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Intro to Cinema Vocab
Vocabulary for Intro to Cinema Studies Class
120
Film, Theatre & Television
Undergraduate 4
05/14/2013

Additional Film, Theatre & Television Flashcards

 


 

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Term
Ambient Sound
Definition
Background sound that is so unobtrusive that people tend not to notice it.
Term
Anamorphic Lens
Definition
A lens that squeezes a wide image onto a film frame in a camera, making everything look tall and thin.  On a projector, an anamorphic lens expands the image, returning it to its original wide shap.
Term
Aperture
Definition
The adjustable opening in the camera lens that permits the operator to regulate how much light passes through the lens to the film.
Term
Aspect Ratio
Definition
The proportion of the width to the height of the image on a TV or movie screen or on the individual frames of the film.  Common examples are 1.33:1 and 1.85:1 (theatrical).
Term
Asynchronous Sound
Definition
A sound that either precedes or follows its on-screen source, such as words that are not synchronized with lip movements.
Term
Backlight
Definition
Lighting from behind the subject.  If backlighting is used alone or is the strongest light used, the subject may be obscured.  Used in combination with other lighting, blacklighting may help set the image of the subject off from the background.
Term
Bird's-eye View
Definition
A camera angle achieved when the camera films the subject from directly overheard.
Term
Bridge
Definition
Music used to link two or more scenes, typically to enhance continuity.
Term
Cameo
Definition
A brief role in a narrative entertainment performed by a well-known person, usually a famous actor, whose name is often not included in the credits or publicity.  May play self or fictional character.
Term
Catchlight
Definition
The light from one or more sources that is visible in the pupils of a subject's eyes.  By examining the Catchlight, one can discover the number and direction of some or all of the light sources.
Term
Character Actor
Definition
An actor who tends to specialize in well-defined secondary roles.
Term
Cinematographer
Definition
The person responsible for the motion-picture photography during the making of a film.
Term
Cinematography
Definition
Motion-picture photography, including technical and artistic concern with such matters as choice of film stock, lighting, choice and use of lenses, camera distance and angle, and camera movement.
Term
Classical Hollywood Cinema
Definition
Films that show one or more characters facing a succession of problems while trying to reach their goals and that tend to hide the manner of their making by means of unobtrusive filmmaking techniques.
Term
Close-up
Definition
An image in which the subject fills most of the frame and little of the surroundings is shown.
Term
Composition
Definition
The arrangement of settings, lighting, and subjects within the frame.
Term
Continuity Editing
Definition
Film editing that maintains a sense of uninterrupted time and action and continuous setting within each scene of a narrative film.
Term
Contrast
Definition
In photography and cinematography, the difference between the lightest and darkest parts of an image.
Term
Conventions
Definition
In films and other texts, a subject or technique that makers of texts and audiences have grown to accept as natural or typical in certain contexts.
Term
Cross-cut
Definition
In editing, to alternate between events occurring at different settings and often presumably transpiring at the same time.
Term
Cut
Definition
The most common transition between shots, made by splicing or joining the end of one shot to the beginning of the following shot.  When projected, the transition from the first shot to the next appears to be instantaneous.
Term
Cutaway Shot
Definition
A shot that briefly interrupts the representation of a subject to show something else.
Term
Deep Focus
Definition
Photography in which subjects near the camera, those in the distant background, and those in between are all in sharp focus.
Term
Depth of Field
Definition
The distances in front of the camera in which all objects are in focus.
Term
Desaturated Color
Definition
Drained, subdued color approaching a neutral gray.
Term
Designer
Definition
The person responsible for the appearance of much of what is photographed in a movie, including locations, architecture, sets, costumes, makeup, and hairstyles.
Term
Direct Cinema
Definition
A type and style of documentary filmmaking in which actions are recorded as they happen, without rehearsal.
Term
Documentary Film
Definition
A film or video representation of actual subjects.
Term
Dutch Angle
Definition
A camera angle in which the vertical and horizontal lines of the film's image appear at an angle to the vertical and horizontal lines of the films frame.
Term
Edit
Definition
To select and arrange the processed segments of photographed motion-picture film or videotape.
Term
Establishing Shot
Definition
A shot, usually a long shot or an extreme long shot, used at the beginning of a scene to show where and sometimes when the events that are to follow take place.
Term
Experimental Film
Definition
A film that rejects the conventions of mainstream movies and explores the possibilities of the film medium.
Term
Explicit Meaning
Definition
A general observation included in a text about one or more of its subjects.
Term
Expressionism
Definition
A style of art, literature, drama, and film used to represent not external reality in a believable way but emotions in striking, stylized ways.
