DCE Quizwiz 2
This visual spread of darkness to brightness is often called...
"latitude" or "range"
the inverse square rule: I ~ (1/r squared)
the intensity emitting from a light source onto a subject drops to a quarter of that intensity every time the distance is doubled
Lev Kuleshov editing experiment
- Close up man's face with blank expression - Then second shot of different subject: food = hungry, dead kid = sad, woman = lust - No shot stands on it's own, it's connected to the shot before and after it
contrast range
1 billion parts to 1
Steps to light a dramatic scene
1. Block and mark 2. Set lights with actors or stand-ins 3. Rehearse camera & actor motions 4. Tweak lights 5. Shoot!
5 Main Factors Controlling Contrast
1. level of light on subject/frame 2. ND (neutral density) lters 3. camera's image sensor's sensitivity (most DSLRS use CMOS) 4. shutter speed 5. lens f-stop setting also called iris, exposure, aperture
how many rods and cones do you have
125 million rods and 6 million cones
reflection
Consider pointing light directly at either a reflector or bounce card or even a white wall next to actors or subject to create a soft ll source; Use flag/cutter to cut off key light "spill" from hitting background if you don't want light to hit that part of your frame composition
Close-Up (CU)
Easier to light, Can be joined to almost any other shot, Shows intensity of emotion, vulnerability, intimacy Good for "cutting on the look", Beautiful when used with long lens
Coverage Characteristics
Employs a "safe" shoot with multiple angles of same action (WS+2 MS/CU turnarounds), Guarantees at least 1-2 angles full "coverage" of a scene/dialogue interaction
Wide Shot (WS)
Establishes location/venue, Provides dialogue interaction "home base", Less editing is required, Captures full range of action sequences
Medium Shot (MS)
Great for general dialogue exchange, Captures actor's gestures and body language, Excellent small group shots
Low Key
High Contrast
Two ways to plan a narrative shoot
In-Camera: director shoots the storyboards exactly as they appear on paper Coverage: director shoots storyboards with a loose formula of additional set ups and longer takes
Proper Exposure is...
KING
The most important of the top 5 factors controlling contrast
Level of light on a subject/frame Lens f-stop setting
High Key
Low Contrast
Practical Light
Motivated areas of illumination
Choose correct balance between...
ND lter, exposure/aperture/iris/f-stop setting, internal gain/ISO, and external lighting
In-Camera Characteristics
Presupposes too much: perfect script, perfect storyboards, perfect execution by actors or crew, Shooting days/deadlines can be easily accomplished, Best used on "tight" or very complicated production schedule days
Spatial Edits
Space (walk to door, cut when opens door to new shot)
Striping
Stripe your content with light and shadow in layers to help audience interpret visual depth
Logical
Teacher walks down hallway, teacher teaching in classsroom
Temporal Edits
Time (cut on drop of pens)
Nets
Translucent black cloth used to cut down light in intensity
Silks
Translucent white cloth used for diffusion
Danger of In-Camera
could have gaps in story and poor match action editing
Barn Doors
creates soft edge on intended shadow because it's close to light source
exposing toward the middle of lens means exposing at
f4 or f5.6
Danger of Coverage
footage can be exhaustive to review and be too simple (visually bland)
Err on the side of shooting a slightly lower, flatter dynamic range because...
gamma curve adjustments can pull apart in post
Gold/Silver Reflectors
good for creating extra sparkle in eyes/face but be careful about losing correct skin tone color
Gobo
intentional design placed close to light source to cast image shadow on wall (Batman)
Blackwrap
like foil, shapeable, cut off light, utility barndoors/snoots/cookies/fingers/dots
Scrims
metallic-stitched softener placed in front of bulb
Fingers/dots
mini-version flag/nets and used to knock down a specific hot spot or to create a specific shadow
Best practices to set a new line of action
place a shot "on" the sight line or action axis, have an actor "cross" the line, cutaway (bridge) shot of something else in room or location (sometimes it is something an actor looks at), a continuous uninterrupted moving shot around the axis (no edit = no violation)
Cookies
random cutout pattern that creates dappled lights/shadows (good for breaking up boring walls like light to passing through tree branches)
Reflectors/bounce cards
re-directs light on subject, can be diffused if surface is white...or focused if surface is silver/gold
Bulbs
separates from simple point/shoot footage, simulates reality, sets mood tone and atmosphere, shows off artistic expression, can be powerful storytelling
Flags/Cutters
solid black cloth attached to frames used to cut off light or create "negative fill" light
Err on the side of slightly underexposing because...
today's powerful sensors can pull much info from pixels in post
Diffusion Sheets
various levels of white and/or clear lter to soften light
Dynamic Range
what will be my darkest dark and my brightest bright in my shot?