Number of Shots?
Push Forward
Push Out
Tack
Dutch Angle
Pull Focus
Whip
Handheld
First Build Your Scene
Next Choose Camera Movement (Track Here)
Finally the end shot of your camera Movement (Track right)
Two Storyboards for each Shot. Easy, now your can use the same scene over for the next shot.
Monday-Friday
(6 shots (two storyboards for each shots) total of 14.
Lyric
Camera Movement
Mark –Lip-sync section
Green Screen (add image)
Jump Cuts - 10 cuts
The jump cut is an editing technique that allows the editor to jump forward in time.
We see an early version of this technique in Eisenstein‘s Battleship Potemkin, where the battleship fires a mortar round and we watch the destruction as various angles jump cut from one to another. In this very early version of the jump cut, contemporary audiences were introduced to a new way of time passage in film. It obviously gained traction and is one of the most used types of cuts today next to the hard cut.
Match On Action Cuts- 10 cuts
The basic idea of cutting for action is that the editor cuts from one shot to another and matches the action of the shots.
The technique of cutting on action is a huge component of, well, action films. Editing is all about motivation. Each time you cut to a new shot you need to ask yourself: why? In the words of a Video-maker: Don’t be tempted to wait for a pause and then cut, unless you have a good reason. Your film will develop a better ‘flow’ if you cut on action instead of waiting for pauses.
Push Forward
Push Out
Tack
Dutch Angle
Pull Focus
Whip
Handheld
Tint
HLS
Lumetri