Frames: Low Angle.
A director would use a low angle for their content because it generates a confusion to the audience about the scene, it could also give the audience a powerless motion and feel whilst watching. A Low angle also would leave the background of a scene or photo with the ceiling or the sky as the secondary image, whereas the subject would be the main focus.
A director would use a low angle of a person because it uses a different type of view point and would also so that they are still the main focus and subject of the scene or photograph. A typical or most used Low angle scene would be related to death or from a height like a child or from a car boot. For example:
Example from the film Holes: Example from the film The Hangover:
Example clip from the film Pulp Fiction: Credits to Camera techniques.
Example from the film Holes: Example from the film The Hangover:
A director might use a different subject other than a person as the main focus of their scene because it may be from a different view point or so that the main focus is the background as well as the subject, a prime example would be a animal. For example:
Example from the film Pulp Fiction: Example from the film Matilda:
Example clip from the film Pulp Fiction: Credits to Camera techniques.
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