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Cinema Study Guide

The document defines various cinematic techniques and terms used in filmmaking, including telephoto lenses, establishing shots, deep focus, eye level, and high contrast lighting. It also covers cinematography styles like backlighting, film stock types, compositional forms, camera movements, sound techniques, and genres like film noir and avant-garde cinema. Finally, it discusses narrative devices and structures used in storytelling.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
118 views3 pages

Cinema Study Guide

The document defines various cinematic techniques and terms used in filmmaking, including telephoto lenses, establishing shots, deep focus, eye level, and high contrast lighting. It also covers cinematography styles like backlighting, film stock types, compositional forms, camera movements, sound techniques, and genres like film noir and avant-garde cinema. Finally, it discusses narrative devices and structures used in storytelling.

Uploaded by

carango17
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Cinema study guide! Terms from Mr.

Doyle Telephoto lens- a lens that acts as a telescope, magnifying the size of objects at a great distance. A side effect it its tendency to flatten perspective Establishing shots- usually extreme long or long shot offering at the beginning of a scene, providing the viewer with the context of the subsequent closer shots deep focus- a technique of photography that permits all distance planes to remain clearly in focus, from close up ranges to infinity eye level- the placement of the camera approximately five to six feet from the ground high contrast lighting- a style of lighting emphasizing harsh shafts and dramatic streaks of lights and darks; often used in thrillers and melodramas backlighting- when the lights for a shot derive from the rear of the set, thus throwing the foreground figures into semidarkness or silhouette fast stock- film stock(unexposed film) that is highly sensitive to light and generally produces a grainy image; often used by documentarists who wish to shoot only with available lighting slow stock- film stocks that are relatively insensitive to light and produce crisp images and a sharpness of detail; when used in interior settings, these stocks generally require considerable artificial illumination closed form- a visual style that inclines toward self-conscience designs and carefully harmonized compositions; the frame is exploited to suggest a self-sufficient universe that encloses all the necessary visual information, usually un an aesthetically appealing manner proxemic patterns- the spatial relationships among characters with the mise en scene, and the apparent distance of the camera from the subject being photographed circular compositions- a circular object, or objects creating a circular formation within the frame; which represents unity, wholeness, completion, fullness, connectedness, and perfection open form- used primarily by realist filmmakers. These techniques are likely to be unobtrusive, with an emphasis on informal compositions and apparently haphazard designs; the frame is exploited to suggest a temporary masking, a window that arbitrarily cuts off part of the action synchronicity(synchronous sound)- the agreement or correspondence between image and sound, which are recorded simultaneously, or seem so in the finished print; synchronous sounds appear to derive from an obvious source in the visuals freeze frame- a shot composed of a single frame that is reprinted a number of times on the filmstrip; when projected, it gives the illusion of a still photograph

lateral movements- the camera or subject of the shot moving laterally to show and emphasize movement, energy, or urgency non-synchronous sound- sound and image that are not recorded simultaneously, or sound that is detached from its source in the film image; music is usually nonsynchronous in a movie, providing background atmosphere swish pan- a horizontal movement of the camera at such a rapid rate that the subject photographed blurs on the screen sound montage- a rapid sequence of cross-faded or straight-cut segments of sound that can overlap or collide motif- any unobtrusive technique, object or thematic idea thats systematically repeated throughout a film ironic contrast- a contrasting event or subject that can be look upon by the audience as ironic and in that way is inherently funny emotional recall- a moment where the character and audience is brought back to an earlier emotion cinema verite(direct cinema)- a method of documentary filming using aleatory(chance filiming, not planned in advance; documentary) methods that dont interfere with the way events take place in reality; such movies are made with a minimum of equipment, usually a handheld camera and portable sound apparatus mickeymousing- a type of film music that is purely descriptive and attempts to mimic the visual action with musical equivalents; often used in cartoons subtext- a term used in drama and film to signify the dramatic implications beneath the language of a play or movie proscenium arch- creates a "window" around the scenery and performers dominant contrast- the area of film that compels the viewers most immediate attention, usually because of prominent visual contrast quarter turn- the subject of the frame is slightly turned so as to hide his true feelings from the audience Film noir- (black cinema) referring to a kind of urban American genre that sprang up after WW2, emphasizing a fatalistic, despairing universe where there is no escape from mean city streets, loneliness and death. Stylistically, noir emphasizes low-key and high contrast lighting, complex compositions, and a strong atmosphere of dread and paranoia Formalistic narratives- don't concealed, yet they heighten the plot; formalistic in nature

Avant-garde film- a range of filmmaking styles that are generally quite different from, and often opposed to, the practices of mainstream commercial and documentary filmmaking; quite literally experimental film Realistic narratives- Realistic narrators prefer loose, discursive plots, with no clearly defined beginning, middle, or end- like life. Stasis- the subject of the frame stays still and is usually inherently funny Diegesis- refers to the internal world created by the story that the characters themselves experience and encounter Mimesis- imitation or reproduction of the supposed words of another, as in order to represent his or her character; especially with the use of sound Narratology- having a narrator tell the story Classical paradigm- begins with a protagonist and an antagonist; as the movie proceeds, the actions of the characters reach a climax in which the resolution occurs from there the classic way of telling a story 1st and 3rd person narration and novelizations- pretty self-explanatory

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