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Madara Uchiha AMV - Centuries
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Anime music video
(Abbreviation: AMV) is a video consisting of clips from a specific anime series or movie accompanied by music. This video is usually made by the fans of this art.
Although this term was restricted to videos that support anime clips, it is also used to refer to composite videos from clips from American animation or video games.
AMVs are usually not official business and are made by fans only, so they should not be confused with official or professional business or music videos that contain original animations (like many Iron Midnight music videos).
AMVs are usually posted on YouTube or other sites of their own.
The first AMV was created in 1982 by then-21-year-old Jim Kaposztas. He linked clips from the "Star blazers" anime series to the music clip "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles.
Create an AMV
AMV creation centers use various video editing techniques to create a sense of concurrency and unity. Some examples include:
Editing synchronization: using different clips from the video source and changing between them at specified times is his most important AMV creator tool. Both the events in the video and the inter-clips transition are often synced to the events in the music. This synchronization is divided into two general types: internal and external. Internal compatibility includes * Synchronizing sound with actual events taking place in the scene, such as gunshots and doors deprecating. External compatibility cases edited in the cuts made in a timely manner with the sound.
Sync between the lips: the movements coincide the lip of a character in the original video source for the lyrics, to make it sound as if a character was singing a song.
Digital effects: The use of video editing software (usually a non-linear editing system) and the video source can be modified in different ways. Some effects are designed to be almost imperceptible (such as adjusting a scene to stop the character's mouth from moving) while others are intended to increase synchronization with the sound, or perhaps create a unique visual style for the video. Others include connectivity in graphics that are not normally in the video, such as adding text on a fixture in the scene even additional computer graphics to add an optical smear.
Popular
John Oppliger of AnimeNation has noted that AMVs producing a fan are mostly popular with Western fans but not with Japanese fans. One of the reasons he cited that Western fans was a "more purely" visual experience as much as most Western fans did not understand the Japanese language, the native language of most anime, and as a result "visuals making a greater impact" on the senses. As for the second reason, it was cited that Westerners are "encouraged by the social pressure to grow from cartoons and comics during the early adolescence", while Japanese citizens grow up with animation "as read". As a result, English-speaking fans tend to use and reuse existing anime to create AMVs while Japanese fans "tend more intuitively" to create or expand the existing manga and anime.
AMV competitions, ratings and ratings
* In March 2008, Daughters Cool hosted the i-manga music and video mash up contest. Fans invited a contest to create music and videos, using the cool blocks
(Abbreviation: AMV) is a video consisting of clips from a specific anime series or movie accompanied by music. This video is usually made by the fans of this art.
Although this term was restricted to videos that support anime clips, it is also used to refer to composite videos from clips from American animation or video games.
AMVs are usually not official business and are made by fans only, so they should not be confused with official or professional business or music videos that contain original animations (like many Iron Midnight music videos).
AMVs are usually posted on YouTube or other sites of their own.
The first AMV was created in 1982 by then-21-year-old Jim Kaposztas. He linked clips from the "Star blazers" anime series to the music clip "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles.
Create an AMV
AMV creation centers use various video editing techniques to create a sense of concurrency and unity. Some examples include:
Editing synchronization: using different clips from the video source and changing between them at specified times is his most important AMV creator tool. Both the events in the video and the inter-clips transition are often synced to the events in the music. This synchronization is divided into two general types: internal and external. Internal compatibility includes * Synchronizing sound with actual events taking place in the scene, such as gunshots and doors deprecating. External compatibility cases edited in the cuts made in a timely manner with the sound.
Sync between the lips: the movements coincide the lip of a character in the original video source for the lyrics, to make it sound as if a character was singing a song.
Digital effects: The use of video editing software (usually a non-linear editing system) and the video source can be modified in different ways. Some effects are designed to be almost imperceptible (such as adjusting a scene to stop the character's mouth from moving) while others are intended to increase synchronization with the sound, or perhaps create a unique visual style for the video. Others include connectivity in graphics that are not normally in the video, such as adding text on a fixture in the scene even additional computer graphics to add an optical smear.
Popular
John Oppliger of AnimeNation has noted that AMVs producing a fan are mostly popular with Western fans but not with Japanese fans. One of the reasons he cited that Western fans was a "more purely" visual experience as much as most Western fans did not understand the Japanese language, the native language of most anime, and as a result "visuals making a greater impact" on the senses. As for the second reason, it was cited that Westerners are "encouraged by the social pressure to grow from cartoons and comics during the early adolescence", while Japanese citizens grow up with animation "as read". As a result, English-speaking fans tend to use and reuse existing anime to create AMVs while Japanese fans "tend more intuitively" to create or expand the existing manga and anime.
AMV competitions, ratings and ratings
* In March 2008, Daughters Cool hosted the i-manga music and video mash up contest. Fans invited a contest to create music and videos, using the cool blocks