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- Tracking_shot abstract "In motion picture terminology, the term tracking shot may refer to a shot in which the camera is mounted on a camera dolly, a wheeled platform that is pushed on rails while the picture is being taken; in this case the shot is also known as a dolly shot or trucking shot. One may dolly in on a stationary subject for emphasis, or dolly out, or dolly beside a moving subject (an action known as "dolly with").The term may also refer to any shot in which the camera follows a subject within the frame, such as a moving actor or a moving vehicle. When using the term tracking shot in this sense, the camera may be moved in ways not involving a camera dolly, such as via a Glidecam, via handheld camera operator, or by being panned on a tripod.The Italian feature film Cabiria (1914), directed by Giovanni Pastrone, was the first popular film to use dolly shots, which in fact were originally called "Cabiria movements" by contemporary filmmakers influenced by the film; however, some smaller American and English films had used the technique prior to Cabiria, as well as Yevgeni Bauer's The Child of the Big City, released a month prior to Cabiria. A popular film using tracking shots was Alfonso Cuaron's Children of Men. Another example of a Steadicam tracking shot can be seen in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining when Danny is moving through the hotel hallways on his three wheeled bike.The tracking shot can include smooth movements forward, backward, along the side of the subject, or on a curve. Dollies with hydraulic arms can also smoothly "boom" or "jib" the camera several feet on a vertical axis. Tracking shots, however, cannot include complex pivoting movements, aerial shots or crane shots.Tracking shots are often confused with the long take – such as the 10-minute takes in Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948) – or sequence shots.".
- Tracking_shot thumbnail AlamoFilming.jpg?width=300.
- Tracking_shot wikiPageID "30247".
- Tracking_shot wikiPageRevisionID "606586998".
- Tracking_shot hasPhotoCollection Tracking_shot.
- Tracking_shot subject Category:Cinematography.
- Tracking_shot subject Category:Film_techniques.
- Tracking_shot type Ability105616246.
- Tracking_shot type Abstraction100002137.
- Tracking_shot type Cognition100023271.
- Tracking_shot type FilmTechniques.
- Tracking_shot type Know-how105616786.
- Tracking_shot type Method105660268.
- Tracking_shot type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Tracking_shot type Technique105665146.
- Tracking_shot comment "In motion picture terminology, the term tracking shot may refer to a shot in which the camera is mounted on a camera dolly, a wheeled platform that is pushed on rails while the picture is being taken; in this case the shot is also known as a dolly shot or trucking shot.".
- Tracking_shot label "Carrellata".
- Tracking_shot label "Kamerafahrt".
- Tracking_shot label "Tracking shot".
- Tracking_shot label "Tracking shot".
- Tracking_shot label "Travelling".
- Tracking_shot label "Travelling".
- Tracking_shot label "Travelling".
- Tracking_shot label "Travelling".
- Tracking_shot sameAs Kamerafahrt.
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- Tracking_shot sameAs Travelling.
- Tracking_shot sameAs Carrellata.
- Tracking_shot sameAs Tracking_shot.
- Tracking_shot sameAs Travelling.
- Tracking_shot sameAs Travelling.
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- Tracking_shot sameAs Tracking_shot.
- Tracking_shot wasDerivedFrom Tracking_shot?oldid=606586998.
- Tracking_shot depiction AlamoFilming.jpg.
- Tracking_shot isPrimaryTopicOf Tracking_shot.