything new but is for emotional impact
Editing techniques - Jump cut - Match cut (one shot of character looking at something, next shot of that thing) - Cross cut: switching back and forth from different scenes occurring in diff places but at the same time - Fill, reveal frame: can be used to hide cuts if object or wall blocks the camera and is dark enough
Misc - Subjective pov: attaching camera to an actor (28 years 2 used this a lot) - Rear projection (actors pretend to drive the car, fake images in background)
كتاب خفيف يعرض أساليب وتقنيات التصوير للسينما. يتم ذكر اسم الطريقة ثم شرح بسيط عنها ثم يذكر أسماء أفلام استخدمتها، والمهم هو الصور التي تسهل الفهم. كتاب ابتدائي مهم لصناع الأفلام ولليوتيوبرز كذلك.
This is a very basic introduction to camera setups and techniques. Each type is illustrated by a storyboard or short series of boards. The author then mentions examples of films where the technique is used. The book would be stronger if they licensed stills from these films.