Visual Storytelling in depth Flashcards

1
Q

beat sheet

A
  • Most important part
  • An outline of the most important narrative beats to your story
  • It’s good to aim for 8 to 15 beats in planning for a narrative short film/video
  • Question to ask: what are the key moments that need to occur for the story to make sense and fully resonate
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2
Q

Structuring Scenes and Films

A
  • Begin the scene at the latest possible moment;end the scene at the earliest possible moment
  • Begin the film at the latest possible moment; end your film at the earliest possible moment
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3
Q

Incongruity

A

We find things funny when we expect one thing and something else is delivered

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4
Q

Benign Penetration

A
  • We laugh when people push the lines/envelope
  • Not too far, but farther than norms or conventions
  • Ex: tweets about hurricane sandy
  • Timing of seeing the jokes
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5
Q

Mark of Culture and Community

A
  • Humor used as mark of ^
  • Social media: something makes you laugh, but outsiders wouldn’t get it
  • Exclusion; othering; pushing people away
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6
Q

the humor code

A
  • incongruity
  • benign penetration
  • Social interaction
  • mark of culture and community
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7
Q

How to tell a joke

A

Set up
Wait for it
Punchline
Tag it (punchline becomes set up for another set up → )

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8
Q

Questions to ask yourself about your comedy and jokes:

A
  • Timing! Can you improve it?
  • Pouring glass of water ex.
  • Would the joke be funnier if it was more specific?
  • Who is the joke on?
  • What’s your identity as the joke teller? Are you punching up or punching down?
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9
Q

Continuity system:

A

taking shots that were taken separately and making them appear as one

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10
Q

The cut:

A

hide and edit more easily

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11
Q

The dissolve:

A

“Shift in time”, cross fade

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12
Q

Spatial Continuity

A
  • 180 degree rule
  • Want to make it look like things are happening in the same directions
  • Conversation (Don’t switch sides)
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13
Q

Establishing Shot

A

Not necessary

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14
Q

Shot/Reverse Shot

A

Reaction shots, conversation, 180 line establishment important

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15
Q

Coverage

A

Want more shots than you need

Giving yourself some options

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16
Q

Match on action

A
  • Trying to make things look like they are happening at the same time
  • Trying to fool the audience
  • If you call audience’s attention to what’s going on in the right hand they won’t concentrate on what’s going on in the left
17
Q

Eyeline matches

A
  • Good way to make it seem like the shots pull together

- Making actors seem like they are actually looking into the eyes of the other actors

18
Q

Pre-Production

A
Location scouting and approvals
Scheduling
Casting
Call sheet and communication
Equipment check-outs and tests
Flag any potential problems or safety issues
Shot lists and storyboards
19
Q

What makes performance

A

Acting, writing directing, editing
Juxtaposition
Conflict
Kuleshov effect

20
Q

Kuleshov effect

A
  • Influence emotion by choosing next shot specifically
  • Accident, assumed emotion shown is concern or shock
  • Obama and Gardner example
21
Q

Sound bridge

A
  • Transition

- Percussion sound bridge (apartment) → elevator → typewriting sound effects

22
Q

Using audience’s imagination

A

typewriter , we know that he’s typing because we can hear it but we don’t see it so we fill in with our imagination

23
Q

Subverting audience’s expectations

A

Can also make audience think one thing is happening when another is actually happening

24
Q

“Constructive” editing

A

Can construct a scene using little fragments and use brain to fill in the holes

25
Q

Parallel editing

A

Makes more suspenseful, cutting between scenes in separate locations

26
Q

Speed of cutting

A

Rhythm

27
Q

Holding the shot

A

Subverting audience expectations

“12-yrs a slave” example