Abstract: The post-cinematic landscape has redefined storytelling as a fusion of motion, technology, and design, demanding new ways of understanding how narratives are built and experienced. The objective of this presentation is to explore how digital tools reshape the grammar of cinema by expanding its expressive possibilities beyond the traditional frame. The study adopts a qualitative, practice-informed approach, focusing on the sequencing of motion, the sculpting of time, the layering of sonic environments, and the integration of interactive elements that contribute to immersive storytelling. Methodology is based on close analysis of selected digital works that exemplify these strategies, with attention given to how editing rhythms, compositional layering, and digital montage generate narrative flow and emotional resonance. By tracing these technical architectures, the discussion highlights the mechanics by which post-cinema engineers motion as lived experience. Rather than treating post-cinema as a rupture with film, the argument situates it as a structural evolution, where storytelling emerges from the interplay of precision, rhythm, and design, opening pathways for both artistic innovation and theoretical reflection.
HOUSSAINI et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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