Extreme close-up: psychological urgency
Close-ups strip environment, forcing micro-reads—time stretches, pressure climbs. When the frame is filled with eyes, lips, or hands, every twitch becomes a seismic event. The audience has nowhere to look but at the raw emotion or critical detail you choose to magnify.
Key points
- Shallow depth of field isolates the detail and blurs everything else
- Skin texture and micro-expressions become the entire story surface
- Use sparingly—too many close-ups numb their impact
- Perfect for reaction shots, lie detection moments, and object reveals
Director logic
The close-up is cinema's microscope—it stops time and forces intimacy. Reserve it for the moments that matter most: the tear, the lie, the trigger finger, the wedding ring.
AI prompts
Specify what fills the frame (eyes, hands, object) and the depth of field. Include emotional descriptors to guide the mood of the close-up.
extreme close-up, eyes filling the frame, shallow depth of field, intense emotional detail, cinematic macro shot