The Emotions of a Lens

Paperback
Nombre de pages
78 p.
18,00 €

En rupture de stock

This book provides a theoretically-based insight into the perception of cinematography, thus making it a novel addition to conventional film studies. Its main achievement lies in the exploration and discussion of a mostly ignored but very important aspect of narrative film, its lifeblood as it were: cinematography. The overall question—does the cinematographer create storytelling images?—is concisely answered: cinematography can be understood as writing with images.

More concretely, this study elaborates a theoretical model that allows us to talk with intellectual rigour about the visual structure of shots, films, styles and other visual elements that make up the film form and its meaning. The basic properties of film shots are space and time: because the images are moving, these space and time units have a dynamic nature, resulting in the expressiveness of cinematography through changing form and content. The different chapters show how the filmic tools that a cinematographer wields make meaning visible and enable the viewer to see the story through the images. In this respect, the job of the cinematographer can be thought of as that of a visual psychiatrist, moving the viewer in the dark.

Détails du produit
Détails du produit
Sous-titreA Study On Cinematography
ISBN9789492944009
Année2018
NUR674
Format170 x 240 mm
Nombre de pages78 p.
À propos de l’auteur

Dr. Marijke Van Kets is a cinematographer. Over the past twenty years, she taught a variety of cinematography courses at film schools in Singapore and Belgium, including digital and analogue film technologies. She is a member of the education committee of IMAGO, the European Federation of Cinematographers.