Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Classification of through-hole lenses

Classification of through-hole lenses

"Intrusion" can be roughly divided into three categories: 1. The content of the shot is incoherent; 2. The changes in characters and props violate logic; 3. Photographic equipment and people are included in the shot.

Incoherent

The "crossing" shot was formed on the shooting scene and completed on the editing table. It usually comes from carelessness on the part of props, recorders, and editors.

Since each shot of the film is shot separately, if the layout of the scene is slightly different when shooting shots of the same scenery, a "flaw" will be formed on the screen. There is a scene in Wang Ying's film "Eat a Bowl of Tea" which shows the life of Chinese Americans in New York. The screen showed an empty corridor, and the voiceover heard the conversation between the two couples. Halfway through the conversation, the rag hanging on the wall changed its position as if by magic. Obviously, the editor edited together two pieces of the same content that were shot one after another (the dialogue was added in post). The camera position and lighting did not change, but the rag gave everything away.

In the movie "Saving Private Ryan", when the soldier played by Vin Diesel died trying to save a French girl, only seven people were left in the squad. But in the next panoramic picture, we still saw eight American troops advancing in formation on the grassland. Violation of logic. Gangs that violate logic mostly stem from the editor's negligence. For example: things that only exist in modern times appear in costume dramas.

The content is inconsistent with historical facts

In fact, in addition to the above three categories, there is another common error. This means that the content of the film is inconsistent with historical facts, or there are scenes, props or dialogue that do not match the era in which the plot takes place. In the Oscar-winning film "Braveheart," Scottish rebel leader William Wallace falls in love with an English princess. However, in historical facts, this woman, known as the "She-Wolf", only married to England after Wallace's death. In another historical legend, "Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves," a telescope appears in Kevin Costner's equipment, suddenly advancing the invention of the telescope by several centuries. When Jack in "Titanic" persuaded Rose not to jump into the sea, in order to distract her, he gossiped that he had fallen into a lake in Wisconsin - but it was actually an artificial lake. "Titanic" sank 5 It was filled with water only years later.

The most terrifying thing is that in the movie "Pearl Harbor", when the heroine first set foot on Hawaiian soil during World War II, the camera passed by some buildings, and the nameplate of one of the buildings was inscribed With "1953"...