Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How to talk about movies-photography

How to talk about movies-photography

Chapter Four: Photography

1. Use light as a pen

(1) How much can I see clearly on the screen? Is that enough for you?

(2) Whether the light is bright or dim is natural or exaggerated.

(3) Does the glare or softness of the light add color to the actor or expose every wrinkle and scar on his body?

2. Curse with close-up in the middle

(1) Where is the camera and why is it there?

(2) How the camera moves can enhance the emotional impact of the scene.

(3) If the camera is moving, why is it moving?

3. Golden ratio

(1) What is the shape of the scene frame, and does it limit what we can see on the screen?

(2) What's in the scene frame, whether the picture is crowded or sparse, whether the composition is fine or casual and natural, and how are the roles arranged?

(3) Whether the scene frame is clear from the foreground to the background, or whether the foreground is clear and the background is fuzzy.

4. The role of the film

(1) Is the overall color of the film strong, bright or dull?

(2) If it is black and white film, is the tone contrast of the film strong or single?

(3) Does the picture look sharp or rough, grainy or smooth and supple?

5. Digital craze

Do you feel the uncanny valley effect?

Is 6.3D a chicken rib?

(1) Is 3D just a gimmick, or does it add visual depth and dimension?

(2) Can this visual depth and dimension be achieved through more superb artistic design and mirror operation?

(3) Is it worthwhile to sacrifice visual brightness, detail and color in pursuit of this extra dimension?