Friday, August 20, 2021

10 camera angles

 Close up: I did a close up of sanitizing my hands when walking into the library



Dolly Shot: I did a dolly shot of following Isaiah's foot steps.



Head-on Shot: I was asking our local celebrity Isaiah for a picture and he threw the badge at the camera.



High Angle Shot: I saw these teachers having a conversation downstairs and asked for permission to film them from upstairs.



Low Angle Shot: I took a video of Isaiah picking his wallet up off the ground.



Point-of-View Shot: I balanced my phone on my lanyard and met Isaiah.


Over-the-Shoulder: We set up the phone at eye level and recorded me with part of Isaiah's head in the shot.



Pan Shot: We showed a sign saying that students must wear their badges and moved the camera horizontally to show Isaiah.



Reaction Shot: Me and Isaiah heard someone yelling and decided to reenact our initial reactions.



Cameo Shot: I stood in front of a neutral/beige wall and filmed.



3 comments:

  1. pan shot: I found this shot funny and how he ripped his badge off when he was supposed to be wearing it. Also haven't seen much of the pan shot.
    Head on shot: I found this shot enjoyable because instead of the actor coming towards the camera it was a object.
    low angle shot: I like how it was of the actor doing a action instead of the regular low angle shot where its just there to make the actor look scarier and bigger.

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  2. I enjoyed the reaction shot. In this shot, you can see the subjects reaction to something off camera. This shot lets us know how the subject feels and catches their genuine reaction.

    I also enjoyed the low angle shot. This shot makes the subject look big from the angle, making them seem powerful.

    Another shot i enjoyed was the high angle shot. This shot makes the subjects look small and ant like and we feel like giants looking at them.

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  3. The pan shot worked well, as it first showed the main objective, and swiveled over to the characters reaction.

    The dolly shot worked well, as the steady, in-sync movements create the impression that the camera is on a track moving in continuity with the character.

    The Head-on shot worked well, as a perfectly aimed shot by the "local celebrity" (on the first try might I add) made the scene pop out the 4th wall towards the viewer.

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CCR

https://youtu.be/jnzvAgyAgyQ