Bordwell Thompson Film Terms

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Glossary of Film Terms

Definitions from David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson, Film Art: An Introduction, 7th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004).

angle of framing

animation

aspect ratio
backlighting
canted framing
cinematography
close-up

contrast
crane shot
crosscutting
cut

cut-in
deep focus
deep space

depth of field

diegesis
diegetic sound
dissolve

editing
establishing shot

The position of the frame in relation to the subject it shows: above it, looking
down (a high angle); horizontal, on the same level (a straight-on angle); looking
up (a low angle). Also called camera angle.
Any process whereby artificial movement is created by photographing a series of
drawings (see also cel animation), objects, or computer images one by one. Small
changes in position, recorded frame by frame, create the illusion of movement.
The relationship of the frame's width to its height.
Illumination cast onto the figures in the scene from the side opposite the camera,
usually creating a thin outline of highlighting on those figures.
A view in which the frame is not level; either the right or left side is lower than the
other, causing objects in the scene to appear slanted out of an upright position.
A general term for all the manipulations of the film strip by the camera in the
shooting phase and by the laboratory in the developing phase.
A framing in which the scale of the object shown is relatively large; most
commonly a person's head seen from the neck up, or an object of a comparable
size that fills most of the screen.
In cinematography, the difference between the brightest and darkest areas within
the frame.
A shot with a change in framing accomplished by having the camera above the
ground and moving through the air in any direction.
Editing that alternates shots of two or more lines of action occurring in different
places, usually simultaneously.
1. In filmmaking, the joining of two strips of film together with a splice. 2. In the
finished film, an instantaneous change from one framing to another. See also jump
cut.
An instantaneous shift from a distant framing to a closer view of some portion of
the same space.
A use of the camera lens and lighting that keeps both the close and distant planes
being photographed in sharp focus.
An arrangement of mise-en-scene elements so that there is a considerable distance
between the plane closest to the camera and the one farthest away. Any or all of
these planes may be in focus. (See shallow space.)
The measurements of the closest and farthest planes in front of the camera lens
between which everything will be in sharp focus. A depth of field from 5 to 16
feet, for example, would mean everything closer than 5 feet and farther than 16
feet would be out of focus.
In a narrative film, the world of the film's story. The diegesis includes events that
are presumed to have occurred and actions and spaces not shown onscreen.
Any voice, musical passage, or sound effect presented as originating from a source
within the film's world. See also nondiegetic sound.
A transition between two shots during which the first image gradually disappears
while the second image gradually appears; for a moment the two images blend in
superimposition.
1. In filmmaking, the task of selecting and joining camera takes. 2. In the finished
film, the set of techniques that governs the relations among shots.
A shot, usually involving a distant framing, that shows the spatial relations among

eyeline match

fade

following shot
frame
framing
genres
graphic match
hard lighting
height of framing
iris

jump cut

long shot
long take
mask

medium close-up
medium long shot

medium shot
mise-en-scne
montage

montage sequence

the important figures, objects, and setting in a scene.


