When the Director Makes You Aware of the Camera
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- Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
- Camera movement is an essential piece of a film’s cinematography, and can often become part of a director’s authorial presence. Think Kubrick’s long tracking shots or Fincher’s subjective camera. However, such movement can often defy the narrative, drawing attention to the camera itself, and momentarily fracturing our film viewing experience. Let’s explore the reasons behind these types of camera moves and how they’re used in film.
//CHAPTERS:
00:00 Camera Movement in Film
02:09 The Breach
04:20 Director’s Style - Fincher, Welles, Hitchcock, Kubrick
06:36 Martin Scorsese/Antonioni’s Pirouette
10:44 Alienation
11:24 Godard’s Weekend
12:48 Fassbinder’s Ali: Fear Eats the Soul
14:21 Memory - Alfonso Cuarón
//SOURCES:
Films credited on screen throughout the video
“The Future of Cinema” (1948) by Alexandre Astruc as translated by The Third Rail
The Shining and the Steadicam®: an interview with inventor Garrett Brown
The Shining - The Making Of Doc
Michelangelo Antonioni Salutes Martin Scorsese at the AFI Life Achievement Award
Film at Lincoln Center: Alfonso Cuarón on Y Tu Mamá También
//MUSIC:
Rain by Twin Musicom is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 license.
Artst: www.twinmusicom.org/
9 by Lex Villena is licensed under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license.
CGI Snake by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 license.
Source: chriszabriskie.com/divider/
Artist: chraiszabriskie.com/
Scenery by Kai Engel is licensed under a CC BY 3.0 license.
#cinematography #martinscorsese #videoessay - Фільми й анімація
Im going to be honest, you've turned film analysis into an art of its own. The work required to get this level of quality and you obviously have taste for days, this is awesome.
I feel a certain kind of bliss and peace watching your videos. There is his feeling of calmness that comes with the realization that there are people who are willing to slow down and look at small threads of the complex fabric of cinema piece by piece. As an aspiring filmmaker, I FEEL your videos. Your Channel is going to be my Tranquility Hideout. Thank You for it.
Wow. This comment made my day! Thank you so much for taking the time to leave such a generous response.
This is so insanely well edited
Trying to improve with every video. Thanks for watching!
I love your videos! Please don't ever stop making these. I used to watch Every Frame A Painting but they seem to have disappeared and ever since they disappeared I have longed for something similar. Now that I've found it you gotta keep going. ;p
That's high praise! Certainly plan to keep making these videos. Thanks for the kind comment.
Thoroughly captivating. Pleased to see Fassbinder's work included here.
He's definitely a filmmaker whose work deserves that attention. You can see ripples of his influence in a lot of modern films.
@@fromtheframe Ah really?? I think he is the single most overrated German director! His "Fear eats the soul" did NOT age well, heavy handed "Sozialkitsch", I would say. Schlöndorff and Wenders are MUCH better!
Your underrated af
Thanks 🙏
You have the most intelligent movie analysis I've ever came upon on UA-cam. Love your videos!
Thank you so much! Glad you are enjoying the videos, and comments like these really make it worth it!
I went into this video not knowing what to expect. What I got was wonderfully thoughtful. Glad to find this channel! Love it. That you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
This video made me laugh in many moments because I'd be thinking about a shot that should be mentioned and you show and talk about those specific shots. 😅
So glad you showed that shot. I was just waiting for the tree shot from Prisoners. It's one of my favorite shots ever.
I'll mention the one film that wasn't mentioned. The opening and closing shot of Parasite that slowly booms down from the window to show that they are lower than the ground level. The way they started and ended up with no improvement in their lives.
And also a lot of shots in Birdman. It is filled with shots where camera takes a moment to contemplate and process what happened.
Great video as always. I love that you pick topics that most people in here aren't talking about and your presentation has gotten even better.
Ooh, those are good choices. You always leave such great suggestions in the comments. Thanks for watching!
she is my favourite video essayist and you are my favourite commenter on her videos. keep it up. please dont stop commenting. i love them
Thanks! Thoughtful video certainly warrants a thoughtful comment.
17:20 -- this move,ent remind me soviet film Soy Cuba, one of the greatest camera works in cinema history
Thanks Kevin!!!! Great tutorial!!!
Second of your videos I have watched - you are a cut above most other videos of this type, imv - great insight here
your channel is so good please dont stop making videos
I hope to keep making them, thank you for the support 🙏
@@fromtheframe I LOVE THEM TOO. I would also be a part of a petition to keep you making these videos
I’ve been binging your videos. Love your voice and analysis, please keep it up!
Thanks
Excellent work
Hi! We like your style, can we talk about collab?:)