Flashbacks scenes in Movies/TV should be depicted as being more blurry than present scenes, since most people can't actually remember a past event that accurately.
Changing something about the appearance of of the image is done often. But I donât think blurry would do unless itâs a really short flashback. It would either look like a mistake (camera not in focus for instance), not be intense enough to be apparent on smaller or lower resolution TVs, or be distracting and annoying to the viewer (say, some sort of foveated motion blur).
Or what if a character sustains a head injury and scenes after it are in black and white and scenes before it are in color. I was going to make a joke here but this is Memento.
Bojack Horseman did some interesting stuff to represent a character with dementiaâs failing memory as she tried to recall things. Unimportant or painful to recall peopleâs faces were blank or scribbled over, the background of scenes got vague sometimes, and one memory would visibly collide with another in some confusing mix.
Theyâre primarily a tool to remind audiences what happened/is relevant, but itâd definitely be interesting for a show to unceremoniously alter flashbacks in similar ways to how brains alter real memories.
Also, my memories are in color. What is it with this black and white shit?
Lolol
AschtuĂ lly ! Some movies do this
Sometimes theyâre desaturated.
Sometimes theyâre 3:4.
Sometimes theyâre straight-up black and white.
Changing something about the appearance of of the image is done often. But I donât think blurry would do unless itâs a really short flashback. It would either look like a mistake (camera not in focus for instance), not be intense enough to be apparent on smaller or lower resolution TVs, or be distracting and annoying to the viewer (say, some sort of foveated motion blur).
I canât remember the last time I saw a flashback that didnât have a filter on it
hmmâŠ. i guess without spoilers, the boy and the heron have an important scene like this⊠visually stunning..
They kinda do. Arenât memories typically depicted with a kind of hazy camera filter over them?
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Thanks for the daily dose of existential crisis, Memory
RickAnonymous-Internet-StrangerDeleted by moderator
Please let this all be a simulation that Iâll wake up from!
But memories donât in any way feel like the present moment? Thatâs universal, right?
Dreams either for that matter, but I somehow fail to care or even notice most of the time while dreaming.
Wavy screen is the classic method isnât it
With harp
Wavy effect with harp is the only way.
Youâve seen a lot of flashbacks using a wavy effect the entire time?
OoOoOoOooo
Some donât do it to confuse the viewer and create a surprise when the viewer knows that it was in the past
Or what if a character sustains a head injury and scenes after it are in black and white and scenes before it are in color. I was going to make a joke here but this is Memento.
Bojack Horseman did some interesting stuff to represent a character with dementiaâs failing memory as she tried to recall things. Unimportant or painful to recall peopleâs faces were blank or scribbled over, the background of scenes got vague sometimes, and one memory would visibly collide with another in some confusing mix.
Also theyâre generally in the 3rd person which makes no sense
Theyâre primarily a tool to remind audiences what happened/is relevant, but itâd definitely be interesting for a show to unceremoniously alter flashbacks in similar ways to how brains alter real memories.
Itâs as if Kurosawa never made Rashomon.