ABSTRACT

The television industry is first started to present dramas, and it just put its cameras in front of a stage performance and filmed what it saw, unlike film, which had a whole series of different shots to help convey the story and emotions. A film can be made and the director and crew may not be sure at first whether the result will be shown on the big or small screen. Interestingly, the rehearsal time will probably be the same, even though the budgets will be vastly different. Films need a lot more postproduction and, in particular, much more replaced sound, as the production team struggles to reproduce the natural sounds you made in the studio with their Foley and Dolby effects. Television uses more multicamera techniques, but even here the film world is starting to copy it, with certain scenes now being simultaneously shot with two cameras so as to get mid shot and the close-up at same time.