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I. Introduction
II. What is Editing?
III. What is an Edit? Transitions Between Shots
A. What Types of Edits are there?
i. The Cut
ii. The Dissolve
iii. The Fade
iv. The Wipe
IV. When to make the Cut? For reasons of:
A. Motivation
B. Information
C. Composition
D. Sound
E. Camera Angle
F. Continuity
G. Pacing
V. The Five Most Common Edit Categories
A. The Action Edit (continuity)
B. Screen Position Edit (screen direction, directing the eye)
C. Form Edit (match cut or match dissolve)
D. Concept Edit (use of symbolism/themes to underline action/meaning)
E. Combined Edit (several categories combined in one transition)
VI. The Editor's Challenge: How to Handle Difficult Footage.
A. Scenarios where Film Language and Shooting-For-Editing got mixed up during production and how the editor might save the day in post
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Add Grammar of the Edit, If you want to get to grips with editing, this book sets down, in a simple, uncomplicated way, the fundamental knowledge you will need to make a good edit between two shots. Regardless of what you are editing, the problem of learning how to be a good edit, Grammar of the Edit to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Grammar of the Edit, If you want to get to grips with editing, this book sets down, in a simple, uncomplicated way, the fundamental knowledge you will need to make a good edit between two shots. Regardless of what you are editing, the problem of learning how to be a good edit, Grammar of the Edit to your collection on WonderClub |