MATCH CUT is a screenwriting device that uses an inanimate object as a bridge between
two scenes.
For example:
EXT. STREET CORNER – DAY
Doyle
approaches a mailbox.
THE
SEALED LETTER
--is slipped into the
slot.
MATCH CUT:
THE
SEALED LETTER
--is
in the hands of Sasha.
INT.
HOTEL LOBBY – NIGHT
Sasha begins to open the
letter.
MATCH CUTS can also be used to indicate the passage of time:
EXT.
HOUSE - DAY
Drake
closes and securely locks the front door. He walks away, not looking back.
The house, now empty,
looks new: freshly painted with clean windows.
MATCH CUT:
EXT.
HOUSE – DAY- MANY YEARS LATER
The house is now
rundown: paint-peeled with broken windows.
By
the way, MATCH CUTS can be used in fiction, too:
. . . Nick leaned back as he gazed out over
the window-lit neighborhood from his balcony. Traffic droned below, when
suddenly he heard a distant crack, crack. A sound he knew only too well.
***
Amber
heard the crack, crack and the bullets whizzing by her as she dove behind a
dumpster and out of the line of fire . . .
Add the MATCH CUT to
your writing toolbox. While it shouldn’t be overused, keep it in mind for those
times when you need an especially intense transition.