Editing
Film editing is the art, technique, and practice of assembling shots into a coherent sequence. The job of an editor is not simply to mechanically put pieces of a film together, cut off film slates, or edit dialogue scenes.
Continuity Editing
Every sort of editing formulates this way, it is used in almost all films and TV programmes. It gives the impression to the audience that the broken down filming is consistent. This sort of editing can also help to show cross-cutting (scenes that were not shot in the same place) where the film cuts between two scenes to show two different parts of the narrative which happens simultaneously. We will be using this in our piece to make sure that our opening sequence has a continuous flow.
Montage Editing
It is the opposite of continuity editing, this is because the cuts are obvious to the audience and it doesn't create the constant flow that continuity editing creates. It juxtaposes images to create meaning.
Cross dissolve
When one images dissolves into the next image.
Wipe
When one film clip wipes out the previous film clip that was on screen beforehand.
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