Term
Extreme Close-up
Definition
An image that shows one subject and largely or completely excludes the background.
Term
Extreme Long Shot
Definition
A shot in which the subject appears to be far from the camera.
Term
Eye-level Angle
Definition
A camera angle that creates the effect of the audience being on the same level as the subject.
Term
Eyeline Match
Definition
A transition between shots where the first shot shows a person or animal looking at something offscreen and the following shot shows what was being looked at from the approximate angle suggested by the previous shot.
Term
Fade-in
Definition
An effect in which the image changes by degrees from darkness to illumination.
Term
Fade-out
Definition
An effect in which the image changes by degrees from illumination to darkness.
Term
Fast Cutting
Definition
Editing characterized by frequent brief shots, sometimes shots less than a second long.
Term
Fast Film (Stock)
Definition
Film stock that requires relatively little light for capturing images.
Term
Feature (film)
Definition
A fictional film that is at least 60 minutes long.
Term
Fill Light
Definition
A soft light usually coming from a source near the camera and used to fill in unlit areas of the subject or to soften any shadows or lines made by other, brighter lights.
Term
Film Stock
Definition
Unexposed and unprocessed motion-picture film.
Term
Film Technique
Definition
Any aspect of filmmaking, such as the use of sets, lighting, sound effects, music, or editing.
Term
Final Cut
Definition
The last version of an edited film.
Term
Fisheye Lens
Definition
A lens that captures nearly 180 degrees of the area before the camera and causes much curvature of the image, especially near the edges.
Term
Flashback
Definition
A shot or a few shots, a brief scene, or a sequence that interrupts a narrative to show earlier events.
Term
Foley Artist
Definition
A sound specialist who uses various objects such as different types of floor surfaces to simulate sounds and synchronize them with corresponding movie images.
Term
Frame
Definition
To position the camera so that the image is composed in a certain way.
Term
Gauge
Definition
The width of a film, usually measured in millimeters.  Most theatrical movies are gauged 35 mm.
Term
Hard Light
Definition
Light that has not been diffused or reflected before illuminating the subject.
Term
High Angle
Definition
A view of a subject from above, created by positioning the camera above the subject.
Term
High-key Lighting
Definition
A high level of illumination on the subject.
Term
Hybrid Film
Definition
A film that is not exclusively fitional, documentary, or experimental but instead shares characteristics of two or all three of the major film categories.
Term
Implicit Meaning
Definition
A generalization that a viewer or reader makes about a text or a subject in a text.
Term
Independent Film
Definition
Film made mainly or entirely without support or input from the dominant, established film industry.
Term
Jump Cut
Definition
A transition between shots that causes a jarring or even shocking shift in space, time, or action.
Term
Key Light
Definition
The main light in a shot, usually the sun or some sort of electric light.  Also, the lighting instrument used to create the main and brightest light hitting the subject.
Term
Lap Dissolve
Definition
A transition between shots in which one shot begins to fade out as the next shot fades in, over lapping the first shot before replacing it.
Term
Location
Definition
Any place other than a film studio that is used for filming.
Term
Long Shot
Definition
A shot in which the subject may be seen in its entirety and much of its surroundings is visible.
Term
Long Take
Definition
A shot of long duration.
Term
Loose Framing
Definition
An image in which the main subject has ample space and does not seem hemmed in by the edges of the frame and the background.
Term
Low Angle
Definition
A view of the subject as seen from below eye level.
Term
Low-key Lighting
Definition
Lighting with predominant dark tones, often deep dark tones.
Term
Masking
Definition
A technique used to block out part of an image temporarily.
Term
Master Shot
Definition
A shot usually made with a wide-angle lens that records an entire scene.
Term
Match Cut
Definition
A transition between two shots in which an object or movement at the end of one shot closely resembles an object or movement at the beginning of the next shot.
Term
Medium Close-up
Definition
An image in which the subject fills most of the frame, though not as much as in a close up.
Term
Medium Shot
Definition
A shot in which the subject and surroundings are given about equal importance.
Term
Method Acting
Definition
Acting in which the performer studies the background of a character in depth, immerses himself in the role, and creates emotion in part by thinking of emotional situations from his own life that resemble those of the character.
Term
Mise en Scene
Definition
French for "staging."  An image's setting, subjects, and composition.
Term
Montage
Definition
A series of brief shots used to represent a condensation of subjects and time.
Term
Morphing
Definition
The alteration of a film image by degrees through the use of sophisticated computer software and multiple advanced computers.
Term
Narrative
Definition
A representation of unified events situated in one or more settings.
Term
Narrative Documentary
Definition
A film or video representation of an actual narrative or story.
Term
Nonlinear Editing
Definition
Editing that involves using a computer and software to select and combine digitized shots.
