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questions about the location of the subject, the type and direction of movement, and the sequence of actions to be recorded. be kept reasonably well informed and can arrange your shooting in a logical order. Be careful, however, not to "plan yourself into a trap." Expect last minute changes in your plan, and, therefore, keep alternative plans in mind and ways they can be put into effect quickly. probable camera locations for the long, medium, and closeup shots. Determine the amount of tape you require, and consider the possibility of some unplanned requirements. Determine whether you will need transportation and additional equipment. and his party are expected to arrive aboard your ship tomorrow. The flag requires complete photographic coverage of all official activities of the CNO and his party while on the ship." The division chief has assigned to arrive by aircraft at 1300 hours. The party consists of the Chief of Naval Operations and three aides. The several awards. The CNO and his party plan to depart at expect to stage or control many shots. deck in front of island. awards. landing. After the A/C lands, you move down to the flag officer, and the CO taking their positions on deck to greet the CNO. Scene 3 is an LS showing the A/C taxiing to the island. For scene 4, shoot an MS of the CNO and his party leaving the A/C. Scene 5 is a CU of the flag officer and CO greeting the CNO. Scene 6 starts with an LS of the CNO inspecting the side boys. Circumstances permitting, move in for an MS and CU of the inspection. Scenes 7 and 8 should be easy to shoot because of the time it takes to read citations, make time for you to move about and get long shots, medium shots, close-ups, and cut shots. Follow your judgment and intuition for shooting scenes 9, 10, and 11. Scene 12 is your closing shot. Again, shoot from a high position it is out of sight. provides a basis for determining camera placement, movement, and shot framing. inserts. Graphics should not be treated casually. Without precautions, graphics can become unsharp, confusing, tilted, distorted, and incomplete. Much of the graphics and text used in motion-video productions are created on a character generator. A character generator is an electronic device used to create words or graphics and electronically inserts them over a video picture. When a character generator is not available, graphics must be recorded by a camera parallel the graphic. The graphic and camera must be level. Your framing must be correct. Basic Photography Course |
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