2013年8月17日星期六

[A good Website I have read]---Observations on film art(2)

The silent comedians knew how to use camera position to build up their gags. Long ago Rudolf Arnheim praised the opening scene of Chaplin’s The Immigrant. As a ship rocks treacherously, we see Charlie from the rear heaving and kicking on the railing. As Arnheim puts it, “Everyone thinks the poor devil is paying his toll to the sea.” (1)
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But then Charlie turns toward the camera to reveal he’s been struggling to reel in a fish.
charlie-and-fish-300.jpg
Here the framing creates the gag by what it doesn’t show. “The element of surprise,” Arnheim notes, “exists only when the scene is watched from one particular position.” The camera setup also makes an expressive analogy; we probably never noticed the similarity between vomiting and wrestling a fish.
One of my favorite comic framings occurs in The General. Buster’s train is hurtling along, and a cannon on one car is suddenly trained on him. The first shot gives us the situation with maximum clarity, in a profiled shot. But then Keaton cuts to another angle, showing the cannon in the foreground and Buster trying to escape it.
general-1-300.jpg
general-2-300.jpg

Nothing much has changed in the scene's action, just the camera setup.


from: http://www.davidbordwell.net/blog/2007/04/30/funny-framings/

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