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CU BOULDER ETHN 4001 Film Analysis Terms
Film Analysis Terms
16
Film, Theatre & Television
Undergraduate 4
06/01/2010

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Term
AUTEUR
Definition
indicates the figure, usually the director, who stamped a film with his/her own "personality"
Term
"metteurs en scene"
Definition
refers to one who transforms a work achieved in another medium into a film.
Term
DIEGESIS
Definition
objects, events, spaces and the characters that inhabit them, including things, actions, and attitudes not explicitly presented in the film but inferred by the audience.
Term
FOCUS
Definition
Focus refers to the degree to which light rays coming from any particular part of an object pass through the lens and reconverge at the same point on a frame of the film negative, creating sharp outlines and distinct textures that match the original object.
Term
MISE-EN-SCENE
Definition
All the things that are "put in the scene": the setting, the decor, the lighting, the costumes, the performance etc. Narrative films often manipulate the elements of mise-en-scene, such as decor, costume, and acting to intensify or undermine the ostensible significance of a particular scene.
Term
REAR PROJECTION
Definition
Usually used to combine foreground action, often actors in conversation, with a background often shot earlier, on location.
Term
THREE-POINT LIGHTING
Definition
provides depth. A backlight picks out the subject from its background, a bright key light highlights the object and a fill light from the opposite side ensures that the key light casts only faint shadows.
Term
HIGH-KEY LIGHTING
Definition
Used in comedies. the fill light is raised to almost the same level as the key light
Term
LOW-KEY LIGHTING
Definition
A lighting scheme that employs very little fill light, creating strong contrasts between the brightest and darkest parts of an image and often creating strong shadows that obscure parts of the principal subjects.
Term
DEEP SPACE
Definition
use of deep frames to convey distance between characters, etc. can be used as a mise-en-scene device
Term
FRONTALITY
Definition
staging elements that face the camera head-on
Term
matte shot
Definition
process shot in which two photographic images (usually background and foreground) are combined into a single image using an optical printer.
Term
SHALLOW SPACE
Definition
image staged with very little depth; creates ambiguity
Term
TYPAGE
Definition
Typage refers to the selection of actors on the basis that their facial or bodily features readily convey the truth of the character the actor plays.
Term
SHALLOW FOCUS
Definition
Shallow focus suggests psychological introspection, since a character appears as oblivious to the world around her/him. It is therefore commonly employed in genres such as the melodrama, where the actions and thoughts of an individual prevail over everything else.
Term
RATE
Definition
A typical sound film is shot at a frame rate of 24 frames per second. If the number of frames exposed in each second is increased, the action will seem to move more slowly than normal when it is played back.
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