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Go wild with the cowboy shot.

Don’t let the name fool you: This type of shot isn’t just for movies about cowpokes. Explore how filmmakers in every genre can make the most of this Western movie trick.

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A person in a wool sweater as framed in a cowboy shot while running through a foggy field

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What is a cowboy shot in film?

  • In cinematography, a cowboy shot includes the subject’s face down to their mid-thigh.
  • This shot size was widely used in Western films like Clint Eastwood’s A Fistful of Dollars based on the frequency of showdowns in these flicks.
  • The cowboy shot is now used widely in films of many other genres.
Cowboy shot
A person facing the camera framed from head to hip while wearing a dark hat and bright button-up shirt

Pulp Fiction

In a memorable scene in this iconic Tarantino film, Samuel L. Jackson threatens a thief who has stolen a valuable briefcase from his boss. Jackson is filmed from a low angle, with the camera framing both the anger on his face and the weapon clutched in his hand at his side. He looks tall, imposing, and powerful — all bad news for the man he’s confronting.

Fight Club

Just as a cowboy shot doesn’t require a cowboy, it also doesn’t require a weapon. Following a brutal fight, we see a cowboy shot of Brad Pitt’s character: battered, triumphant, and holding a beer. This still establishes him as powerful, but the cold beer hanging by his waist shows that despite it all, he’s having a good time.

Wonder Woman

When Wonder Woman squares off against a machine gun crew on a World War I battlefield, director Patty Jenkins uses a cowboy shot to show her staring down her enemies. It captures the steely resolve on her face as well as her hand reaching for the lasso of truth on her belt, giving us a chance to anticipate the action-packed sequence to come.

"The cowboy shot is usually used to reveal some kind of weapon that a character is holding. It’s a way to show that a character has power or dominance over another character."
https://main--cc--adobecom.hlx.page/cc-shared/assets/video/creativecloud/video/discover/media_1264a22ca996bc8117fbcb497e77b0ee55380427d.mp4#_autoplay | A person in a busy terminal looking down and then up to camera as framed in a cowboy shot

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