Term
Nonnarrative Documentary
Definition
A film or video that uses no narrative or story in its representation of mainly actual subjects.
Term
Normal Lens
Definition
A camera lens that provides the least distortion of image and movement.
Term
Pace
Definition
The rate that the film's subjects are revealed or presented.
Term
Panning
Definition
Filming while the movie camera is pivoted horizontally, usually while the camera is attached to a stationary base or is being held by a stationary camera opterator.
Term
Parallel Editing
Definition
Editing that alternates between two or more events, often suggesting that the events are related to each other or are occurring simultaneously.
Term
Perspective
Definition
As used by painters, photographers, and cinematographers, the relative size and apparent distances between objects in a created image.
Term
Point-of-view Shot
Definition
Camera placement at the approximate position of a character or person that gives a view similar to what that subject would see.
Term
Producer
Definition
A person in charge of the business and administrative aspects of making a film.
Term
Rack Focus
Definition
Changing the sharpness of focus during a shot from foreground to background or vice versa.
Term
Reaction Shot
Definition
A shot, usually of a face, that shows someone or occasionally an animal presumably reacting to an event.
Term
Running Time
Definition
The time that elapses when a complete film is projected.
Term
Saturated Color
Definition
Intense, vivid, or brilliant color.
Term
Scene
Definition
A section of a narrative that gives the impression of continuous action taking place in continuous time and space.
Term
Self-reflexive
Definition
Characteristic of a text that refers to or comments on itself as a text.
Term
Sequence
Definition
A series of related consecutive scenes, perceived as a major unit of a narrative film.
Term
Set
Definition
A constructed setting where action is filmed.
Term
Setting
Definition
The place where a narrative's events occur.
Term
Shallow Focus
Definition
Photography with sharp focus in only a short distance between the foreground and the background.
Term
Shot
Definition
An uninterrupted strip of exposed motion-picture film or videotape that represents a subject, perhaps even a blank screen, during an uninterrupted segment of time.
Term
Slow Cutting
Definition
Editing characterized by frequent shots of long duration.
Term
Soft Light
Definition
Light that has been diffused or reflected before illuminating the subject.
Term
Sound Dissolve
Definition
A transition between two shots in which a sound begins to fade out as the next sound fades in and overlaps the first sound before replacing it.
Term
Sound Effect
Definition
A sound in film other than spoken words or music.
Term
Special Effects
Definition
A shot unobtainable by live-action cinematography.
Term
Spherical Lens
Definition
A lens that transmits the image to the film in the camera without squeezing or compressing the image.
Term
Standard Aspect Ratio
Definition
On screens with the standard aspect ratio, the ratio of the width to the height is 1.33:1 or 4:3.
Term
Stop-motion Cinematography
Definition
The process of filming a two or three-dimentional subject, stopping the camera, making changes in the subject being filmed, and resuming filming, either in the same laborious manner or by filming continuously.
Term
Storyboards
Definition
A series of drawings of each shot of a planned film or video story, often accompanied by written dialogue, brief descriptions, or notes.
Term
Style
Definition
The way that subjects are represented in a text, such as a film.
Term
Superimposition
Definition
Two or more images photographed or printed on top of each other.
Term
Swish Pan
Definition
The shot that results when a movie camera is pivoted too rapidly during filming and blurred footage results.
Term
Take
Definition
A version of a shot.
Term
Telephoto Lens
Definition
A lens that makes all subjects in an image appear closer to the camera than is the case with a normal lens.
Term
Tight Framing
Definition
A shot in which there is little visible space around the main subjects.
Term
Tilting
Definition
Pivoting a movie camera vertically during filming, uually while the camera is attached to a stationary base, or is being held by a sationary camera opterator.
Term
Track
Definition
To film while the camera is being moved around.
Term
Wide-angle Lens
Definition
A camera lens that makes all subjects in an image appear farther from the camera and from each other than is the case with a normal lens.
Term
Wide-screen
Definition
A film format with an aspect ratio noticeably greater than 1.33:1.
Term
Wipe
Definition
A transition between shots, usually between scenes, in which one shot appears to be pushed off the screen by the next shot.
Term
Italian neorealism
Definition
A film movement in Italy during and after WWII that created films that combine imaginary and actual events, are usually located in actual settings, and show ordinary and believable characters caught up in difficult social and economic conditions, such as poverty and unemployment.
Term
French New Wave cinema
Definition
A film movement made up of a loose grouping of untraditional movies made in France in the late 1950s and early 1960s. French new wave filmmakers reacted against carefully scripted products of the French film industry, explored more current subjects, and sometimes employed untraditional filmmaking techniques.
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