Temporal
spatial
Invisible, or seamless editing means a good job was done deleting and the bad parts and selecting the shots with the best angle , and merging from scene to scene in a coherent, non-disruptive manner.
Cut - in editing, a single unbroken strip of film.Cross-cut - the intercutting of shots from two or more scenes so the fragments of each scene will be presented to the viewers attention alternately.Parallel action (cut) - a device of narrative construction in which the development of two pieces of action are presented simultaneously.
Film techniques such as lighting, mise-en-scene, dialogue, setting, music, flashbacks, camera angles and camera shots and juxtaposition were all used to enhance the characters in â??Cluelessâ??. In addition to these, Cherâ??s dialogue with the audience, broke the Fourth Wall.
opening scene
spatial
Spatial Relations
No its not its Spatial (Apex) <- incorrect. it's rhythmic
Your question cannot be answered because you didn't tell us what the techniques are for. Techniques for doing what? what editing technique may take advantage to establish a sense of place within a scene
Invisible, or seamless editing means a good job was done deleting and the bad parts and selecting the shots with the best angle , and merging from scene to scene in a coherent, non-disruptive manner.
These transitions have several names and techniques, depending on how smooth the director and film editor want the transition to be. The smoothest may be a close-up of one scene as a close-up of say a door handle with a fade to a close-up of a different door handle, with a pull back to reveal the next scene. You could call this a 'dissolve'. Other opinions may offer different techniques. All would be considered 'continuity editing'. You can review the vocabulary used by film editors, below.
onomatopoeia
crime scene investigators
Spatial Relations
A clapperboard is used to synchronize audio and visual recordings made separately. It produces a distinctive precise action on both recordings that may be lined up later when editing to combine the two recordings in synchronization for playback. So likely it should be used at the beginning of any point that might need editing together at a later time. Such as the start of a particular scene of a movie.
An omitted scene is a part of a script or story that was originally included but later removed during editing or revisions. It is usually cut to streamline the plot, improve pacing, or for other creative reasons.
Imperatives Ironymonosyllabic wordsPowerful blood imageryRepetitionPersonification