Author(s):  
Akihito Kanai

In addition to the determinacy created by the stories' or characters' goal-directed actions, the indeterminacy created by the non-story and nostalgia aspects of rhetoric is an essential issue of narrative simulation for non-story film rhetoric composition. The narrative simulation can test cognitive effects created through the interaction between the cognitive process, story, discourse, and the rhetoric of a film. Non-story film editing can be classified according to the categories of rhythm and nostalgia, and can be used for narrative film rhetoric simulation. Nostalgia may emerge with the determinacy of the place and time and the indeterminacy of non-story aspects of rhetoric. Non-nostalgia narrative may emerge with the indeterminacy of the place and time and can be simulated by the use of the non-story editing regarding the rhythm categories.


2021 ◽  
pp. 129-160
Author(s):  
Catriona Kelly

The 1960s witnessed the transformation of “film factories” from metaphor to lived reality. Lenfilm’s output rose once more to the levels its predecessor studios had reached in the 1920s, but the conditions of production were now far more complex and demanding, with staffs more than ten times the size. And while the 1960s was an era of optimistic emphasis on the Soviet film industry’s capacity to equal and surpass the world in technological terms, during the 1970s, the conviction took hold that the technological superiority of Western films was of direct relevance to audience share. Increasingly, ambitious filmmakers petitioned Goskino for permission to shoot on Kodak and to use Arriflex cameras; criticism of inferior Soviet film stock and GDR-produced film editing tables mounted, both across the USSR and at Lenfilm itself. Yet investment in studio infrastructure and technology remained at best haphazard, particularly at Lenfilm, which enjoyed less generous support from the center than Mosfilm, but also more limited resourcing than film studios in the capitals of Soviet republics. At the same time, Lenfilm had an unusually diverse, energetic, inventive, and loyal workforce, with corporate values that inspired manual workers and porters as well as “creative” personnel. Hierarchical at some levels, the work culture was egalitarian at others, and the frenetic process of scrambling to finish films in trying circumstances created strong bonds. The chapter explores the various conflicts and contradictions, but also rewards, that this situation generated.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Dmytryk
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-60
Author(s):  
David Villalvazo
Keyword(s):  

Film editing deals with shots composed by melodic, harmonic and rhythmic elements and combines them into unities developed through time. In Avondale Dogs, cinematic passages about an ill mother, a dead pigeon, friendly neighbours and scattered pies provide eloquent clues about some fundamental characteristics shared by music and film.


1987 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Wise ◽  
Anthony Debons

Contemporary display systems are notorious for their lack of flow across display pages. The capabilities to dynamically change the makeup and layout of a display that are resident in windowing and sensor fusion systems are beginning to present the display system designer with even more complex display transition problems. The motion picture industry, on the other hand, has for years successfully presented a series of dynamic visual displays, where changes from one scene (or display) to the next has been accomplished with no notice, or where the change has actually enhanced the information flow to the viewer. This paper discusses how some of the techniques and principles used in making editing decisions might be applied to the design of display systems.


2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 69-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Lefebvre ◽  
Marc Furstenau

Abstract In this essay we consider some of the effects of digital film editing technology on editing. Through an analysis of this technology, as well as DVD technology, we examine the impact these new interfaces have on the film experience. In addition, a study of the effects of compositing—understood here as digital montage par excellence—permits us to dig deeper into its impact on traditional approaches to film style, as well as to question the anxiety stemming from the new technology, given that many critics today argue that digitization has obliterated film’s indexicality.


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