Description
Directly addressing how filmmakers can craft visually powerful films through practical skills that can be used throughout the filmmaking process, author Blain Brown explores how we use space, color, camera angles, composition, motion, POV, and all the dozens of other methods in the day-to-day work of telling stories visually.
Brown interrogates not only the tangible aspects of visual storytelling, but also the more abstract areas including visual metaphor, manipulating time and space, and visual subtext. It covers all the aspects of visual storytelling that directors, cinematographers, and editors use to tell stories visually and includes over 450 colour images to illustrate how the desired visual effect is achieved. Written by a working filmmaker with over 30 years' experience as a director and cinematographer, this book looks at both the how and the why of visual storytelling, consistently drawing on the day-to-day real-world environment of making a film.
Ideal for intermediate and advanced students of filmmaking as well as professionals working in the industry.
About the Author
Blain Brown has worked as a director of photography, writer, and director on feature films, commercials, industrials, music videos, and documentaries for over thirty years. His other books include Cinematography: Theory and Practice (4th Edition), Motion Picture and Video Lighting (4th Edition), The Filmmaker's Guide to Digital Imaging, and The Basics of Filmmaking.
Book Information
ISBN 9781032414720
Author Blain Brown
Format Hardback
Page Count 372
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd