Sinkhole Security Camera Footage Sinkhole Security Camera Footage In filmmaking and video production Sinkhole Security Camera Footage, footage is the raw Sinkhole Security Camera Footage Sinkhole Security Camera Footage, unedited material as it had been originally filmed by movie camera or recorded by a video camera which usually must be edited to create a motion picture, video clip, Sinkhole Security Camera Footage television show or similar completed work. More loosely, footage can also refer to all sequences used in film and video editing, such as special effects and archive material (for special cases of this, see stock footage and B roll). Since the term originates in film, Sinkhole Security Camera Footage footage is only used for recorded images, such as film stock Sinkhole Security Camera Footage videotapes or digitized clips -- Sinkhole Security Camera Footage on live television Sinkhole Security Camera Footage, the signals from video cameras are called sources instead. Sinkhole Security Camera Footage Sinkhole Security Camera Footage
The origin of the term "footage" is that early 35 mm silent film has traditionally been measured in feet and frames Sinkhole Security Camera Footage; Sinkhole Security Camera Footage the fact that film was measured by length in cutting rooms, Sinkhole Security Camera Footage and that there are 16 frames (4-perf film format) in a foot of 35 mm film which roughly represented 1 second of silent film, made footage a natural unit of measure for film. The term then became used figuratively to describe moving image material of any kind. Television footage Sinkhole Security Camera Footage, especially news footage, is often traded between television networks, but good footage usually commands[tone] a high price. The actual sum depends on duration, age, size of intended audience, duration of licensing and other factors. Amateur movie footage of current events can also often fetch[tone] a high price on the market -- scenes shot inside the World Trade Sinkhole Security Camera Footage Center during the September 11, 2001 attacks were reportedly sold for US$45,000.[1] Sometimes Sinkhole Security Camera Footage film projects will also sell or trade footage, usually second unit material not used in the final cut Sinkhole Security Camera Footage. For example, Sinkhole Security Camera Footage the end of the non-director's cut version of Blade Runner used landscape views that were originally shot for The Shining before the script was modified after shooting had finished.[2] Sinkhole Security Camera Footage
Found footage is a genre Sinkhole Security Camera Footage of film making, especially horror, in which all or a substantial part of a film is presented as discovered film or video recordings, often left behind by missing or dead protagonists.[1][2][3] Sinkhole Security Camera Footage The events on screen are seen through the camera of one or more of the characters involved, Sinkhole Security Camera Footage who often speaks off screen. Filming may be done by the actors themselves as they recite their lines, and shaky camera work and naturalistic acting are often employed. While the Sinkhole Security Camera Footage genre dates back at least as far as 1971s Punishment Park, it was popularised after the release of such films as The Blair Witch Project (1999), Paranormal Activity (2007), REC (2007) Sinkhole Security Camera Footage, Quarantine (2008), Cloverfield (2008) and Chronicle (2012).[4]Sinkhole Security Camera Footage
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/xy7Kg_gg-z0/mqdefault.jpg)