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Thu, 16 Oct 2008 12:46:14 +0100 |
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In his book _Inside the Gaze_, Francesco Casetti calls what you refer to
as the 'God's eye' pov shot as the 'unreal objective shot'. For Casetti,
this refers to unusual camera angles that cannot be attributed to any
character. Casetti gives the example of those shots found in Busby
Berkeley musicals where the camera is placed perpendicular to the
horizon, when it is pointing downwards on a group of dancers who form an
abstract pattern.
Casetti then gives this shot (as with the other types of shot he
discusses) a dubious linguistic formulation (in terms of personal
pronouns). According to Casetti, the formula for the unreal objective
shot is 'as though you were me' (p. 50). His main point is that the
enunciator and enunciatee are positioned as equivalent to the extent
that both are detached or absent from the scene and share the camera's
omniscient position.
Warren Buckland
www.warrenbuckland.com
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