Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Which scene in the film best reflects the director's level?

Which scene in the film best reflects the director's level?

1, large-scale action scene. Directors who are not awesome will basically shoot with multiple cameras and then hand them over to editors for editing. The audience watched a lively game, such as The Whisperwind and The Battle of Los Angeles. At first glance, there are more people, more money and more cameras. Awesome directors still control the overall situation on big scenes, and they have strict rules, such as Shadow Warrior, Apocalypse Now, Black Hawk Down and TDK. In fact, the scene scheduling level in michael bay is also good.

2. Multi-person dialogue. To shoot a good-looking multi-person dialogue, you need to have a deep understanding of what scene scheduling is. Altman's gosford Manor provides a model. Ang Lee's "Sense and Sensibility" group drama, to be honest, the lens language is very general.

3. Scenes combining audio-visual and performance. A major difference between film and television works and stage works is the free combination of audio-visual languages. A good director will keep the audio-visual performance inseparable from the performance, give extra points to the performance, and let the performance give full play to its narrative function. For example, should a successful role-building be attributed to the actor or the director? ?

4. Transition. Usually, in order to show richness, transitions are distinguished in night scenes, indoor and outdoor scenes and different atmospheres and scenes. If you can see the purposeful and targeted design in the transition in a movie, it means that the director may have a global thinking in the production, such as the daily transition in Seven Deaths.