Video Production Story-Telling Techniques: The Sequence


Sequence is an extremely common term in professional video production. A video sequence is a vital story-telling element; sequences are the building blocks of visual story-telling much like paragraphs are the building blocks of written stories.

What is a Sequence?
When you take a wide shot, put it together with three medium-shots and two close-ups in order to show that someone made a telephone call or built a chair, it’s called a sequence.

More technically, sequence refers to a series of shots that depict a single incident or happening.  In most professional video production, the shot changes every five seconds or so.  To hang on a shot any longer than that is considered boring.  So you do not use just one shot of an event, you use a lot.  Editing them together is called a sequence.

In video, a sequence is analogous to paragraphs and sentences in verbal storytelling. Take eight to ten words, string them together artfully based on the rules of grammar and you communicate a basic idea. String that sentence with other, related sentences to build a paragraph for more complex written story-telling.

In video, you do the same thing with visuals and it’s called a sequence. Traditionally, most sequences begin and end with a wide-shot. The middle is medium and close shots.

Build your story one sequence at a time.
Multiple sequences are strung together to tell an entire story. Say your story starts with the sequence of a character making a phone call. That sequence consists of six shots.

  1. WS character walking over to phone and picking it up
  2. CU character punches buttons on phone.
  3. CU character’s face as he speaks
  4. MS of shadowy person character is talking to
  5. CU of character’s face looking horrified
  6. CU of phone being hung up

The next sequence takes our character into the garage to build a chair. The viewer sees a series of WS, MS, and CU shots.  (Wide shots, medium shots and close-ups)

  1. WS garage as character walks in
  2. CU opening paint thinner
  3. CU of thinner being spread on chair
  4. CU of guys face, obviously hating the stinky fumes
  5. MS as he works

Now, the two sequences can be interspersed…throw in a few quick shots of the phone conversation to remind the audience the character was terribly upset by something.
Then cut to your third and final sequence that shows the paramedics wheeling him out of the garage, DEAD after being asphyxiated by paint thinner fumes. Was it an accident, suicide or murder? Ummmm, had something to do with that shadowy character on the phone….

Isn’t TV Land a cheerful place?  Death and destruction rule!

Sequences have multiple personalities
Sequences tell a story, but depending on what narration and other story-telling elements you use along with it, a sequence can be made to illustrate multiple ideas. For example, the exact same sequence of an automobile cruising down the highway might be used with different narration to illustrate any of the following ideas:

  • An example of the marvels of modern technology
  • An example of why Americans are fat
  • A factor in global warming

The same wide, medium, and close-up shots of the same hot sports car, morphed into entirely different stories because of drastically different context due to choosing other story-telling elements.

Sequences make great file video, or stock video. If you had access to sequences of different types, you could tell just about any story you wanted to.

Thanks for reading Video Production Tips

Lorraine Grula

Internet Video Gal

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