Term
Who was not a major soviet director? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is a major locale in Battleship Potempkin? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is not a surrealist director? |
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Definition
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Term
For what image is un chien andalou famous? |
|
Definition
Cutting an eyeball with a razor blade |
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Term
For what concept is Sergei Einstein most well known for? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What is the Kuleshov Effect? |
|
Definition
Spector infers spatial and temporal contunuity from shots of seperate elements |
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Term
Who directed Man with the Movie Camera? |
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Definition
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Term
What was the ending scene of Man with the Movie Camera? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Which of the following was not one of the Big 5? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following was not a reason for the decline of Hollywood after WWII? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is not a quality of film noir? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens at the end of The Killing? |
|
Definition
Johnny loses all his money |
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Term
What was the result of the Paramount Decree? |
|
Definition
Studios had to sell off their theatres |
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|
Term
Which of the following is not a novelty adopted by Hollywood in the 1950's-1960's?
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is not an exhibition strategy developed by Hollywood in the 1950's-1960's? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What were some early forms of sound to accompany films at nickelodeons? |
|
Definition
Live music, actors, and narrators |
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Term
What were the challenges of sound cinema? |
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Definition
Synchronization, amplification, need to standardize film speed (24 fps replaced 16 fps) |
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Term
Who directed Singin in the Rain? |
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Definition
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Term
Who directed Steamboat Willie? |
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
When was the first public screening with sound on disk when WB partenered with western electric? |
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Definition
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Term
Who directed The Jazz Singer? |
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
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|
Term
|
Definition
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|
Term
When did the Big 5 agreement occur? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What are the artistic effects of sound on production? |
|
Definition
Static camera, minimal cutting.
Decor/mise-en-scene was no longer expressive- became something to talk into.
Talking to bodies huddles around microphones |
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|
Term
What were the technical effects of sound on production? |
|
Definition
Difficulty of silencing whirring camera.
-soundproof booth
-no tilt or travel
-only slight pans
Difficulty of recording with a single fixed microphone |
|
|
Term
What were the commercial effects of sound on production? |
|
Definition
-conversion was expensive
-popular stars and directors became a liability due to accents/broken english, and their way of speaking didnt match star persona
-diction coaches and dialogue writers
-reliant once again on theater for stars and stories |
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|
Term
What were the solutions to effects of sound on production? |
|
Definition
-Blimps- box that went over camera to quiet it.
-microphone booms |
|
|
Term
Who were the losers when sound came to the cinema? |
|
Definition
Live musicians,
moving camera and editing,
silent film actors,
and studio independence |
|
|
Term
Who were the winners when sound came to the cinema? |
|
Definition
Directors (gained a lot more power),
screenwriters,
diction coaches,
and genre of the film musical |
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|
Term
What were the challenges of international sound film? |
|
Definition
There was a language barrier. Dubbing was ineffective til 1932. For a time, studios reshot films with foreign actors. Eventually dubbing and subtitles became the norm. |
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Term
What were some effects on the film industry after the Revolutionary wars? (1918-1920) |
|
Definition
The industry was disorganized; hoarded film stock.
-production, distribution, exhibition
=extremely disorganized
Little production, predominantly newsreels and propoganda (Agit-vehicles) |
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|
Term
Who nationalized the film industry and formed a state film school in 1919? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is Kuleshov's effect? |
|
Definition
Spectator infers spatial and temporal continuity from shots of seperate elements. (editing can transcend time and space)
(In state film school, Kuleshov's workshop) |
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|
Term
In Kuleshov's workshop, what characterizes Mozhukin? |
|
Definition
Bowl of soup, dead body, baby |
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|
Term
What were the things that stood out in creative geography/atomy in Kuleshov's workshop? |
|
Definition
couple in city, woman's body |
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|
Term
How did Kuleshov's workshop admire Hollywood's use of continuity editing? |
|
Definition
used to demonstrate continuity editing and the ways in which it could manipulate spctatorial expectations |
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|
Term
What is "privelage editing not the shot?" |
|
Definition
the most important part is the way the shots are ordered that makes the scene more impactful |
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|
Term
What did the new economic policy do for the film industry from 1921-1924? |
|
Definition
-brought country out of crisis
-film industry recovered
-hoarded film stock reappeared
-flims focus on education and entertainment
-creation of a central... |
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|
Term
What did renewed government control (1925-1930) do? |
|
Definition
first five year plan (in 1928),
theatres closed
portable projection units were established |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
fusion of art and politics, socially useful arts, art serves an idealogical purpose |
|
|
Term
What is socially useful art? |
|
Definition
art that serves an idealogical purpose |
|
|
Term
