Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - The protagonist suddenly jumps up, stays still in the air, and the camera rotates 180-360. What should be the term for this special effect?

The protagonist suddenly jumps up, stays still in the air, and the camera rotates 180-360. What should be the term for this special effect?

Is it similar to the classic scene of Nero dodging bullets in The Matrix? It is a system called FrozenTime, which is a time freezing technology based on film camera. Used to shoot special visual effects, such as three-dimensional images of high-speed moving objects. The equipment is a front-end capture system consisting of 60 Canon film cameras, 60 sets of pan/tilt and track fixing systems, and is controlled by a digital central control system. A group of cameras fixed on the track expose the subject at the same time, and then connect the photos of each camera to play back, and you can get a freeze-frame effect; If exposed with a certain time difference, two time changes can be made: orbital motion and object motion segmentation. For example, we set up a track in front of a building, start shooting at four in the morning, and take a picture every one or two minutes. The effect of connecting each picture at last is that the camera we see slowly turns around the house and the sun rises slowly from the back of the house, which normal cameras can't do.