Low angle: power and oppression
Below eye level, verticals converge upward; figures loom. Often paired with wide lenses for exaggerated perspective.
Key points
- Lower height increases dominance cues (watch facial distortion)
- Wide + close elongates chins—mind distance and focal length
- Include ceilings or towers to feel “loomed over”
Director logic
The hero rises; the tyrant looms—low angle is the oldest power shorthand in cinema. Use it at turning points where dominance shifts, villain entrances, or the moment a character finally reclaims agency.
AI prompts
In AI generation, specify camera height and lens type together. Adding architectural or ceiling elements reinforces the upward converging lines that sell the power dynamic.
low angle camera, wide lens, imposing character, dramatic upward perspective, towering architecture, converging vertical lines