Instead, he relies mostly on his facial expression and little details that make his acting successful. For this reason, the protagonist's performance is very outstanding as shown through his facial expression from before and after of him discovering the paper. This also suggests how much the "black hole" has changed his life. Also, the framing of this film focus on the actor showing how ordinary and dull his life is as the audience makes him the focal point of the film. .
After the protagonist got the chocolate from the black hole, he looks for his next target anxiously, and he settled on the door to his boss's office. In this situation, the director uses tracking toward the door to let the audience feel the strong desire of greed behind that door. Also, the way that the protagonist looks at the door while he bites the chocolate shows the audience that he wants more and he will never be satisfied with the black hole. There is another significant tracking scene when the camera tracks diagonally towards the man to show his facial expression and to demonstrates the setting in shot #1. The range of tonalities in this film is middle range of contrast, in this case, the film does not seem stark and dramatic and it also does not seem like it's muting the emotional states. There is a lot of use of medium shot and a medium close-up to showcase the office environment that the protagonist is in. .
The film uses a lot of cut as the transition of each clip. The use of cut gives the audience a clean feel and this type of transition is the one that tend to be less noticeable for the audience, which is very important in films. Moreover, there is common use of continuity editing to maintain the naturalism of the film. For this purpose, the quick cut editing of when the man is stealing money from the safe box shows the piling of his desire toward money and the loss of his moral standard. The overall film duration is dependent on the editing.