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workshop-video-editing-basics/docs/slides/30-180-degree.md
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### 180Degree Rule
> The camera must stay on one side of an imaginary line (the **axis of action**) so that left and right remain consistent for the viewer.
> This is not The Matrix, you are not one of the Wachowskis.
Note:
Introduce the idea of spatial grammar; viewers build a mental map within seconds. Violating it breaks immersion.
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180Degree Rule
<img src="images/30-180-degree/180-degree-rule.png" alt="Illustration of the action axis with safe camera positions" />
--
180Degree Rule
#### The Axis of Action
* Subject A always screenleft, Subject B screenright.
* Any camera placed within the 180° arc keeps this orientation.
Note:
Point to coloured semicircle on slide—explain that this is the camera's “safe zone.”
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#### What Happens If You Cross?
* Subjects swap screen sides → confusion.
* Eyelines no longer match → broken eye contact.
* Movement direction reverses (car appears to turn around).
Note:
Play a 5second clip of a conversation where one shot accidentally crosses; ask the room what feels “wrong.”
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#### Three Ways to Cross Cleanly
1. **Neutral (online) shot** cut to a shot that sits directly on the axis, then to the new side.
2. **Visible camera move** dolly/pan across the line within a single shot.
3. **Subject movement** have the actor walk across the axis; cut once theyve settled on the other side.
Note:
Emphasise that each method gives the audience a visual “ticket” allowing the flip.
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#### Breaking the Rule  Deliberately
> Rules are guidelines; break them with intent.
* Fight chaos, dream logic, psychological disorientation.
* Use colour or lighting cues to anchor geography even when L/R flips.
Note:
Show quick montage from "The Bourne Ultimatum" to illustrate purposeful disorientation.