Comparison of artwork to a machine? |
|
Definition
art put together from parts,
montage: put together from parts
focused on human labor, factory, the machine
studios were seen as factories |
|
|
Term
What is the purpose of art? |
|
Definition
it can be calculated to elicit a response and should be understandable by everyone. |
|
|
Term
What did biochemical acting do? |
|
Definition
carefully controlled physical movements |
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|
Term
What are the montage characteristics of the genre: crisis and revolution? |
|
Definition
social realism and avoids supernatural events and fantasy |
|
|
Term
What are the montage characteristics of a narrative? |
|
Definition
-characters represent a social class instead of portrayal as psychologically distinct individuals
-downplay of individual characters as central causal agents
-social forces are the source of causes and effects
|
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|
Term
What are the montage characteristics of editing? |
|
Definition
-dynamic, with large # of shots
-stimulates audience
-overlapping editing
-elliptical editing (jumpcut)
-rhythmic editing |
|
|
Term
What are some things that characterize montage? |
|
Definition
camera work- dramatic angles
special effects |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
realistic elements
use of contasting textures, volume, shapes, and colors to create visual tension and effects (montage not just between shots, but within a shot- montage cell) |
|
|
Term
What type of lighting characterizes montage? |
|
Definition
frequently used no fill (film?) light. |
|
|
Term
Who is Sergei Einsenstein? |
|
Definition
a key filmmaker and theorist (we still rely on his theories today) |
|
|
Term
What is the montage of attractions? |
|
Definition
spectacular moments to stimulate emotions |
|
|
Term
What is collision montage? |
|
Definition
antithetical elements clash to produce larger meaning
-intellectual cinema
-thesis + antithesis = synthesis -Marxist theory of dialect
*the extent to which he achieves it is questionable |
|
|
Term
Who directed Strike in 1925? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Who directed The Battleship Potempkin in 1925? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a documentary filmmaker,
committed constructivist
-social utility of documentary, fiction films were "cine-nicotene" |
|
|
Term
Who directed Soviet Toys in 1924 and why was that movie important? |
|
Definition
Dziga Vertov, and it was the first animated soviet film. |
|
|
Term
Who directed Man With a Movie Camera? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Who said "of all the arts cinema is the most important?" |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is the main idea with montage? |
|
Definition
things collide- synthesis of ideas |
|
|
Term
Who is Vsedvolod Pudovkin? |
|
Definition
influence of intolerance
montage: dynatmic, often discontinuous editing |
|
|
Term
Who directed Mother in 1926? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which is the most popular of all montage films? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Why did montage cinema decline? |
|
Definition
-charges formalism by govt
-levied against any director who's films were too difficult for the average citizen to understand
- too much focus on style, not enough on idealogy
-1st five year plan implemented(1928)
-cinema was centralized
-move towards "socialist realism" |
|
|
Term
What was the legacy of Montage Cinema? |
|
Definition
it was highly influencial to mainstream narrative filmmaking,
hollywood has adopted much of montage cinema's style, if not its ideaology |
|
|
Term
What film is a legacy for montage cinema? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who directed Vogue in 1990? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the Avant Garde capitol of the world in 1920s? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Surrealism and Avant Garde.... do what? |
|
Definition
-experimentation (focus is on perspective- how do you see the world? Avant Garde plays with the form)
-creation of new forms
-manipulation of shapes and colors
-unique comparisons & combinations
-not external reality, visual sensation
-depiction of the subconscious
-fantasy
-movement in painting, film, and literature that aims to depict the workings of the subconscious, combining incongruous imagery, presenting a situation in dreamlike, irrational terms |
|
|
Term
What does surrealism suggest? |
|
Definition
any fantastic style of representation |
|
|
Term
What is surrealism in film concerned with? |
|
Definition
preserving films of the past
challenged accepted notions of what film was
pure visual form, plays w/ shapes, images
surrealistic fantasies
naturalistic study of human passion and sensation/poetic realism
creates experimental cinema of visual sensation
not interested in conventional story |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
an american photographer living in Paris who used collage, chaos, visual shapes/patterns, and rayographs |
|
|
Term
Who directed Return to Reason in 1923? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who are Salvador Dali and Luis Bunuel? |
|
Definition
violent antagonisms who created a series of logical associations, and commentary on the collapse of European culture between WWI and WWII |
|
|
Term
Who directed Un Chien Andalou in 1929? |
|
Definition
Salvador Dali and Luis Bunuel |
|
|
Term
What is the historical context of the Golden Age of French Cinema in 1930s? |
|
Definition
rise of fascism in spain, germany, and italy |
|
|
Term
What is significant about France in the Golden Age of Frech Cinema? |
|
Definition
contest between right-wing fascist forces and leftist groups called the popular front |
|
|
Term
When did French film industry move to sound? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is important about poetic realism in 1929-1939? |
|
Definition
influenced by populist culture, cinema of expressionism disenchantment and actors. represented human condition. popular heroes on the margins of society. pessimistic atmosphere. tragic destiny/doomed quest for happiness. chiaroscuro lighting
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|
|
Term
|
Definition
mix of realism and stylization |
|
|
Term
Who are the Key Filmmakers of poetic realism in 1929-1939? |
|
Definition
Jean Vigo
Jean Renoir
Marcel Carne
Marcel Pagnol
Julien Duvivier
Jacques Feyder
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|
Term
Who directed L'Atalante in 1934? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is cinema of the occupation? |
|
Definition
nazi occupied france, banned american films, films as escapism- pacifying, |
|
|
Term
What is vichy government? |
|
Definition
poetic realist films were banned, empty entertainment, propoganda, and subversive challenges |
|
|
Term
Who said "the sensor is the artists best friend" |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who were the Big 5 in the hollywood studio system? |
|
Definition
(vertically integrated, oligopy)
Paramount
MGM
Fox
Warner Bros.
