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Technical horror term: Forezoom
I spend a *lot* of time providing on-the-fly descriptive tracks for Kestrell. In that time, I have gotten great utility out of a technical term I picked up from Buffy scriptwriters, "Baitcam". This describes the frequently-used shot where the camera starts looking at the protagonist and/or potential victim from behind concealing foliage, usually from the middle distance, implying that something dangerous is hiding in the bushes. (There usually is, but sometimes it's just a fake-out.) This is, as you can see, complex to describe, but sufficiently quick to establish visually that it's very handy to have shorthand for it.
After the third time in a week that I found myself pausing a video to say: "They're doing that thing with the protagonist in the middle distance and suddenly an indistinct outline figure dashes across the camera in the foreground," I decided I needed a new piece of shorthand. After some thought, I decided that "Forezoom" did the job nicely, being evocative, and only rwo syllables.
Having used it successfully for a month or so, I've decided to share it with the world :)
After the third time in a week that I found myself pausing a video to say: "They're doing that thing with the protagonist in the middle distance and suddenly an indistinct outline figure dashes across the camera in the foreground," I decided I needed a new piece of shorthand. After some thought, I decided that "Forezoom" did the job nicely, being evocative, and only rwo syllables.
Having used it successfully for a month or so, I've decided to share it with the world :)
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Now, how about convenient short hand for these:
casting several lead males or females who resemble each other, causing confusion
intrusive loud soundtrack obscuring mumbled dialogue
[seen currently in Masterpiece's Poldark] Gratuitous staring out to sea and brooding.
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2) This falls under the more general complaint "mumblers".
3) I usually describe these at moderate length, since there's rarely anything more interesting to do during them :)
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"X, maybe."
"X or double."
"Double or nothing."no subject
As for "forezoom", it's a good term, but I immediately assumed it meant that thing where, in a moment of total horror, the camera simultaneously zooms a bit towards the character while blurring the background. There must be a technical term for that, but I have no idea what it is. (Or for that matter, how it's actually accomplished...)
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