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Feb 24, 2004 18:14


"בנוסף, יצר סמית' בשנת 1901 את הסוג השני של חיתוך סצינה בסרטו The Little Doctor. בסרט זה, הקיים כיום רק בגרסא אשר הופקה מחדש בשנת 1903 תחת השם The Sick Kitten, הזהה לחלוטין לגרסא המקורית, ישנו חיתוך היישר במורד ציר העדשה מצילום מסוג Medium Long Shot לצילום תקריב גדול מוחדר (Insert) של החתול עם כפית בפיו, ואז מוחזר הצילום ה- Medium Long Shot. מאחר ( Read more... )

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domitian February 28 2004, 14:26:07 UTC
1. I don't think most people 500 years ago went to the theatre. We all heard about Shakespeare and the Globe, but then, most of his audience were bourgeoisie - and they were only a minority of England's total population. So maybe their way of visualising things was different in a way we cannot imagine. Maybe it was more similar to painted church windows.

2. Maybe Griffiths overlooked that people are becoming more similar not as part of a rational process, but simply because they are exposed to the same experiences - mental (visual or otherwise) and practical. So the Brit doesn't "realise" his soul is the same a Jap's, or vice versa. They're becoming the same because they both generally do the same kind of work, go to the same movies, watch program highly similar to each other, and have a list of books that both draw from. Anyway, a European may say Japanese films are weird, but they're generally much more understandable to him than, say, any common Japanese would have been a hundred years ago. As for Frenchies, well, I think they're not very different from other European or non-European city dwellers, but then, Frenchies are your territory.

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