Statement (of what's going on in the shot and what it is)
Example (of what is going on in the shot)
eXplain (the director's purpose)
eXplain (the effect on the audience)
Your link (to something else to do with the aspect)
In this scene, the long shot is used by the director to show the Afrikaner guard as he approaches Geel Piet.
In the long shot, we see Geel Piet as he exits Doc’s jail cell with the bucket of tobacco leaves, as well as the
guard staring him down from a distance before he confronts him. John Avildsen, the director, used this shot
to establish something, in the scene we also see two smaller prisoners sitting aside, and while Geel Piet
stands up and stands up to Sergeant Borman, he gets beaten back down to the same level these prisoners,
who have surrendered themselves to the authority of the Afrikaners by sitting down. As Sergeant Borman
stands to confront Geel Piet, he has a baton in his hand, the effect this has on the audience is that this
incites the thought of incoming violence towards Geel Piet or the prisoners in the approaching scenes or
shots. This aspect can be contrasted to another scene in which the long shot is used to show P.K as he
leaves his mother to attend a boarding school.
I work with Jess on this S.E.X.X.Y Paragraph.
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