Friday, February 02, 2007FRAME BY FRAME![]() Previously I linked to David Bordwell's analysis of Scorsese's The Departed, in which he traced the average shot length in the director's films over the years. Now, Bordwell has posted even more fascinating piece on editing and shot length. In a post entitled "My Name is David and I'm a Frame Counter," Bordwell discusses mathematical relationships within edited sequences: Directors have been counting frames for a long time. Experimental filmmakers like Brakhage did. Ozu had a special stopwatch built to register feet and frames during filming. Hitchcock cared about frame counting too. In Film Art’s chapter on editing (pp. 224-225 of the new edition), we show how the gas station fire in The Birds gains impact from its steadily shorter shot lengths. The first shot lasts 20 frames, the second 18, the third 16, and so on down to 8 frames. Bordwell examines the ways in which film-to-video transfers muck with such precision, examining the technology behind PAL video, Laserdisc CLV format, MPEG-2, progressive scan, and more. He also takes a look at how video mastering can undermine the meticulous calibration of a director like King Hu, whose A Touch of Zen (pictured) is a marvel of quick cutting. Before the DVD was a gleam in Warren Lieberfarb’s eye, I studied King Hu’s wonderful A Touch of Zen on an editing table. There is a lot of frame arithmetic in the editing. During one swordfight, the mysterious stranger leaps away from the blows of Miss Yang and lands in a medium shot. He steps back, tipping up his face to reveal that she’s bloodied his head. He stares in astonishment. The shot lasts only 20 frames. Comments (0) |
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