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Introduction to Film Art Midterm
Notes for Chapters 1-4
95
Other
Undergraduate 1
10/04/2009

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Term
Parallelism
Definition
The process whereby a film cues spectators to compare two or more distinct elements by highlighing some similarity.
Term
Suspense
Definition
Delay in fulfilling an established expectation.
Term
Curiosity
Definition
Ability of a spectator to frame hypotheses about prior events.
Term
Referential meaning
Definition
Meaning dependent on spectator's ability to identify specific items; refers to things or places already invested with significance.
Term
Norms
Definition
Bodies of conventions.
Term
Symptomatic meaning
Definition
Meaning that situates artwork within a trend of thought and bears traces of a particular set of social values.
Term
Form
Definition
The overall system of relations that we can perceive among elements in the whole film.
Term
Criterion
Definition
A standard which can be applied in the judgement of many works.
Term
Surprise
Definition
An expectation that is revealed to be incorrect.
Term
Motivation
Definition
Justification for an element's presence in a film.
Term
Motif
Definition
Any significant repeated element's presence in a film.
Term
System
Definition
Any set of elements that depend on and affect one another.
Term
Elements upon which narrative relies
Definition
Space, time and causality
Term
Story
Definition
In a narrative film, all the events that wee see and hear, plus all those taht we infer or assume to have occurred.
Term
Plot
Definition
In a narrative film, everything visibly and audibly present.
Term
Narration
Definition
The plot's way of distributing story information in order to acheive specific effects.
Term
Unity
Definition
A feature of films which implies that the movie contains mostly motivated events.
Term
Gauge
Definition
The width of a frame.
Term
Form
Definition
The overall organization of a film.
Term
Style
Definition
Purposeful patterns of a film.
Term
Master shot
Definition
The filming of the entire sequence, including all action and dialogue.
Term
Coverage
Definition
Catches teh scene from different angels for stylistic choice.
Term
Rushes (dailies)
Definition
Footage taken directly to the editor from production.
Term
High-key lighting
Definition
Refers to an overall lighting design that uses fill and backlight to create low contrast between brighter and darker areas.
Term
Fill light
Definition
Less intense illumination that softens or eliminates shadows.
Term
Side lighting
Definition
Sculpts a figure's features (also called a crosslight).
Term
Cast shadow
Definition
Light fails to illuminate part of the set because an object blocks it out.
Term
Frontal lighting
Definition
Directional lighting that tends to eliminate shadows.
Term
Highlight
Definition
A patch of relative brightness on a surface.
Term
Back lighting
Definition
Comes from behind the object filmed; used alone it tends to create silhouettes.
Term
Light direction
Definition
The path of light from its source to the object lit.
Term
Top lighting
Definition
Comes from above.
Term
Low-key illumination
Definition
Refers to an overall lighting design that minimizes or eliminates fill light and creates strong contrast and sharp, dark shadows.
Term
Attached shadow (or shading)
Definition
Light fails to illuminate part of an object because of the object's shape or surface features.
Term
Prop
Definition
An object in the setting which has a function within the ongoing action.
Term
Light quality
Definition
The relative intensity of the illumination.
Term
Underlighting
Definition
Comes from below the object; tends to distort features.
Term
Key light
Definition
Primary source of light; provides dominant illumination and casts strongest shadows; usually corresponds to the motivating light source in the setting.
Term
Background or set lighting
Definition
Illuminates background and extras.
Term
The key components of mise-en-scene
Definition
Lighting, setting, costume and makeup, figure behavior (movement and acting)
Term
Changes our vision is attuned to in cinema
Definition
Color, balance, size, and movement
Term
Linear perspective
Definition
Characterized by the convergence of parallel lines at distant vanishing point.
Term
Volume
Definition
The condition of being solid and occupying three-dimensional space.
Term
Depth cues
Definition
Factors in teh image that help create a sense of space.
Term
Aerial perspective
Definition
Hazing of more distant planes.
Term
Planes
Definition
Layers of space occupied by persons or objects.
Term
Deep-space composition
Definition
Significant distance seems to seperate planes.
Term
Overlap of edges
Definition
A basic depth cue.
Term
Shallow-space composition
Definition
Mise-en-scene suggests comparatively little depth; the closest and most distant planes seem only slightly separated.
Term
Theoretical essay
Definition
Aims to emplain some of the larger and more complex structures of the cinema and how we understand them; addressed to an audience possessing specialized knowledge.
