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  Canvas Video submission                                                9/22 Submission 1:  This shot was an extreme close up I filmed of one of my peers. Filming it was not found difficult at all as I just got the camera to focus on his face. Submission 2: This was an arc shot. It was one of the harder shots due to not knowing where we could capture the highest angle. At the end the staircase by the vending machines was one of our best bets. Submission 3: This was a long shot recorded across the hallway coming into the cafeteria. This was an easy shot as it took Dylan and I a short time to record. Submission 4: This was a high angle shot. It was one of the easier shots as I recorded Dylan looking up and speaking. Submission 5: This was a medium shot captured from the waist up. It was one of the easier shots as it took a short time to record. Submission 6: T...

Camera Angles in a Movie

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Camera Angles         My chosen movie was the Next Friday. This movie is based on its "Friday" sequence and resumes based on the previous film. This film is resumed based on how the main character id now facing his bully which came out of jail. The first few minutes of the movie shows angles of the two prisoners leaving jail and creating an emphasis on the danger they are able to cause. Many close ups are shot of them as they come up for the next steps and plan. Wide shots were widely used the first 9 minutes of the main character escaping. This made the viewer more interested or intrigued into the plot and what the next step is. After that to get the character familiar with the atmosphere the director uses extreme wide shots to show "Craig" or the main character's new home. Followed up by an angle that is the eye level shot, and this is when your subject is at eye-level. An eye level shot can result in a neutral perspective and is used here to show his unlces c...