Steven Katz

Film Directing Shot by Shot

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A complete catalogue of motion picture techniques for filmmakers. It concentrates on the 'storytelling' school of filmmaking, utilizing the work of the great stylists who established the versatile vocabulary of technique that has dominated the movies
since 1915. This graphic approach includes comparisons of style by interpreting a 'model script', created for the book, in storyboard form.
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704 printed pages
Original publication
2019
Publication year
2019
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Quotes

  • Елена Цирукинаhas quoted9 years ago
    As we all know, the universal units of composition are the long shot, the medium shot, and the close-up.
  • Konstantin Tcelmshas quoted9 years ago
    This is the logic that determines the breakdown: use any actor, set, location or other resource as much as possible on any given day. Since actors are paid a day rate, it is very inefficient to bring an actor to the set to recite a few lines of dialogue for three scenes each shot on a separate day. Often the breakdown/schedule will require that the actor say all his lines for each scene he's included in on one day
  • Konstantin Tcelmshas quoted10 years ago
    Visualization is a way of coming up with new visual and narrative ideas before shooting begins. This may be merely a single arresting image in a scene or the decision to stage action for a long sequence shot rather than fast cutting. It may help you find the dramatic center of the scene, or it may reveal a dishonest line of dialogue. Surprisingly, the individual compositions in a storyboard are not necessarily the main benefit of visualization. If the staging of a scene is previewed on paper and subsequently improved, then the storyboard has helped focus the vision in the final film.

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