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Intro into Film
Exam 1
85
Film, Theatre & Television
Undergraduate 2
02/02/2013

Additional Film, Theatre & Television Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Realism
Definition
A style of filmmaking that attempts to duplicate the look of objective reality as it's commonly perceived, with emphasis on authentic locations and details, long shots, lengthy takes, and a minimum of distorting techniques.
Term
Frame
Definition
The dividing line between the edges of the screen image and the enclosing darkness of the theater. Can also refer to a single photograph from the filmstrip.
Term
Formalistic
Definition
A style of filmmaking in which aesthetic forms takes precedence over the subject matter as content. Formalists are often lyrical, self-consciously heightening their style to call attention to it as a value for its own sake.
Term
Expressionism
Definition
A style of filmmaking that distorts time and space as ordinarily perceived in reality. Emphasis is placed on the essential characteristics of objects and people, not necessarily on their superficial appearance. Typical expressionist techniques are fragmentary editing, extreme angles and lighting effects, and the use of distorting lenses and special effects.
Term
Classical Cinema
Definition
A vague but convenient term used to designate the style of mainstream fiction films produced in American, roughly from the midteens until the late 1960's.
Term
Shot
Definition
Those images recorded continuously from the time the camera starts until the time it stops. That is, an unedited strip of film.
Term
Medium Shot
Definition
A relatively close shot, revealing the human figure from the knees or waist up.
Term
Close-up
Definition
A detailed view of a person or object, usually without much context provided. A close-up of an actor generally includes only his or her head.
Term
Telephoto lens
Definition
A lens that acts as a telescope, magnifying the size of objects at a great distance.
Term
Extreme long shot
Definition
A panoramic view of an exterior location, photographed from a great distance, often as far as a quarter-mile away.
Term
Long shot
Definition
A shot that includes an area within the image that roughly corresponds to the audience's view of the area within the proscenium arch in the live theater.
Term
Full shot
Definition
A type of long shot that includes the human body in full, with the head near the top of the frame and the feet near the bottom.
Term
Extreme close-up
Definition
A minutely detailed view of an object or person.
Term
Deep focus shot
Definition
A technique of photography that permits all distance planes to remain clearly in focus, from close-up ranges to infinity.
Term
Establishing shot
Definition
Using an extreme long shot or long shot offered at the beginning of a scene, providing the viewer with the context of the subsequent close shots.
Term
Over the shoulder shot
Definition
A shot that usually contains two figures, one with his or her back to the camera and the other facing the camera.
Term
Wide-angle lens
Definition
A lens that permits the camera to photograph a wider area than a normal lens.
Term
Angle
Definition
The camera's angle of a view relative to the subjects being photographed. A high angle shot is photographed from above; a low angle from below the subject.
Term
Eye level shot
Definition
The placement of the camera approximately five to six feet from the ground, corresponding to the height of an observer on the scene.
Term
Set-up
Definition
The positioning of the camera and lights for a specific shot.
Term
Crane shot
Definition
The shot taken from the special device called a crane, which resembles a huge mechanical arm. The crane carries the camera and the cinematographer and can move in virtually any direction.
Term
Point of view shot
Definition
Any shot that is taken from the vantage point of a character in the film, showing what the character sees.
Term
Cinematographer
Definition
The artist or technician responsible for the lighting of a shot and the quality of the photography.
Term
Take
Definition
A variation on a specific shot. The final shot is often selected from a number of possible takes.
Term
Genre
Definition
A recognizable type of movie, characterized by certain pre-established conventions.
Term
High key
Definition
A style of lighting emphasizing bright and even illumination, with a few conspicuous shadows.
Term
High contrast
Definition
A style of lighting emphasizing harsh shafts and dramatic streaks of lights and darks.
Term
Low key
Definition
A style of lighting that emphasizes diffused shadows and atmospheric pools of light.
Term
Three point lighting
Definition
A common technique of lighhting a scene from three different sources. Sources include a key light, fill lights, and a backlight.
Term
Key light
Definition
The main source of illumination for a shot
Term
Dominant
Definition
That area of a film image that compels the viewer's most immediate attention, usually because of a prominent visual contrast.
Term
Fill lights
Definition
Secondary lights that are used to augment the key light--main source of illumination for a shot. Fill lights soften the harshness of the key lights revealing details that would otherwise be obscured in shadows.
Term
Back light
Definition
When the lights for a shot derive from the rear of the set, this throwing the foreground figures into semidarkness or silhouette.
Term
Lens
Definition
A ground of molded piece of glass, plastic, or other transparent material through which light rays are refracted so they converge or diverge to form the photographic image within the camera.
Term
Overexposure
Definition
Too much light enters the aperture of a camera lens, bleaching out the image.
Term
Painterly style
Definition
A visual style emphasizing soft edges, lush colors, and a radiantly illuminated environment, all producing a romantic lyricism.
Term
Linear style
Definition
A visual style emphasizing sharply defined lines rather than colors or textures. Deep focus lenses are generally used to produce this hard-edged style, which tends to be objective, matter-of-fact, and anti-romantic.
Term
Film noir
Definition
A french term--literally, black cinema-- referring to a kind of urban American genre that sprang up after World War II, emphasizing a fatalistic, despairing universe where there is no escape from mean city streets, loneliness and death.
Term
Filters
Definition
Pieces of glass or plastic placed in front of the camera lens that distort the quality of light entering the camera and hence the movie image.
Term
Rack focusing
Definition
The blurring of focal planes in sequence, forcing the viewer's eyes to travel with those areas of an image that remain in sharp focus.
Term
Fast stock
Definition
Film stock that's highly sensitive to light and generally produces a grainy image.
