Term
What kind of films earned large profits for the Hollywood studios in the 1960s? |
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Definition
historical epics adaptations of Broadway musicals lower-budget youthpics
Answer is all of the above |
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Term
What industrial transformation occurred in Hollywood in the 1960s and 1970s? |
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Definition
many of the major studios were bought by larger conglomerates |
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Term
What stylistic innovation is credited to late-1960s films Bonnie and Clyde and The Wild Bunch? |
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Definition
fast cutting and slow motion for scenes of extreme violence |
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Term
Which of these was an important technological development in 1960s and 1970s Hollywood? |
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Definition
multi-track sound recording the Steadicam 70mm exhibition
All of the above |
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Term
What was the significance of the cluster of films released in the early and mid-1970s that includes The Godfather, The Exorcist, Jaws, Rocky, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Saturday Night Fever, and Star Wars? |
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Definition
they earned unprecedented box office rental returns |
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Term
What effect did the rise of blockbuster films have on Hollywood filmmaking? |
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Definition
major directors also became major producers studios became less willing to let filmmakers experiment with plot, tone, and style more sequels and series of films were produced
All of the Above |
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Term
Which of these films does not represent the revival of an old Hollywood genre on a major scale? |
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Definition
Robert Altman's Nashville |
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Term
What is the relation of Martin Scorsese's work to film history? |
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Definition
Scorsese's films are influenced both by European cinema and by old Hollywood movies |
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Term
Which of the following is not an example of American independent cinema of the 1960s and 1970s? |
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Definition
Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver |
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Term
Which of these was not a main genre of political Third World fiction filmmaking of the 1960s and 1970s? |
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Definition
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Term
Which description best characterizes Cuban cinema of the 1960s? |
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Definition
adoption of some European art cinema techniques but modified to be more accessible to wide audiences |
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Term
Which African filmmaker took on the role of griot, the traditional storyteller figure, in his use of character types and voice-over commentary? |
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Definition
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Term
What effect did Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution have on Chinese cinema? |
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Definition
it created a new genre of film called the "revolutionary model performance film" |
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Term
Which Soviet director of the 1960s and 1970s made several personal, experimental films and was subsequently forbidden to direct films and sentenced to hard labor? |
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Definition
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Term
What best characterizes the techniques and forms of engaged cinema? |
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Definition
a mix of Direct Cinema techniques and interview formats |
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Term
What was the significance of Bertolt Brecht to political cinema of the 1960s and 1970s? |
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Definition
his theory of theater, in which he encouraged the distancing of the audience and the creation of an "anti-illusionist" style, was highly influential |
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Term
What has been the most commercially successful documentary genre since the 1960s? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following documentary genres had successful theatrical releases in the 1990s? |
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Definition
portrait films IMAX films documentaries with sexual or violent content
All of the Above |
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Term
Which of the following best describes structural film? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is not a trend in avant-garde cinema since the 1970s? |
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Definition
the resurgence of structural film as the dominant mode of avant-garde production in the 1990s |
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Term
Which of the following best characterizes the European film industries since the 1970s? |
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Definition
many European films are co-productions of several countries Hollywood films command most of the box office in Europe Hollywood has occasionally financed European auteur films
All of the Above |
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Term
What role has television played in European film production? |
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Definition
both public and private television have been important sources of funding since the 1970s |
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Term
What is meant by the term "Eurofilms"? |
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Definition
films co-produced by several European countries |
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Term
What best characterizes the films of Marguerite Duras? |
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Definition
stories about complex love affairs presented in a slow, laconic style |
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Term
What is not a trend in European cinema of the 1980s? |
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Definition
a return of the challenging, anti-narrative approach of radical political modernism |
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Term
Which celebrated Soviet director of mystical, poetic films, who worked abroad in the 1980s, said, "Masterpieces are born of the artist's struggle to express his ethical ideals"? |
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Definition
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Term
What was an effect of Glasnost and Perestroika on Soviet cinema? |
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Definition
directors began to make films critical of Soviet history state funding for filmmaking declined previously banned films were shown
All of the Above |
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Term
What is a trend in Latin America film production since the 1970s? |
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Definition
foreign investment in Latin American filmmaking state-supported production international co-production by filmmakers in various Latin American nations
all of the above |
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Term
Which of the following is a trend in Japanese cinema since the 1970s? |
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Definition
a new generation of directors specializing in internationally popular animated science-fiction and fantasy films investment of Japanese companies in Hollywood the growth of the Japanese market for Hollywood films
All of the Above |
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Term
What characterizes the films of China's Fifth Generation? |
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Definition
films with psychological depth influenced by European art cinema |
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Term
What is not a characteristic of the Australian film industry since the 1970s? |
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Definition
after a number of important, artistically significant films in the 1970s, Australian cinema went into an economic tailspin from which it has never recovered |
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Term
What is true of sub-Saharan African cinema since the 1970s? |
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Definition
many filmmakers have continued to draw on oral storytelling traditions the "back-to-sources" trend has continued since the 1960s a biannual film and TV festival is held in Burkina Faso
all of the above |
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Term
What is not a change that occurred in the Hollywood industry in the 1970s and 1980s? |
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Definition
the amazing popularity of VCR rentals cut into U.S. theatrical attendance significantly |
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Term
What is an effect of the "megapicture mentality" on the Hollywood industry? |
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Definition
many spectacular failures have cost the Majors significant revenue |
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Term
What is the purpose of "megaplexing"? |
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Definition
To increase the number of screens on which a film opens to maximize economies of scale to improve the quality and comfort of auditorium facilities
All of the above |
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Term
What is not an aspect of the "intensified continuity" style? |
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Definition
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Term
What was not a major Hollywood genre in the 1980s and 1990s? |
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Definition
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Term
How were independent American films able to achieve success in the 1980s and 1990s? |
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Definition
the formation of the Sundance Institute in 1980 production financing from television the formation of "mini-major" studios
All of the above |
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Term
Which of these films does not contain digitally-produced imagery? |
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Definition
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Term
How has globalization affected Hollywood? |
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Definition
A) some Hollywood studios have been acquired by foreign companies the percentage of revenue for Hollywood films from foreign markets has increased some foreign companies finance Hollywood films
All of the above |
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Term
Which of these companies is not part of the Disney media empire? Question 41 answers |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a film aimed at a global audience |
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Term
What explains the increase in movie attendance since the 1990s? |
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Definition
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Term
Why do many directors shoot films on digital video (DV)? |
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Definition
to cut costs to open up a new flexibility of camera placement
Answer is A and C |
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