Elliptical editing is a technique used in film editing that allows an event's duration on-screen to be shorter than its duration in the story. The simplest type of elliptical edit is a cut between two shots, both of which show part of the same event.
Editors use elliptical editing to control the pace of the story. A long, tedious event that may take hours in the story may be cut down so that film spectators only need to sit through a few minutes.
The film is a series of scenes, each of which only show the most interesting or dramatic events. Almost all narrative films use elliptical editing to keep the running time reasonable.
In addition to the basic elliptical cut, there are three common patterns used in elliptical editing: punctuation, empty frame and cutaway.
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