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Videomaker - Cutting on the Action

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Uploaded by on Oct 1, 2007

Brandon explains "cutting on the action," highlighting a sequence designed to demonstrate this technique. To learn more great video tips and tricks, download our free report "How to Make a Storyboard: Movie Storyboarding Examples" at http://www.videomaker.com/r/559

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Uploader Comments (videomaker)

  • Chico! Live here myself, thanks for techniques but I need a lot of help with my cinematography. Chance we can correspond?

  • @punjedi The best way to do that would be to post on the Videomaker forums. Our expert editors and knowledgeable community members get to see all the questions posted there.

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All Comments (29)

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  • Here's a shocking fact: there were more than 25 million speeding tickets issued to the American public last year. The reason? We like speed. With instant access to information on the internet, food that is ready to eat faster than it takes a car to pull up to a window, and planes that fly so fast that air around them heats up to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit, it's no wonder that our world demands speed.

  • you all should search "The Harrison House Trailer" on youtube.

    it's a indie film shot for 600 dollars.

    dreams can happen.

  • @automaticchic Cutting is more of... saving time, but still being aware of continuity. Continuity is like how they reached for the door handle, cutting is more like, hopping from place to place but being quite aware of the continuity.

  • im confused.what's the difference between cutting and continuity? :(

  • A simple point, well made, but, though I could hear the narration perfectly well, I did find it distracting that it suddenly became louder partway through, and I HATE that cartoon technique of wobbly lines, seen in the titles. I mention these personal gripes, not so much to complain, as to wonder if anyone else feels the same. Also, it's an example of how critical we can be, in watching film. Thanks for the posting.

  • @littlefurrydude That would be another story!

  • Why do most videomaker videos have such terrible audio?

    Perhaps this is a lesson in itself. A good video is 70% about audio.

  • Great! I always thought that a scene was suppose  to be thought out before shooting

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