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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper discusses the differing techniques used by filmmakers and TV producers, and the way the two industries have influenced each other. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HV676852.rtf
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Relationship between Film and Television Research Compiled for The
Paper Store, Inc. by K. Von Huben 7/2010 Please Introduction Film and television are visual media, highly structured and much alike
than different. This paper considers the technical differences between the two, as well as the way they have influenced each other throughout history. Discussion First, it must be said that
technically, there is no real difference between the two, at least in terms of what the director and actors do to make a film or television show. That is, a
close-up is a close-up, a tracking shot is a tracking shot, pans, focus, tilt-all the terms and methods are the same. A search for "compare contrast techniques film and television"
or similar phrases yields numerous results that discuss "film AND television techniques" and find almost no difference between them, with regard to actually shooting the material. Both film and
television use a series of shots that are cut together in a continuous pattern that creates a narrative (broadcasting, 2010). Both media share the freedom "to select the compass of
each individual shot and its freedom to determine the nature of the movement within it" (broadcasting, 2010). Film and TV are very closely linked aesthetically, and continue to "have a
close relationship with each other," which extends to the techniques they share (broadcasting, 2010). However, these techniques are limited: "Television adopted videotape in order to achieve an immediate high-quality record
of the electronic image," which seemed likely to prove a threat to using film in television (broadcasting, 2010). This has not happened; many TV productions use film cameras (broadcasting, 2010).
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