Camera:
- Establishing shot: The opening shot in a dramatic scene that establishes the disposition of people and objects in the mise en scene. As such it is usually a wide shot, and is likely to be followed by a succession of closer shot.
- Two-shot: A shot in which two figures appear in the frame.
- Point of View shot: A camera angle in which the viewer seems to see with the eyes of the character in the scene.
- Over the Shoulder shot: A camera shot in which the subject of the shot is filmed from behind a person's head and shoulders, which are framed to one side in the foreground.
- High-angle shot: A camera shot taken from a higher level than the subject, and angled down towards them. This shot can have the effect of diminishing the authority of the subject, making them look weak.
- Low angle shot: A camera shot taken from a lower level than the subject, and angled up at them. This shot can have the effect of enhancing the authority of the subject, making them look powerful.
- Canted angle: A cinematic device where the camera is physically placed at an angle so that vertical and horizontal surfaces appear diagonal.
- Pan: A horizontal camera movement left-to-right or right-to-left on a fixed axis. The word is short for 'panoramic movement'. A pan following a moving object suggests that we are viewing it from the point of view of an observer.
- Tilt: A camera movement up or down on a horizontal axis.
- Tracking shot: A camera movement achieved by mounting the camera on a dolly and moving it along a track. Typically, tracking shots are used to follow characters or other objects in motion.
Sound:
- Diegetic sound: Sound that can be heard by the characters in the world of film.
- Non-diegetic sound: Sound that cannot be heard by the characters in the world of film.
- Synchronous sound: Sound that is directly matched with what is being viewed.
- Sound bridge: Editing technique in which visual cuts are deliberately not matched with audio cuts.
- Dialogue: The conversation that happens between characters in a work of fiction, or the lines spoken by actors.
- Voiceover: A type of non-diegetic, asynchronous sound in which the audience hear a voice that does not have a source either within the frame or within hearing distance and which is not heard by the people on screen.
- Incidental music: Music used in a film or play as a background to create or enhance a particular atmosphere.
- Stings: A short musical phrase primarily used as a form of punctuation.
- Ambient sound: Sound which is natural to a setting.
Mise en scene:
- Mise-en-scene: The look of a film, derived from its use of sets and settings, lighting, colour, costumes hair and make-up, props, actor movement, and the overall placement and visual composition of these elements by the director.
- Location: A 'real' place, as opposed to a studio, in which something is filmed or otherwise recorded.
- Set: An interior that has been constructed to look like a real place when filmed; the set helps to identify the time and place in which a narrative will unfold.
- Costume: The clothes worn by characters in a fictional text. The costumes are part of the mise en scene and as such are an important part of signification (for example, as a generic or period identifier).
- Make-up: Cosmetics used to change the appearance of a performer.
- Prop: Short for 'property'. A small item used in a film or TV production to add realism, assist with the narrative or act as a motif.
- High-key lighting: Lighting which eliminates most of the shadows.
- Low-key lighting: Lighting which emphasises shadows.
Editing:
- Cut: The commonest form of edit in moving image texts, this is the instantaneous change from one shot to another in an edit.
- Shot/reverse shot: A convention for showing a dialogue sequence. We cut between the two speakers, showing each person's point of view.
- Eye-line match: A visual code used to make it clear what the subject is looking at
- Graphic match: A compositional device onscreen, whereby objects of common characteristics of shape or colour are used in successful shots.
- Match on action: Two shots in which an action begun in the first is completed in the second, thus disguising the fact that there has been a cut.
- Dissolve: In editing, a cross-fade between two shots: one fades out as another fades in.
- Wipe: A shot transition in which the new image wipes over the previous one.
- Superimposition: To place one image over the top of another on the screen.
- Long take: Not to be confused with a long shot, a long take is a shot of comparatively long duration.
- Montage: The production of a rapid succession of images in a motion picture, usually accompanied by music, to illustrate an association of ideas or a passing of time.
- Post-production: The various processes that take place after filming in order to create the final cut of a film.
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