Term
Slow stock
Definition
Film stocks that are relatively insensitive to light and produce a sharpness of detail.
Term
Optical printer
Definition
An elaborate machine used to create special effects in movies.
Term
Double exposure
Definition
The superimposition of two literally unrelated images on film.
Term
Multiple exposures
Definition
A special effect produced by the optical printer, which permits the superimposition of many images simultaneously.
Term
Star
Definition
A film actor or actress of great popularity.
Term
Footage
Definition
Exposed film stock
Term
Story boarding
Definition
A pre-visualization technique in which shots are sketched in advance and in sequence
Term
Editing
Definition
The joining of one shot with another. The shots can picture events and objects in difference places at different times. Editing is called montage in Europe.
Term
Aspect ratio
Definition
The ratio between the horizontal and vertical dimensions of the screen
Term
Mise en scene
Definition
The arrangement of visual weights and movement within a given space. In the live theater the space is usually defined by the proscenium arch; in movies, by the frame which encloses the images. Cinematic mise en scene encompasses both the staging of the action and the way that it's photographed.
Term
Wide screen
Definition
A movie image that has an aspect ratio of approximately 5.3, though some widescreens possess horizontal dimensions that extend as wide as 2.5 times the vertical dimension of the screen.
Term
Masking
Definition
A technique whereby a portion of the movie image is blocked out, this temporarily altering the dimensions of the screen's aspect ratio.
Term
Iris
Definition
A masking device that blacks out portions of the screen, permitting only part of the image to be seen.
Term
Subsidiary contrast
Definition
A subordinated element of the film image, complementing or contrasting with the dominant contrast.
Term
Intrinsic interest
Definition
An unobtrusive area of the film image that nonetheless compels our most immediate attention because of it's dramatic or contextual importance.
Term
Matteur en scene
Definition
The artist or technician who creates the mise en scene--that is, the director.
Term
Tight framing
Definition
Usually in close shots. The mise en scene is so carefully balanced and harmonized that the people photographed have little or no freedom of movement.
Term
Loose framing
Definition
Usually in longer shots. The mise en scene is so spaciously distributed within the confines of the framed image that the people photographed have considerable freedom of movement.
Term
Pan
Definition
Short for panorama, that is a revolving horizontal movement of the camera from left to right or vice versa.
Term
Proxemic patterns
Definition
The spatial relationship among characters within the mise en scene, and the apparent distance of the camera from the subject photographed.
Term
Open form
Definition
Used primarily by realist filmmakers, these techniques are likely to be unobtrusive, with an emphasis on informal compositions and apparently haphazard designs.
Term
Closed form
Definition
A visual style that inclines toward self-conscious designs carefully harmonized compositions.
Term
Aleatory
Definition
Techniques of filmmaking that depend on the element of chance.
Term
Anticipatory set-up
Definition
The placement of the camera in such a manner as to anticipate the movement of an action before it occurs.
Term
Hand-held shot
Definition
A shot taken with a moving camera that is often deliberately shaky to suggest documentary footagein an uncontrolled setting.
Term
Iconography
Definition
The use of well known cultural symbols or complex of symbols in an artistic representation.
Term
Dissolves
Definition
The slow fading out of one shot and the gradual fading in of its successor, with a superimposition of images, usually at the midpoint.
Term
Dolly shot
Definition
A shot taken from a moving vehicle. Originally tracks were laid on the set to permit a smoother movement of the camera. Today even a smooth hand held traveling shot is considered a variation of the dolly shot.
Term
Slow motion
Definition
Shots of a subject photographed at a faster rate tan twenty four frames per second, which when projected at the standard rate produce a dreamy, dancelike slowness of action.
Term
Lyrical
Definition
A stylistic exuberance and subjectivity, emphasizing the senuous beauty of the medium and producing an intense outpouring of emotion.
Term
Convention
Definition
An implied agreement between the viewer and the artist to accept certain artificalities as real in a work of art.
Term
Avant-garde
Definition
From the french, meaning, "in the front ranks."
Term
Epic
Definition
A film genre characterized by bold and sweeping themes, usually in heroic proportions.
Term
Tilt (oblique angle)
Definition
A shot photographed by a tilted camera
Term
Zoom shot
Definition
A lens of variable focal length that permits the cinematohrapher to change from wide-angle to telephoto shots in one continuous movement, often plunging the viewer in or out of a scene rapidly.
Term
Aerial shot
Definition
Essentially a variation of the crane shot, though restricted to exterior locations. Usually taken from a helicopter.
Term
Swish pan
Definition
A horizontal movement of the camera at such a rapid rate that the subject photographed blurs on the screen
Term
Pull back dolly
Definition
Withdrawing the camera from a scene to reveal an object or character that was previously out of frame
Term
Animation
Definition
A form of filmmaking characterized by photographing inanimate objects or individual drawings frame by frame, with each frame differing minutely from its predecessor.
Term
Fast motion
Definition
Shots of a subject at a rate slower than twenty four fps, which when projected at the standard rate, convey motion that is jerky and slightly comical, seemingly out of control.
Term
Reverse motion
Definition
A series of images are photographed with the film reversed. When projected normally, the effect is to suggest backward movement.
Term
Freeze frame
Definition
A shot composed of a single frame that is reprinted a number of time on the filmstrip; when projected, it gives the illusion of a still photograph.
Term
Cel
Definition
Transparent plastic sheets that are superimposed in layers by animators to give the illusion of depth and volume to their drawings.
Term
Flashback
Definition
An editing technique that suggests the interruption of the present by a shot or serious of shots representing the past.
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