Camera work
Across
- 3. A framing that prioritizes the subject's physical relation to the immediate environment, often used to show a character's movement through a space.
- 5. Used to dwarf the character against their surroundings, emphasizing their isolation or the scale of the setting.
- 7. A framing used to make a character appear powerful, heroic, or intimidating to the audience.
- 8. A tight framing designed to highlight a character's internal emotions or a significant facial expression.
- 11. A neutral perspective that suggests a sense of realism and equality between the character and the viewer.
- 13. A technique used to create a connection between two characters during a dialogue, placing the viewer in the space of the conversation.
- 14. A deliberate blurring of the background to isolate a character, connoting their internal focus or their disconnection from the world around them.
Down
- 1. A tight framing designed to highlight a character's internal emotions or a significant facial expression.
- 2. A framing of a tiny detail used to generate a sense of claustrophobia or to show an object's narrative importance.
- 4. A perspective that looks down on a subject to make them appear vulnerable, weak, or insignificant.
- 6. A shot that forces the audience to occupy the same optical space as a character, creating a sense of direct empathy.
- 9. A tilted horizon line used to connote a sense of disorientation, madness, or a world out of balance.
- 10. A fluid movement that follows a subject, used to immerse the audience in the character’s journey and build a sense of continuous, inescapable momentum.
- 12. A technique where the foreground, middle ground, and background are all sharp, used to show a character's relationship to their entire world simultaneously.