Newsmeldung von slashCAM: Film analysis by Framecounting of Thomas - 2 Feb 2007 12:07:00 David Bordwell (known as an author of books on film theory) is committed in his blog "frame counter" to be, that is for certain, fast-cut film sequences every frame in order to count the time relationship between the cuts to be determined and thus the visual rhythm of a sequence to be analyzed. Some movies are just arithmetically edited, for example, is the scene of the burning gas in Hitchcock's "The Birds" cut so that the first adjustment will take 20 pictures, the next 18, then 16 and then next. Problems for this method of analysis but there are shooting on video: Differences to the original lengths of scenes occur when the footage of 24 frames per second video will be banned and then by pull-down procedures at the 30 picture per second of NTSV - Video will be stretched. DVDs work on counting the frames actually better, but, as Bordwell's analysis of a battle sequence from King Hu's wonderful "A Touch of Zen" describes not always synonymous.
Antwort von Dragon:
Hehe cool - and I thought I am the only one that makes the crazy :-).
Antwort von Dragon:
No, because there are other counters cut:)
always fascinating: when sections include Tony Scott. Entire movie about to afuwendig, so look at the rounded number of the BMW shortfilm analysis:
approximately 500 seconds film makes for Tony Scott to "beat the devil" 400 sections ...
Incidentally, the recommendation:
"the classical Hollywood cinema" of bordwell, Steiger and thompson. very worth reading
Antwort von learner fcp 4,5:
Hey folks, there is in Final Cut Pro HD 4.5 a function which counts the frames? Or simply adds one of each clip duration / minutes, and then be multiplied? regards
Antwort von breakable:
hmm,
no idea, but I've always the premiere with
dummy clips (eg color) made.
gruß cj