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parts of a film relate to one another through visual repetition and variation |
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standardized shape of film 1:85:1 |
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suggest represented depth by making stuff up close distinct and stuff far away indistinct |
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camera takes in a wide field of view and squeezes it into regular sized film. A projector then unsqueezes the image |
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position of frame in comparison to subject |
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relationship of a frames width to its height 1:85:1 |
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a films parts are juxtaposed to show similarities, differences etc |
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when sound is temporarily out of sync with movements. ex sound is out of sync with lips |
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author of a film, usually director. a good filmmaker is an auteur |
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lighting cast from the opposite side of the camera creating a silhouette |
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the pole that the microphone is on |
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framing on a diagonal where one side is higher than the other |
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drawings on celluloid used to make animation |
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computer generated imagery |
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a cut that has continuous time between the two shots but mismatches the position of figures |
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in making film: camera use to film and laboratory work to develop it |
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the resolution of a narrative film |
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system of cutting to maintain continuous and clear narrative action |
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the difference between the brightest and darkest areas within the frame |
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a director's film reflect that director's personal creative vision. multiple films done by the same director can have the same auteur |
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shift from a distant framing to a closer view of the same image |
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the foreground and background are in focus |
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an arangements of mise en scene elements so that there is a large amount of distance between the forground and background |
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a cut when dialouge from shot a is heard in shot b |
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the world of the films story, includes stuff not shown |
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sound originating from film's world |
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sound recorded when event was filmed |
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system of joining shots so that the story isn't shown in order |
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one shots disappears as the other appears, the 2 shots are superimposed on each other in the middle |
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distance camera is from mise en scene elements |
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distributing finished films |
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a camera support with wheels that moves on a track |
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in narrative film, the shortening of plot duration by omitting intervals of story duration |
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shot transitions that omit parts of an event causing an ellipsis in plot and story duration |
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how much light is exposed to the film through the aperture |
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sound from a physical source in the story space that other characters can hear |
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a shot showing a person looking off in one direction and the next cut is that object in the correct direction |
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black to a shot or shot to black |
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a dark film, term given to american films by french critics. low key lighting somber mood |
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film: clear base coated on one side with light sensitive emulsion |
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distance from the center of the lens to where the light is focused |
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when the framing shifts to keep the moving subject on screen |
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two shots joined to create strong similarity of graphic elements |
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how hight the camera is above the ground |
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