The big idea: In a photo, the angle it's shot from, how close or wide it's framed, and where the subject looks all shape how you feel about them.
You react to this without noticing.
🖼️ Picture a film still shot from down low, looking up at a figure so they loom over you — you feel small before anything happens. Move the camera up high looking down on them instead, and suddenly they look tiny and helpless.
Here's what to look for:
One clear example of each
Camera angle
Where the camera looks from. A low angle looking up makes a figure loom and seem powerful; a high angle looking down makes them look small and vulnerable, like a lost child seen from above.
Framing
How close or wide the shot is, and what's kept in or cut out. A tight close-up on a tearful face fills the frame with emotion; a wide shot of one person in a huge landscape makes them feel tiny and alone.
Gaze
Where the subject looks. Straight at you (‘direct address’) feels personal, as if they're speaking to you; looking away lets you watch them unseen, like an observer, and can feel lonely or thoughtful.
The key move: Name the angle, the framing or where the subject looks, then say what it makes you feel about them — and why the image-maker wanted that here.
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Why it matters in the exam: In Paper 1 photos and film stills, angle, framing and gaze earn quick marks: point to a low or high angle, a close-up or wide shot, or a direct look, and say what it makes you feel about the subject. Always link the choice to the feeling.
Analyse the camera angle, framing and gaze: a homelessness charity advert shows a man sitting in a doorway, photographed from high above so we look down on him, small in a wide, empty street — and he is staring straight up into the camera, right at us.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Don't just say ‘high angle’ or ‘he looks at us’. Every point needs the feeling — what the angle, framing or gaze makes you feel about the subject.