Film editing/Penny and Eggbert/Intro
A fun exercise in the course on Narrative Film Editing
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Why did I create this lesson?
Why I wrote these instructionsOne of the best ways to learn film editing is to purchase the film editing disks from the Star Movie Shop. You will learn a lot from these disks. (Note: These disks are free if you earn enough points at Wikiversity.)
Disks without instructionsHowever, there is a problem with the disks from the Star Movie Shop. The problem is there are no written instructions except for the first disk ("Follow Dave?" Editing Workshop CD-ROM).
The missing manual on film editing theoryTherefore, I created these instructions in this lesson which hopefully will help you understand the theories covered in the disks. This lesson your are beginning now is totally separate from the disks of the Star Movie Shop. You will not find this lesson on any of their disks so pay attention! |
Buy these disks!
The disks from the Star Movie Shop
This is lesson separate
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The most unusual movie in the world
A super simple scene
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Prerequisites
Before you start
Free
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Introduction
Inside your editing programOn the timeline of your editing program, you work with film clips. Each film clip consists of a picture track and an audio track which are synced together. To the right, you see a short film clip of Eggbert saying "Quack, quack, quack." You see Eggbert's mouth wide open and you see the audio waveform of his conversation. For this clip, there is a slight pause before Eggbert begins to speak and a slight pause at the end. Do you see this? The Rule: Remember that the picture and the audio must never go out of sync. That is the rule you must follow always while you create "L-Cuts" and insert narrative music. |
Here is sample clip in the timeline (picture and audio)
A film clipThis is my drawing of a film clip. This shows one piece of dialog from the scene called "The story of Penny and Eggbert".
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Look at the script
The next page
Contact your instructor
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