Editing: Multiple Camera Mode (Discussion)

From Screenpedia
Revision as of 15:45, 19 November 2013 by Jeremy Butler (talk | contribs) (→‎External links: fix link)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Multiple camera vs. single camera

  1. What is the difference between the two modes of production?
    • What is it about this scene from As The World Turns (password: telestylistics) that marks it as a multiple-camera production? From 1 February 2008.
      • Compare it with the All My Children scene in Television: illustrations and QuickTime clip.
      • All Groups: List at least three aspects of the scene that mark it as multiple-camera.
    • What is it about this The New Adventures of Old Christine episode, “Ritchie Scores” (8 January 2007) that marks it as a multiple-camera production?. See video clip.
      • All Groups: List at least three multiple-camera aspects of the scene that it shares with the AMC example.
  2. In which situations is single camera preferred? In which is multiple camera preferred?
    • All Groups: List at least two examples of each.
  3. All Groups: List four single-camera TV shows and four multiple-camera shows, but don't use the examples in the textbook.
    • Groups 1 and 2:
      • Single camera: Walking Dead, Arrested Development, The Office, 30 Rock
      • Multiple camera: Big Bang Theory, Home Improvement, Two and a Half Men, Two Broke Girls
    • Group 3 and 4:
      • Single camera: Community, Scrubs, Arrow, Breaking Bad, Scandal, Orange is the New Black
      • Multiple camera: Everybody Loves Raymond, Blue Mountain State, Friends, Roseanne

Multiple-camera exercise: "The Contest," Seinfeld, October 26, 1992

  • Pretend you are director Tom Cherones and map out the camera positions for this scene.

Template:Gallery

Bibliography

  1. Butler, Jeremy G. Television: Critical Methods and Applications. New York: Routledge, 2012.

External links

  1. Television Style video examples
  2. Seinfeld scene breakdown materials
  3. Video clip
  4. Hybrid mode of production in How I Met Your Mother