Match on Action
A match on action, a technique used in film editing, is a cut that connects two different views of the same action at the same moment in the movement. By carefully matching the movement across the two shots, filmmakers make it seem that the motion continues uninterrupted. For a real match on action, the action should begin in the first shot and end in the second shot.
A cinematographic technique which states that the camera must remain on the same side of an imaginary line, perpendicular to the camera's viewpoint, from which the establishing shot is taken. The 180 degree rule is an important element of the continuity style.
180 Degree Rule
Imagine two people standing face to face. Draw a line from the centre of the top of Person A's head to the centre of the top of Person B's. Now extend this line to infinity on both the x and y axes, dividing the two people bilaterally. To follow the 180 degree rule, the camera must, in each sequence of shots, stay on one side of this line. If this rule is not followed, the characters will not appear to be addressing each other and the cinematic illusion will be broken, as the viewer's sense of perspective is disrupted.
Welcome to Welling School Sixth Form Media and Film Studies blog. I hope you find the resources and information here useful and beneficial to your studies. It is also an area to showcase your work and I hope you will visit the Team Media Youtube area to see both your work and productions created by other students in the sixth form. The blog is regularly updated and has been designed to aid your learning as well as provide a platform for extended dialogue about Media and Film Studies beyond the classroom. Please feel free to add comments and engage in debate about the topics referenced here. You are also free to roam Alan and Gerry's brilliant blogs which are featured in the menu, and the blogs of your peers.
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Chidambaram (India, Malayalam 1985)
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This was the second of the films at Leeds International Film Festival in
the season ‘Spice & Fire: The Films of Smita Patil’ that I managed to
catch. Once ...
Teacher’s Pet (US, 1958)
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I’d never heard of this late Gable movie (or should it be a mid-era Day
one?) and I was surprised I watched it to the end. I did so not because it
was part...
What's New March 2011
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The construction and launch of Britain's great ships is a spectacular sight
- a fact not lost on filmmakers since the earliest days. As the BFI's
three-y...
Closing Post
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It's the end of the project now and I've really enjoyed it. I'm really
pleased with the final piece, even though we did have quite a few problems
with it a...
i feel
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that the exam went okay
mesed up my timing n_n finished 15 and a half pages with 25 mins to go. i
couldve done abit more to each question but i didnt have ...
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