A cut obeying the axis of action principle, in which the first shot shows a person
looking off in one direction and the second shows a nearby space containing what
he or she sees. If the person looks left, the following shot should imply that the
looker is offscreen right.
1. Fade-in: A dark screen that gradually brightens as a shot appears. 2. Fade-out: A
shot gradually disappears as the screen darkens. Occasionally, fade-outs brighten
to pure white or to a color.
A shot with framing that shifts to keep a moving figure onscreen.
A single image on the strip of film. When a series of frames is projected onto a
screen in quick succession, an illusion of movement is created.
The use of the edges of the film frame to select and to compose what will be
visible onscreen.
Various types of films that audiences and filmmakers recognize by their familiar
narrative conventions. Common genres are musical, gangster, and Western films.
Two successive shots joined so as to create a strong similarity of compositional
elements (e.g., color, shape).
Illumination that creates sharp-edged shadows.
The distance of the camera above the ground, regardless of the angle of framing.
A round, moving mask that can close down to end a scene (iris-out) or emphasize a
detail, or that can open to begin a scene (iris-in) or to reveal more space around a
detail.
An elliptical cut that appears to be an interruption of a single shot. Either the
figures seem to change instantly against a constant background, or the background
changes instantly while the figures remain constant.
A framing in which the scale of the object shown is small; a standing human figure
would appear nearly the height of the screen.
A shot that continues for an unusually lengthy time before the transition to the next
shot.
An opaque screen placed in the camera or printer that blocks part of the frame off
and changes the shape of the photographed image, leaving part of the frame a solid
color. As seen on the screen, most masks are black, although they can be white or
colored.
A framing in which the scale of the object shown is fairly large; a human figure
seen from the chest up would fill most of the screen.
A framing at a distance that makes an object about four or five feet high appear to
fill most of the screen vertically. See also plan amricain, the special term for a
medium long shot depicting human figures.
A framing in which the scale of the object shown is of moderate size; a human
figure seen from the waist up would fill most of the screen.
All of the elements placed in front of the camera to be photographed: the settings
and props, lighting, costumes and makeup, and figure behavior.
1. A synonym for editing. 2. An approach to editing developed by the Soviet
filmmakers of the 1920s; it emphasizes dynamic, often discontinuous,
relationships between shots and the juxtaposition of images to create ideas not
present in either shot by itself
A segment of a film that summarizes a topic or compresses a passage of time into
brief symbolic or typical images. Frequently dissolves, fades, superimpositions,
and wipes are used to link the images in a montage sequence.

narrative form
nondiegetic sound
pan
point-of-view shot
(POV shot)
racking focus
rate

scene
sequence
shallow focus
shallow space
shot

shot/reverse shot

superimposition
take
tilt
tracking shot
wipe
zoom lens

A type of filmic organization in which the parts relate to each other through a
series of causally related events taking place in time and space.
Sound, such as mood music or a narrator's commentary, represented as coming
from a source outside the space of the narrative.
A camera movement with the camera body turning to the right or left. On the
screen, it produces a mobile framing that scans the space horizontally.
A shot taken with the camera placed approximately where the character's eyes
would be, showing what the character would see; usually cut in before or after a
shot of the character looking.
Shifting the area of sharp focus from one plane to another during a shot; the effect
on the screen is called rack-focus.
In shooting, the number of frames exposed per second; in projection, the number
of frames thrown on the screen per second. If the two are the same, the speed of
the action will appear normal, while a disparity will create slow or fast motion.
The standard rate in sound cinema is 24 frames per second for both shooting and
projection.
A segment in a narrative film that takes place in one time and space or that uses
crosscutting to show two or more simultaneous actions.
Term commonly used for a moderately large segment of film, involving one
complete stretch of action. In a narrative film, often equivalent to a scene.
A restricted depth of field, which keeps only one plane in sharp focus; the opposite
of deep focus.
Staging the action in relatively few planes of depth; the opposite of deep space.
1. In shooting, one uninterrupted run of the camera to expose a series of frames.
Also called a take. 2. In the finished film, one uninterrupted image with a single
static or mobile framing.
Two or more shots edited together that alternate characters, typically in a
conversation situation. Over-the-shoulder framings are common in shot/reverseshot editing.
The exposure of more than one image on the same film strip.
In filmmaking, the shot produced by one uninterrupted run of the camera. One shot
in the final film may be chosen from among several takes of the same action.
A camera movement with the camera body swiveling upward or downward on a
stationary support. It produces a mobile framing that scans the space vertically.
A mobile framing that travels through space forward, backward, or laterally. See
also crane shot, pan, and tilt.
A transition between shots in which a line passes across the screen, eliminating one
shot as it goes and replacing it with the next one.
A lens with a focal length that can be changed during a shot. A shift toward the
telephoto range [zoom in] enlarges the image and flattens its planes together,
giving an impression of magnifying the scene's space, while a shift toward the
wide-angle range [zoom out] does the opposite.

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