COM 320, History of the Moving Image–The Origins of Editing Styles And

COM 320, History of the Moving Image–The Origins of Editing Styles And

COM 320, History of Film–The Origins of Editing Styles and Techniques I. The Beginnings of Classical/Hollywood Editing (“Invisible Editing”) 1. The invisible cut…Action is continuous and fluid across cuts 2. Intercutting (between 2+ different spaces; also called parallel editing or crosscutting) -e.g., lack of intercutting?: The Life of An American Fireman (1903) -e.g., D. W. Griffith’s Broken Blossoms (1919) (boxing match vs. girl/Chinese man encounter) 3. Analytical editing -Breaks a single space into separate framings, after establishing shot 4. Continguity editing…Movement from space to space -e.g., Rescued by Rover (1905) 5. Specific techniques 1. Cut on action 2, Match cut (vs. orientation cut?) 3. 180-degree system (violated in Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)) 4. Point of view (POV) 5. Eyeline match (depending on Kuleshov Effect, actually) 6. Shot/reverse shot II. Soviet Montage Editing (“In-Your-Face Editing”) 1. Many shots 2. Rapid cutting—like Abel Gance 3. Thematic montage 4. Creative geography -Later example—Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds 5. Kuleshov Effect -Established (??) by Lev Kuleshov in a series of experiments (poorly documented, however) -Nature of the “Kuleshov Effect”—Even without establishing shot, the viewer may infer spatial or temporal continuity from shots of separate elements; his supposed early “test” used essentially an eyeline match: -e.g., man + bowl of soup = hunger man + woman in coffin = sorrow man + little girl with teddy bear = love 6. Intercutting—expanded use from Griffith 7. Contradictory space -Shots of same event contradict one another (e.g., plate smashing in Potemkin) 8. Graphic contrasts -Distinct change in composition or action (e.g., Odessa step sequence in Potemkin) 9. Cubism -From Yuri Tsivian’s analysis of Strike: Multiple views of the scene are presented, views that are not POVs of any characters in film–like the work of a cubist artist 10. Overlapping editing -Repetitions expand the time of the event shown -Later examples–Mission Impossible 2, Babe 11. Elliptical cutting/Jump cutting -Opposite effect of overlapping editing -A portion of the event is left out (often via jump cuts), so the event takes less time than it would in reality -Later examples–Rocky Horror Picture Show, Basquiat 12. Nondiegetic inserts -Elements from outside the “story world” (diegesis) are inserted for symbolic or metaphorical purposes -e.g., Slaughterhouse/police attack in Strike -Later examples–Basquiat, My Own Private Idaho, Naked Gun 2-1/2 10/17 .

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