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Films Frames - Every Frame is a Painting
#Every Frame Is a Painting
A place to share your favourite film frames and stills.
↱ Please use the following title formatting, when posting: · Film Name, Director/s (YYYY)
read guidelines ↡ before posting
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↳ Our family Communities:
➰#Cinema
Fin - The Last Breath of a Film !fin@lemmy.world
Silent Film Gifs !silentfilmgifs@lemmy.world
Lost In Film - !lostinfilm@lemmy.world
Cinema Português - !cinemaportugues@lemmy.world
Film Posters Porn !filmpostersporn@lemmy.world
Cinephile Circlejerk !cinephilecirclejerk@lemmy.world
MovieSnob !moviesnob@lemmy.film
➰#Music
Album Art Porn - !albumartporn@lemmy.world
➰#Photography
Sizz - !sizz@lemmy.world
Kenopsia - !kenopsia@lemmy.world
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➤Simple Guidelines
➧1. Include the original film name, director and year of release for your cinema favourite frame
Always include the original film name, director and year of release. If you do not know some of the required information, state that in either the title or top-level comment e.g. [Roma, Federico Fellini, Unknown Year]. The reason we ask for this information is that you can only search on the content of post titles, not comments.
➧2. Add review? I'ts your choice! In the 'body' of the post you can add your review, a comment or anything else you think about the film. You're free to do that, let's keep the discussion open about the film you just posted. Or just don't write anything and share your favourite frame, is up to you.
➧3. No low-effort/low-quality posts.
Posts made to r/filmsframes are expected to be of high quality and have serious effort put behind them. The frame should be clean, not have any urls/website watermarks in them.
➧4. Be Original
Don’t publish stills/frames of a famous film like everyone else, we want to see your own view of a film, your favourite shot, try to publish your favourite still/frame.
➧5. Be respectful.
Harassment, abuse, name calling, and/or threats of any kind is not tolerated here. Any content, whether an image or a comment, that includes any kind of bigoted language or hate speech will be met with a permanent ban.
➧6. No off-topic Content
Never post anything that is off-topic (i.e. not film stills/frames) or that contains gory material.
➧7. No spam or reposts.
Do not submit more than one of the same post/comment on this community or across multiple communities. In addition, please wait at least 3 months before reposting an image that has already been posted to r/filmsframes, and do not repost from the top of all time.
➧8. No advertisement or self-promotion.
Do not use this subreddit to advertise or self-promote. This includes (but is not limited to) websites, articles, blog posts, and brands.
➧9. No memes images or GIFS Please keep the 'frames' and 'stills' in mind.
➧10. Tag NSFW Posts
· Nudity: Obvious, implied or strategically covered · Content that is “sexually explicit” · Gore, both human and non-human.
➧11. Look around you... Please watch what is posted already, maybe shots/frames/stills from ‘Marvel’ or other “blockbuster” films or others alike, aren’t the most suitable for this community. Yet, this is relative, if you find your "view/still/frame is artistic enough to post, don’t be shy to post it.
➠ Report if you if like... Feel free to report any content that does not respect these rules.
I loved the 2012 Dredd, especially for the way that they switched between the "grungy real world view" and "bright sparkly drugged view" during those sequences. I think that just having the color and image changes in addition to the timeframe shift was a good choice.
Finally a main character who never removes thier helmet/mask actually has an actor play the character with the helmet/mask the entire time instead of removing it to mug to the camera every scene.