In editing, Substitution Splice refers to or stop trick is a cinematic special effect in which filmmakers achieve an appearance, disappearance or transformation by altering one or more selected aspects of mise-en-scène between two camera shots while maintaining the same framing and other aspects of the film scene in both shots. The term is usually discussed in relation to timing, continuity, emphasis, and the way one image leads into the next.
How The Technique Works
In practice, the term usually comes up when editors are shaping continuity, emphasis, rhythm, and the relationship between adjacent shots. In the cutting room, the term usually relates to timing, continuity, juxtaposition, or the way one image prepares the viewer for the next.
Effect On Rhythm And Meaning
It matters because editing choices shape pace, emphasis, and meaning even when the audience is not consciously noticing the technique. Seen in context, it helps explain how a cut steers attention, reshapes time, or changes the meaning created between images.
Where It Appears
The concept becomes clearest when it is applied to actual transitions, reaction shots, or sequence building rather than treated as an abstract rule. That remains true whether the technique is used invisibly or foregrounded for expressive effect.