[Home]History of B Roll

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Revision 2 . . September 5, 2001 8:34 am by Koyaanis Qatsi [explanation of why one might want to cut away to the B roll]
Revision 1 . . September 5, 2001 8:04 am by Floog
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Changed: 1c1,3
The secondary or "safety" footage for non-narrative or interview based film. In order to string together two interview clips that were not shot consecutively, an editor will cut away from A Roll to B Roll, while the audio from the A Roll shot plays under. Then when the editor cuts back to the second A Roll shot, it appears as if the concepts were always married together.
The secondary or "safety" footage for non-narrative or interview based film. In order to string together two interview clips that were not shot consecutively, an editor will cut away from A Roll to B Roll, while the audio from the A Roll shot plays under. Then when the editor cuts back to the second A Roll shot, it appears as if the concepts were always married together. This technique of using the cutaway is common to hide zooms: the visuals may cut away to B roll footage of what the person is talking about while the A camera zooms in, then cut back after the zoom is complete. The cutaway to B roll footage can also be used to hide verbal or physical tics that the editor and/or director finds distracting: with the audio separate from the video, the filmmakers are freer to excise "uh"s, sniffs, coughs, and so forth.

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