Not exact matches
There have been
cameras mounted in holes in the display, plenty of
tricks with mirrors, and lots of computer - graphics schemes to
create the illusion that each person in a videoconference is looking in a different direction than is actually the case.
Considering how audiences have become more savvy about the art of animation, it's easy to take for granted the technological advances Walt Disney employed for the film, namely the use of a multiplane
camera to
create an illusion of depth; while addressed in the main documentary, the technique is further explored in a «
Tricks of the Trade» excerpt from the old Disneyland television series as well as the 1937 nature - themed short The Old Mill, in which Disney and his crew not only tried out the new multiplane
camera but also honed their skills at drawing and animating animals.
These
tricks include an Enterprise lift that goes nowhere, a five - year - old in a costume used to make a cave set look bigger than it actually is and (our favourite) how the
camera is shaken to
create that jittery effect during action sequences such as the skydiving jump.
Edison
created the first electric light bulb, motion picture
camera, and phonograph among other things, which leads us to believe E.D. has some innovative
tricks up its sleeve.
The most common
trick is to use the increasingly common dual -
camera setup on the back of phones to generate a depth map of an image, which lets the software blur the background and keep the subject in focus,
creating a virtual shallow depth of field that simulates the effect of a $ 500 DSLR lens.