Sunday 19 June 2016

Zoom actor in while background out? How is this effect called and made?

It's called Dolly Zoom (but there are a couple of alternate names for it)



From MediaCollege:




A dolly zoom is a cinematic technique in which the camera moves closer or further from the subject while simultaneously adjusting the zoom angle to keep the subject the same size in the frame.



The effect is that the subject appears stationary while the background size changes (this is called perspective distortion).



Invention of the dolly zoom is credited to cameraman Irmin Roberts.



The technique was made famous by Alfred Hitchcock (Vertigo being the best-known example), and was used by Steven Spielberg in Jaws and ET.





From Wikipedia:




The dolly zoom is commonly used by filmmakers to represent the sensation of vertigo, a "falling-away-from-oneself feeling" or a feeling of unreality, or to suggest that a character is undergoing a realization that causes him or her to reassess everything he or she had previously believed.



After Hitchcock popularized the effect the technique was used by many other filmmakers, and eventually became regarded as a gimmick or cliché.



This was especially true after director Steven Spielberg repopularized the effect in his highly regarded film Jaws, in a memorable shot of a dolly zoom into Police Chief Brody's (Roy Scheider) stunned reaction at the climax of a shark attack on a beach (after a suspenseful build-up).





Examples on YouTube:

No comments:

Post a Comment