This book contains everything a student needs to know about planning, shooting, and editing a single-camera video project.
This book contains everything a student needs to know about planning, shooting, and editing a single-camera video project.
Steve Price takes students through the entire single-camera video production process, from pre to post, showing students how to expertly plan, light, capture audio, shoot, edit, and color correct their work successfully and effectively. In addition to this, he teaches students how to translate their skills to any single-camera genre in the industry through dedicated chapters on fiction and non-fiction projects such as narrative films and series, commercials, music videos, documentary films, news packages, and corporate and freelance videos. Each of these chapters discusses how preproduction, production, and postproduction differ between the genres, features tailored tips and tricks for each individual mode of production, and features a case study that helps demonstrate the differences and similarities between each one.
This book is a must-have for any filmmaking, media production and communications students taking a class in single-camera video production.
Part I: Preproduction (Chapters 1-3); 1 Scripts and Storyboards; 2 Locations; 3 Scheduling; Part II. Production (Chapters 4-6); 4 Shooting; 5 Lighting; 6 Sound; Part III Post-production (Chapters 7-9); 7 Editing; 8 Audio Post; 9 Coloring; Part IV Producing Fiction (Chapters 10-12); 10 Narrative Films and Series; 11 Commercials; 12 Music Videos; Part V Producing Non-fiction (Chapters 13-15); 13 Documentary Films; 14 News Packages; 15 Corporate and Freelance Work
Stephen Price, Jr. is a professor at the University of Central Missouri and has worked in the media industry for almost 30 years. He started out in sports radio, but has since produced TV news, commercials, music videos, corporate videos, and documentary films. He was the president of the Missouri Broadcast Educators Association for 6 years, and has been the Chair of the Production Aesthetics and Criticism Division of the national BEA organization. Hes been teaching for over 20 years across four different universities, with classes that cover every type of video production, including scriptwriting, cinematography, video editing, documentary film production, and corporate and freelance production.