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Intro to Film
Exam #1
26
Film, Theatre & Television
Undergraduate 1
02/09/2010

Additional Film, Theatre & Television Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

1 )  "There exists today no means of influencing the masses more potent than the cinema"

 

2 )  "The cinema must and shall become the foremost cultural weapon of the proletariat."

 

3 )  "The cinema will only become an art when its raw materials are as cheap as pencil and paper."

Definition

1 )  Pope Pius XI

 

 

2 )  Vladimir Lenin

 

 

3 )  Jean Cocteau

Term
Magic Lantern
Definition
  • slide projector show using a lantern and painted glass
  • contained movement, commercial, communal experience
Term
Camera Obscura
Definition
  • camera without film
  • image; used to relearn representational skills
Term
Louis Daguerre
Definition
  • one of the perfectionists of fixed image technology
  • invented photography
Term
Edweard Muybridge
Definition
  • landscape photographer
  • set up with still cameras, a way to capture a horse running and getting all feet in the air

 

Term
Marey
Definition
  • wanted to capture fast moving things with camera
  • invented photographic gun
Term

Persistence of Vision

 

10 - 12 fps

Definition
  • the retention of a visual image for a short period of time after the removal of the stimulus that produced it 
  • the phenomenon that produces the illusion of movement when viewing motion
  • once you have fast exposure time you have reached the persistence of vision
Term
Thomas Edison
Definition
  • mass production of the processes of invention
Term
The Black Maria
Definition
  • small
  • built to revolve resulting in a short distance from camera to subject
Term
Dickson and Heisse - Camera - 1889
Definition
  • continuous and intermittent drives (motors)
  • loop
  • sprocket holes, sprocketed/toothed wheels
  • shutter and aperture
  • aperture as a control of depth of field - mono, ortho and Pan chromatic film stocks
  • electrically powered - big/heavy - subject must come to the camera
Term
Opera
Definition
  • only survivor of pure-photographic, movie-like experiences
Term

Edwin S. Porter

WKL Dickinson

William Heisse

Definition
  • hired by Thomas Edison to invent the movie camera which he took credit for
Term

Kinetoscope - 1894

 

 

 

Definition
  • subject must come to the immovable, bulky camera
  • intended for solitary viewing experience
  • theatrical vignettes
  • tight framing- short distance from camera to subject
  • flat, even lighting
  • action composed/staged parallel to the picture plane as if we were viewing a stage play from a 3rd row center seat
  • fixed camera; each film is one action, one shot
Term
Kinetophone - 1896
Definition
  • kinteoscopes with sound
Term
Shot
Definition
  • an unbroken exposure/ a perspective on the action
Term
Scene
Definition
  • a self-contained dramatic unit, most commonly set in one place
Term
Motion Picture Film
Definition
  • a thin ribbon of transparent, flexible material
  • the alternation of images and black screens
  • 3 parts - base, emulsion, silver salts
Term
Lumiere Cinematographie
Definition
  • portable, lightweight camera goes to subject
  • with simple alterations, the same machine is a camera, a developing chamber or a projector
  • product intended for public projection exhibition
Term
Lumiere Actualities
Definition
  • reportage, actualitie - ancestor of documentary film
  • real-life subject matter
  • tight or loose framing, depending on whether intimate/private (tight) or public (loose) subject
  • 10 AM to 2 PM light, unless the public subject occurred ealier or later in which case the cameraman/operator had to adapt his imagery to the situation
  • compositions/staging on diagonal for public, parallel to picture for private subjects
  • fixed camera most of the time - rarely the camera was mounted on a movable platform (rickshaw, moving sidewalk, trolley car, etc.) - in which case the camera moves in photographing the subject
  • each film is one action, one shot with the duration determined by the time the action took to play out
  • framing device of doors opening, closing
  • ethnography
Term
Staging
Definition
  • one of the most important of all filmmaking techniques
  • the placement and movement of the characters in relation to each other, the decor and the camera during the shot
Term
Timing
Definition
another vitally important technique which temporal relationship of the elements in motion during staging
Term
George Melies
Definition
  • Parisian (french) stage magician turned filmmaker
  • began with long in duration one shot and went on to elaborate multiscene/shot films
  • 'Trick' films - persistence of vision/stop motion photography.  Superimpositions, lap dissolves
  • Decor
  • Extremely elaborate staging and timing - highly trained, physically adept stage performers (from his magic theater troupe)
  • entirely artificial, interior/theatrical spaces
  • tongue in cheek, sophisticated awareness of the absurdity of the presentation - silly but wonderous
  • unified, consistent style and tone
Term
Cecil Hepworth
Definition
  • british
  • most technically sophisticated filmmaker before Griffith
  • does not build on or develop a lexicon of filmmaking technique
  • over the long haul, not story-oriented
Term
Edwin S. Porter
Definition
  • American - the first important American filmmaker
  • innovative use of technique, combined with considerable common sensein ordering his visualizing his stories
  • strong emphasis on narrative, on story-telling
Term
Panorama
Definition
huge paintings
Term
Birth of a Nation
Definition
  • film by G.W. Griffith
  • so big, makes feature films the thing to do
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