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The Giver Cinematic Elements

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Understanding cinematic elements can make movies more pleasurable and meaningful to watch. Today the author will be using information from "Introducing Cinema and Theatrical Elements in Films" to give an idea of how moves are made. Framing is one of the first tools used in movie making. The three major frames are close up, long, and medium shot all of which have separate outcomes on the movie's final look. Close-ups are used to show emotion or details and do so by only showing an actors head. One time a close-up was used in "The Giver" was when Gabe was going to sleep and Jonas was acting silly. The camera closed in on his face to showcase Jonas' emotion. Long shots sacrifice details for quantity by showing off more of the sounding. Directors use long shots to show off more of the set and other characters. You see a long shot in The Giver when Jonas hikes through the desert to show how vast it was. Finally medium shots are a compromise of both as so, it shows about the actors waist up which gives detail and surroundings and so this is why they are used. …show more content…

One of the camera movements is a pan. This occurs when the camera moves from side to side. A pan is used to change the viewers focus. The Giver uses panning to show the auditorium for the ceremony of graduation. Tilting is when you move a camera angle up and down. Tilting like panning can be used to change the viewers focus. An example of this in The Giver is when Jonas looks up at the mountain he has to hike. Zooming is when the camera view appears to get closer to or further from an object. Directors use this to change attention levels of an object. The Giver used a zoom to go from Jonas' view to a view of the whole community to show the whole thing. Dolly shots are when the camera moves to follow an actor. This gives the audience the feeling of moving along with the characters. The movie used this during the chase

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