Camera Movement
Eric McCrory
Director: James Gartner
Cinematography: Jeffrey Kimbrel, John Toon
Logline: Texas Western struggles against Iowa and their coach finally takes the reigns off of his players in desperation.
Pan/Tilt: This style of filming is used to show a back & forth, sort of action camera, capturing the speed and intensity of the scene. Quick cuts of players moving across screen, following a hard pass, tilting up for a dunk etc...
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Producer(s): James Cohen, Erik Rydholm, Mark Shapiro
Around the Horn, a sports talk show
Jib/Crane: At the very beginning intro as well as the closing outro, this and many other talk shows utilize a crane shot in which the studio as a whole is shown to the viewer. Giving a sense of completion and fullness. To begin, you see the host and all of the analyst lined up and ready to play. To close, the camera moves away from the analysts opposite the direction it moves in the intro, moving far enough away so that Tony Reali can famously throw his piece of paper as a send-off.
NSFW!!
Director(s):Matt Clattenburg, John Dunsworth, Jonathan Torrens
Trailer Park Boys is a documentary style comedy following the lives of a few Canadian trailer park members. Once again, caution NSFW.
Handheld: The majority of Trailer Park Boys is filmed with a handheld, and a crappy one at that. In accordance with the overall theme of the show, the dirty, grungy "trailer park", the handheld is necessary to move along through the trailer homes and follow along during the absurd shenanigans and fights.
Director: Casey Neistat
Casey Neistat is a master drone operator. A famous youtube blogger who often does drone reviews, Casey uses drone shots in almost all of his videos, and they are all magnificent.
Drone: Casey uses his drone usually to film the landscape he's currently visiting, and that location varies a lot. This is a wonderful summer hype video with several drone shots throughout that capture and greater sense of the excitement that comes with the first days of summer weather.
Director: Jack Craymer
Felly the kid in his song "Desert Eagle" has a very appealing style of animation along with the slo-mo/still shots that I struggle to pin a name on.
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