Here's a very useful Photoshop keyboard shortcut to create a copy of merged layers while leaving the original layers intact.
On a the PC the shortcut is:
CTRL + ALT + SHIFT + E
Photoshop will merge all of the layers into one new layer and insert it at the top of your layers stack. It leaves all the original layers unaltered so you can still go back to them if you need. Kelby Training's Matt Kloskowski provides a quick video tutorial/demo here.
Here's a short piece that shows Stanley Kubrick's use wide lenses and symmetry in his films.
On the topic, you can also check out this short article on Stanley Kubrick Film Techniques.
"A long-playing full shot is what always separates the men from the boys. (sic) Anybody can make movies with a pair of scissors and a two-inch lens." ~ Orson Welles Happy Xmas.
"Lens whacking" is a camera technique to introduce lens flare into a shot and to create unconventional focus effects. It's achieved by shooting through a disconnected lens using a DSLR. Here's a video tutorial from Film Riot on the technique.
Note: Mostly a repost of an earlier article Today marks the 43rd anniversary of the assassination of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark by the Chicago Police Department and the FBI.
Filmmakers Mike Gray and Howard Alk arrived at the crime scene a few hours after the massacre to document the scene. Their footage disproved official police testimony and newspaper accounts which portrayed the raid as a "shootout" with the Black Panthers when in fact it was nothing short of a deliberate execution.
This footage was incorporated into their documentary, The Murder Of Fred Hampton, which is available in a newly restored version on DVD. Here's the lower resolution online version:
The police involved in the raid, State's Attorney Hanrahan and the FBI officials involved in the conspiracy against the Black Panthers were never brought to justice. However, survivors and the families of the deceased eventually won a civil law suit more than a decade after the murders thanks to the diligent efforts of the People's Law Office in Chicago. One of the lead attorneys, Jeffrey Haas, wrote a book on the case, The Assassination of Fred Hampton. It's a great read and much-needed reminder of the consequences of unbridled government power which is as relevant today as it was in 1969.