Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Scene scheduling

Scene scheduling

Scene scheduling

From French, it means "put it in the right place" or "put it in the scene" Originally used in stage plays, it refers to the director's artistic treatment of the actors' action routes, states and communication between actors in a scene. Because there are some similarities between film and drama in artistic treatment, the word scene scheduling is also quoted in film creation, which means that the director arranges things in the picture.

Movie scene scheduling basically includes three levels: actor scheduling, space scheduling and lens scheduling.

Actor scheduling refers to the director's scheduling of performance methods, stations, distances, numbers and positions. , resulting in different shapes and scenes of the picture, revealing the relationship between characters and their emotional changes, so as to obtain the picture effect. Spatial scheduling refers to the scheduling of all elements in the picture, including scheduling scene, depth of field, scheduling angle, scheduling light, scheduling color, scheduling scenery, scheduling sidewalk and so on. Its purpose is to make the picture more expressive or produce special meaning.

Shot scheduling means that the director uses the change of lens orientation to simulate the eyes of the audience by pushing, pulling, shaking, moving and following the lens, so that the picture becomes more dynamic. Through camera scheduling, you can change the angle and scene of the same subject.

Scene scheduling has many functions. It can enrich the characters' images, reveal their hearts, enrich the language and modeling of the pictures, play a role in rendering the environment and creating artistic effects and lens effects with special significance. There are many methods for scene scheduling, such as depth scene scheduling, repeated scene scheduling and comparison scene scheduling.

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