This is a screenshot from the editing software, I am using Adobe Premiere Pro to edit my film opening. You can see in the bottom left where my imported footage is kept so I can drag it onto the video timeline (bottom right) and cut it together with the current footage. On the top left is a preview of the imported video before any alterations have been made and before it has been put into the timeline. Next to it, in the top right, you can see the video preview after it has been added to the timeline and edited to fit. In this case there is not much of a difference as I have only done very basic editing so far and not many effects have been added.
At this stage I am still very early on in the editing process but I have about 1 minute of footage edited together with the quick paced music in the flashback chase scenes and ambient noises such as bird song and wind in the trees during the forest scenes. I still need to put the rest of the footage together and add music during the forest scenes but I am pleased with the progress I have made so far. On the preview screen at the top you can see one scene that I am currently editing from the chase scene where Dylan is running away from the camera. You can see that there are very little cuts in the forest scene so that the scene feels slower and more peaceful but tense at the same time. In the chase scene there is lots of little cuts and most shots are only a second long, sometimes even shorter. This makes the chase scene seem fast, sudden and hard to follow, throwing you into the action and (paired with the use of fast music) create a sense of action and getting adrenaline going. This fits the action movie convention and helps define the opening as that of an action/thriller movie.
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