RKO |
|
|
Term
Who were the little 3 in the HW studio system? |
|
Definition
Universal
Columbia
United Artists |
|
|
Term
Who were the independents og the hw studio system?> |
|
Definition
A Pictures: Goldwyn and Selznick
B Pictures (poverty row): Republic and Monogram Pictures |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
major stars, best directors, biggest budgets & production values |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
small budget, clever filmmaking, frequently a genre picture |
|
|
Term
The Hays Code in 1922 had what? |
|
Definition
MPPDA
-public relations, foreign quotes |
|
|
Term
Hays code in 1930 had what? |
|
Definition
production code, outlined moral standards (everything was G) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
enforcement of code
-JOseph Breen took over production code administration (PCA)
-would be $25,000 fine; barred from most 1st run theaters |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
abandoned in favor of ratings system |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-the PCA was not actively enforced until 1934 with the PCA
-“don’ts and be carefuls”
-more risqué content produced
-i.e gangster films, sex comedics |
|
|
Term
Who directed Scarface in 1932? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who directed She Done Him Wrong in 1933? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-avoid depicting: brutality; sexual promiscuity
-marriage was a sacred institution, “Hollywood beds”
-forbid using certain words: sex, God, hell, damn, or terms deficient in gentility and tone |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Depression Era income & marketing
-concession sales
-double & triple features
-giveaways, dish nights
-attendance improved during WWII |
|
|
Term
Innovation in Hollywood included what? |
|
Definition
sound recording
-unidirectional mic
-lighter booms
-multiple track recording
-symphonic score
camera movement
-1932: bell & howell rotambulator
-1936: panorama dolly
-technicolor |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-musical
-screwball comedy (displaces sexual tension onto verbal sparing) *His Girl Friday (Hawks, 1940)
-horror film
-social problem film
-gangster film
-film noir
-the war film |
|
|
Term
Post-war American cinema 1945-1960 |
|
Definition
Hollywood in Transition
-1946: top-earning year ever at the domestic box office in the U.S.
