180-degree rule- The 180-degree rule of shooting and editing
keeps the camera on one side of the action. As a matter of convention, the
camera stays on one side of the axis of action throughout a scene; this keeps
characters grounded compositionally on a particular side of the screen or
frame, and keeps them looking at one another when only one character is seen
onscreen at a time. The technique allows for an expansion of the frame into the
unseen space offscreen. It is referred to as a rule because the camera, when
shooting two actors, must not cross over the axis of action; if it does, it
risks giving the impression that the actors' positions in the scene have been
reversed.
There are instances when the 180-degree rule is violated.
For instance, the director Yasujro Ozu often tampers with sight lines and
crosses the axis with ease. Ozu reverses camera angles, breaking with
convention, and creates an almost purely cinematic tension within scenes. We
are forced to see characters with reversed screen placement, sight lines, and
even movement. While the continuity of the scene holds, this change of
placement serves to make the audience both uneasy and attentive.
this is a video explaining the conventions of the 180-
degree rule and how to use it once filming. there is also an example of where
it is excepted.
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