Term
Review
Definition
Aims at the broadest possible audience; functions to introduce unknown films and either to recommend or not recommend them.
Term
Critical essay
Definition
Aims to reveal subtleties or complexities that may have escaped viewers on the first or second viewing.
Term
Selective focus
Definition
Focusing on only one plane and letting the other planes blur.
Term
Slow-motion effect
Definition
Can be created by combing a constant projection speed and shooting more frames per second.
Term
Contrast
Definition
Refers to the degree of difference between teh darkest and the lgihtest areas of the frame.
Term
Film stocks
Definition
Are differentiated by the chemical qualities of the emulsion.
Term
High-contrast image
Definition
Displays bright white highlights and stark black areas.
Term
Low-contrast images
Definition
Possesses a wide range of grays with no true black or white areas.
Term
Technicolor
Definition
Produces sharply distinct, heavily saturated hues.
Term
tinting
Definition
Is accomplished by dipping the already develope dfilm into a bath of dye.
Term
toning
Definition
Is accomplished by adding dye during the developing of the positive print.
Term
Exposure
Definition
The regulation of how much light passes through the camera lens.
Term
Day for night
Definition
A technique in which filmmakers use blue filters in sunlight.
Term
Fast-motion effect
Definition
Can be created by combing a constant projection speed and shooting fewer frams per second.
Term
Perspective relations
Definition
Scale, depth, and spatial relations.
Term
Focal length
Definition
The distance from the cetner of the lensto the point where lgith rays converge to a point of focus on the film.
Term
Wide-angle lens
Definition
Less than 35mm focal length (in 35 mm-gauge cinematography); distorts stright lines lying near the edges of the frame and exaggerates depth; figures seem to cover ground mroe rapdily when moving towerade or away from camera.
Term
Depth of field
Definition
The range of distances before the lens within which objects can be photographed in sharp focus.
Term
Deep space
Definition
Refers to the staging of action on several planes.
Term
Racking (or pulling) focus
Definition
Refocusing on different planes during one continuous shot.
Term
Superimposition
Definition
Laying one image over another.
Term
Process (or composite) shots
Definition
Complex techniques for combining strips of film to create a single shot.
Term
Telephoto lens
Definition
Generally 75-250mm or more focal length (in 35mm-gauge cinematography); flattens space along camera axis; depth and volume cues reduced; a figure moving toward the camera seemst o take more tiem to cover a small distance.
Term
The three cinematographic qualities of a shot
Definition
Duration of the shot; photographic aspects of the shot; and framing of the shot.
Term
The affects of framing on an image
Definition
Determining the size and shape, defining onscreen and offscreen space, imposing the distance, angle, and height of the viewer's vantage point, and moving in relation to the mise-en-scene
Term
Aspect ratio
Definition
The ratio of frame width to frame height.
Term
Masks
Definition
Blocks the passage of light through either teh camera's or the printer's lens.
Term
Multiple-frame or split screen-imagery
Definition
Two or more images, each with its own frame dimensions and shape, appear within the larger frame.
Term
Angle of framing
Definition
Positions the viewer's vantage at some angle onto the mise-en-scene.
Term
Low angle framing
Definition
Postions the viewer as looking up at the framed mise-en-scene.
Term
High angle framing
Definition
Positions the viewer as looking down at the mise-en-scene.
Term
Extreme long shot
Definition
Used for framing landscapes, bird's eye views, and vistas.
Term
Long shot
Definition
Figures are prominent but background dominates.
Term
Medium long shot
Definition
Human figure is framed from knees up.
Term
Medium shot
Definition
Frames the human body from the waist up.
Term
Medium-close shot
Definition
Frames the human body fromt he chest up.
Term
Close-up shot
Definition
Traditionally this shot show just the head, hands, feet, or a small object.
Term
Extreme-close up shot
Definition
Singles out a portionof a figure and isolates and magnifies it (i.e.,eyes or lips)
Term
Mobile framing
Definition
Within the image, the framing of a shot changes.
Term
Pan
Definition
Gives the impression of a frame horizontally scanning space.
Term
Tilt
Definition
Gives the impression of unrolling space from top to bottom or bottom to top.
Term
Tracking or dolly shot
Definition
Camera travels in some direction abong the ground.
Term
Crane shot
Definition
Camera moves above ground level.
Term
Hand-held camera
Definition
Produces a bumpy, jigglign image.
Term
Zoom shot
Definition
Creates a sense (for the viewer) the part of the framed space has been magnified or demagnified.
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