-$1.5 billion in admissions
-over half the population was going to the movies
-post-war industrial boom
-new prosperity |
|
|
Term
What was the top earning year ever at box office in US? |
|
Definition
1946- $1.5 billion in admissions |
|
|
Term
Post WWII was also a period of decline for Hollywood |
|
Definition
-1946: $1.7 billion gross, 98 million theatergoers
-1962: $900 million gross, 47 million theatergoers
-1930s: studios release almost 500 films
-1960s: studios release under 150 films |
|
|
Term
What are some reasons for Hollywood decline? |
|
Definition
-american migration to the suburbs
-baby boom
-new leisure activities
-television:
-1954: 32 million tvs
-1959: in 90% of homes
-to compete: color, widescreen, stereo, 3D
-Hollywood used tv to its benefit |
|
|
Term
Post war changes 1946-1948 |
|
Definition
-HUAC (house un-American activities committee) Hearings
-congressional hearings to investigate ties to communism within American industry
-the Hollywood ten & the blacklist
-1st session convened in 1947
-set out to prove that the screen writers’ guild was dominated by communists
-2nd session in 1951
-only 1 of 10 victims were able to resume careers
-the Hollywood ten refused to testify before congress and were imprisoned |
|
|
Term
What is the most important change in film industry? |
|
Definition
The Paramount Decree (1948) |
|
|
Term
What was The Paramount Decree? |
|
Definition
-monopoly suit
-1938: justice department initiates suit
-1948: decision reached
-accused the big 5 of colluding to monopolize the film industry
-studios forced to divest (sell) their theaters |
|
|
Term
What are some ways in which Hollywood adapted? |
|
Definition
novelty abounds
size of screen
cinerama
cinemascope |
|
|
Term
What are some novelty abounds? |
|
Definition
technical gimmicks
-3D
-smell-o-vision
-color film
-improved sound technology
-more daring films
-exploitation
-film studios get into tv production |
|
|
Term
What are some exhibition practices? |
|
Definition
-drive-ins
-1933: first theater
-1956: 4000
-between 1933-1956: 4000 INDOOR theaters closed
-appeal: cost, target demographic (baby boomers)
-art cinemas
-1950: fewer than 100
-mid 1960s: more than 600 |
|
|
Term
What are some characteristics of two different release schedules? |
|
Definition
roadshows, 1 theatre per market, 2 or 3 screenings per day, staggered release schedule, limited advance ticketing for higher price, saturation release became popular in 1970s |
|
|
Term
What things characterize the rise of the independents? |
|
Definition
-importance of agent
-lew wasserman pioneered this approach, percentages
-package units
-script&talent
-exploitation films
-roger corman (AIP), saturation booking, tv ads and summer releases |
|
|
Term
What characterizes the evolution of classical hollywood cinema? |
|
Definition
-subjective narrative techniques
-intricate narrative construction
-realism (setting, lighting, narration)
-long takes, deep focus
-reevaluation of old genres |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-term developed by French film critics after WWII
-noticed a prevailing sense of cynicism, pessimism, and darkness
-many of the films are based on pulp detective novels of the 1920s and 1930s
-the closest mainstream HW cinemas has to an “art cinema” |
|
|
Term
What things characterize film noir? |
|
Definition
-dark, rain-slicked streets
-crime and corruption
-urban environment
-private eye, hardboiled detective
-femme fatale
-chiaroscuro
-disorientation and confusion
-repressed sexuality
-masculinity in crisis |
|
|
Term
Who directed Double Idemnity in 1944? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who directed The Big Sleep in 1046? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who directed The Killing? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who did expolitating films? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Italian Neorealism and European Art cinema in 1945-1959 was in what type of historical context? |
|
Definition
- Historical Context
- Devastation of World War II in Europe
- U.S. influence in Europe
- Marshall Plan
- U.S. offers aid to European countries
|
|
|
Term
How did Europe resist influence of US film industry? |
|
Definition
- Levy charges on expected earnings
- Freeze profits
- Earnings kept and invested in country
|
|
|
Term
What proactive measures did Europe take? |
|
Definition
- European governments invest in film industry
- European co-productions ("Runaway productions")
- Film Festivals
|
|
|
Term
What characterizes European Art Cinema? |
|
Definition
- In opposition to CHC
- Non-linear and episodic plot structure
- All detail motivated by:
- Realism or Authorial Expressivity
- Characters lack defined goals
- Realism affects Space and Time
- Ambiguity
- Cinema of Auteurs
|
|
|
Term
What were the goals of European art cinema? |
|
Definition
- Challenge Hollywood norms
- Change the way we see the world
- Change the way we watch movies
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Narrative Transitivity-Intransitivity
- Identification- estrangement
- Transparaency- foregrounding
- Single diegesis- multiple diegesis
- Diegesis= the world of film
|
|
|
Term
What was Italian cinema during fascist era like? |
|
Definition
- Film industry under Mussolini
- Dominated by fascist propoganda
|
|
|
Term
Typical genres of italian cinema during fascist era are what? |
|
Definition
- White telephone (family melodramas)
- Little international appeal or artistic innovation
|
|
|
Term
What was post-war italy like? |
|
Definition
- 1948: Unemployment at 22%
- Infrastructure destroyed by the war, including cinecitta and its studios
- Little money for film production
- Shortage of equipment and film stock
- Actors difficult to find employment
|
|
|
Term
What did Cesare Zavattini do? |
|
Definition
- 1942: called for new approach to cinema
- Ged Rid of Professional actors
- "the ideal film would be 90 minutes in the life of a man to whom nothing happens."
|
|
|
Term
What are the characteristics of neorealism? |
|
Definition
- Loose plot, improvisation
- Non-professional actors
- Visual roughness of documentary
|
|
|
Term
Who directed Rome, Open City in 1945? |
|
Definition
|
|