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Group 6

CLOSE UP SHOT
is a photograph or movie shot taken
of a subject or object at close range
intended to show greater detail to
the viewer. You should be able to
recognize the imagery in the frame,
and if the close-up is on an actor,
there will be a much more
significant emotional connection
between your viewer and the
subject or object featured in the
shot. 

Shot by: Liean Medrano G11

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EXTREME CLOSE UP
shot of the face or part of the
face that fills the screen. You
can also shoot an object in
extreme close up.

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MEDIUM SHOT
(also referred to as MS), or waist
shot is captured at a medium
distance from the subject. It is
used for dialogue scenes, but
also depict body language and
more of the setting.
FULL SHOT


similar to a wide shot except
that it focuses on the
character in the frame,
showing them from head to
toe. Frames character from
head to toes, with the subject
roughly filling the frame. The
emphasis tends to be more on
action and movement rather
than a character’s emotional
state.

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LONG SHOT
(aka Wide Shot) Shows the subject from
top to bottom; for a person, this would be
head to toes, though not necessarily
filling the frame. It’s used to focus on the
subject while still showing the scene the
subject is in. The character becomes
more of a focus than an Extreme Long
Shot, but the shot tends to still be
dominated by the scenery. This shot often
sets the scene and our character’s place
in it.

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MASTER SHOT
a film recording of an entire
dramatized scene, start to finish,
from a camera angle that keeps
all the players in view. It is often
a long shot and can sometimes
perform a double function as an
establishing shot. Usually, the
master shot is the first shot
checked off during the shooting
of a scene.

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POINT OF VIEW SHOT
also known as POV shot, is an angle
that shows what a character is looking
at. Typically POV shots are placed in
between a shot of a character looking
at something and a shot showing the
character's reaction.

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REACTION SHOT
refers to when an action takes place on
screen, and then cuts to a separate shot
that allows the viewer to see the reaction
to this action from other players in the
scene. This can be a reaction from a
human, animal, or any form with a
perceptible personality.

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TILTING SHOT
a cinematographic technique in which
the camera stays in a fixed position but
rotates up/down in a vertical plane.
Tilting the camera results in a motion
similar to someone raising or lowering
their head to look up or down.

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HIGH ANGLE SHOT
A high-angle shot is a technique where
the camera looks down on the character
or subject from an elevated
perspective. The opposite of Low Angle
Shot

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LOW ANGLE SHOT
A low-angle shot is a shot in which the
camera angle is positioned below the eye
line of the subject, pointing upward. An
extreme low-angle shot is positioned below
the subject’s feet, offering a sharper
contrast in the shot.

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WORM'S EYE VIEW
view of an object from below, as though
the observer were a worm; the opposite
of a bird's-eye view. It can be used to look
up to something to make an object look
tall, strong, and mighty while the viewer
feels childlike or powerless

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CANTED SHOT
A camera angle which is
deliberately slanted to one
side, sometimes used for
dramatic effect to help portray
unease, disorientation, frantic
or desperate action,
intoxication, madness, etc.

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GROUP MEMBERS
 Liean Medrano G11
 FrenellA Sandoval G16
 Ashlee Comia G7
 Reymark Ilagan B23
 Antoine Van Escalona
 Mel Gerald Metusalem B27
 Mharjhovin Casapao

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