Every Frame a Painting
Season 2, Episode 10: Memories of Murder (2003) - Ensemble Staging
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How do you emphasize to the audience that something is important? Well, you could always cut to a close-up, but how about something subtler? Today I consider ensemble staging — a style of filmmaking that directs the audience exactly where to look, without ever seeming to do so at all. NO SPOILERS. Eight Ways to Get the Audience to Look at a Character: 1) Let Them Speak 2) Make Them Brighter or Bring Them Closer 3) Let Them Move (Especially Hands or Eyes) 4) Put Them in the Center of Frame 5) Turn Them Towards the Lens 6) Separate Them from the Group 7) Isolate Them by Moving the Camera 8) Have Other People Look at Them
All Episodes - Season 2
Episode 1
The Bad Sleep Well (1960) - The Geometry of a Scene
Episode 2
Drive (2011) - The Quadrant System
Episode 3
Akira Kurosawa - Composing Movement
Episode 4
F For Fake (1973) - How to Structure a Video Essay
Episode 5
Lynne Ramsay - The Poetry of Details
Episode 6
In Praise of Chairs
Episode 7
Chuck Jones - The Evolution of an Artist
Episode 8
Vancouver Never Plays Itself
Episode 9
Buster Keaton - The Art of the Gag
Episode 10
Memories of Murder (2003) - Ensemble Staging