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Test your basic knowledge |
Film Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
performing-arts
,
film
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A long shot in which the film frame resembles the proscenium arch of the stage - distancing the audience
Tableau shot
Medium shot
Matte painting
Overhead shot
2. A crew member whose job is to maintain consistency in visual details from one shot to the next
Digital compositing
Green screen
Handheld shot
Continuity editor
3. Color. The strength of a hue is measured by its saturation or desaturation
Hue
Mixing
Continuity editor
Antagonist
4. A continuity editing technique that preserves spatial continuity by using a character's line of vision as motivation for a cut
On-the-nose dialogue
Low-angle shot
Classical style
Eyeline match
5. A technique in which the audience temporarily shares the visual perspective of a character or a group of characters. The camera points in the directions the character looks - simulating the character's field of vision
Point-of-view shot
Flashing
Pixilation
Blockbuster
6. A marketing strategy of screening a blockbuster prior to general release only in premier theaters
Offscreen space
Roadshowing
180-degree rule
Rear projection
7. An unstated meaning that underlies and is implied by spoken dialogue
Subtext
Anime
Focus puller
Gauge
8. A shot that focuses audience attention on precise details that may or may not be the focus of characters
Fabula
Cutaway
Overhead shot
Figure placement and movement
9. The conclusion of the film wraps up - all loose ends in a form of resolution - though not necessarily with a happy ending.
Anamorphic lens
Lightning mix
Fabula
Closure
10. A description of film stock that is highly sensitive to light
Focal length
Hollywood Blacklist
Fast
Overhead shot
11. The space between the camera and subject it is filming.
Director
Mixing
Shot/reverse shot
Camera distance
12. The aspect ratio of 1.33:1 - standardized by the Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences until the development of widescreen formats in the 1950s
Auteur
Method acting
Academy Ratio
Anamorphic lens
13. Creating images during post-production by joining together photographic or CGI material shot or created at different times and places
Crane shot
Standard shot pattern
Compositing
Polarizing filters
14. A shot that appears during or near the end of a scene and reorients viewers to the setting
Speed
Wide film
Parellel editing
Re-establishing shot
15. Dutch angle; a shot resulting from a static camera that is tilted to the right or left - so that the subject in the frame appears at a diagonal
Canted angle
Fast motion
Gauge
Line reading
16. The camera should move at least 30 degrees any time there is a cut within a scene
30-degree rule
Formalist style
Low-key lighting
Denouement
17. A compositing method that allows cinematographers to combine live action and settings that are filmed or created separately. Actors are filmed against a green or blue background. During post-production - this background is filled in with an image thr
Composition
Aerial Shot
Computer-generated imagery (CGI)
Green screen
18. The practice of shooting during the day but using filters and underexposure to create the illusion of nighttime
Persistence of vision
Day for night
Director
Production values
19. Creating the appearance of movement by drawing a series of frames that are projected sequentially - rather than photographing a series of still images
Dye coupler
Animation
Color filter
Digital cinema
20. Creating images during post-production by joining together photographic or CGI material shot or created at different times and places
Camera distance
Fabula
Compositing
Figure placement and movement
21. The rules of character - setting - and narrative that films that belong to a genre - such as Westerns - horror films - and screwball comedies - generally obey.
Genre conventions
Anamorphic lens
Runaway production
Composition in depth
22. Lighting design in which the greater intensity of the key light makes it impossible for the fill to eliminate shadows - producing a high-contrast image (with many grades of light and dark) - a number of shadows - and a somber mood
Star persona
Subtext
Low-key lighting
Film stock
23. An outlawed studio era practice - where studios forced exhibitors to book groups of films at once - thus ensuring a market for their failures along with their successes
Auteur
Digital set extension
Block booking
Fade-out
24. The first shot in a standard shot sequence. Its purpose is to provide a clear representation of the location of the action
Establishing shot
Emulsion
Medium shot
Overexposure
25. A technique of overdeveloping exposed film stock (leaving it in the chemical bath longer than indicated) in order to increase density and contrast in the image
Pushing
Handheld shot
Dissolve
Closure
26. Filters that increase color saturation and contrast in outdoor shots
Promotion
Subgenre
German Expressionism
Polarizing filters
27. A type of matte shot - created by positioning a pane of optically flawless glass with a painting on it between the camera and the scene to be photographed. This combines the painting on the glass with the set or location - seen through the glass - be
Intertextual reference
Available light
Long shot
Glass shot
28. A term describing a conclusion that does not answer all the questions raised regarding characters or storylines - nor tie up all loose ends
Open-ended
Telecine
Sound bridge
Composition
29. A black masking device used to black out a portion of the frame - usually for the insertion of other images
Auteur
Canted angle
Shutter
Matte
30. Non-diegetic; any element in the film that is not part of the imagined story world
Extradiegetic
Filter
Subtext
Realist style
31. Reels of film that are shipped to movie theaters for exhibition. Digital cinema - which can be distributed via satellite - broadband - or on media such as DVDs - may soon replace film prints because the latter are expensive to create - copy - and dis
Plot summary
Intertextual reference
Release prints
Long shot
32. A type of matte shot - created by positioning a pane of optically flawless glass with a painting on it between the camera and the scene to be photographed. This combines the painting on the glass with the set or location - seen through the glass - be
Glass shot
Plot summary
Soundtrack
Post-production
33. A mental phenomenon by which viewers derive more meaning from the interaction of two sequential shots than from a single shot in isolation
Tracking shot
Rear projection
Kuleshov effect
Soviet montage
34. Muted - washed out color that contains more white than a saturated color
Digital set extension
Brechtian distanciation
Desaturated
180-degree rule
35. An alternative to classical and realist styles - formalism is a self-consciously interventionist approach that explores ideas - abstraction - and aesthetics rather than focusing on storytelling (as in classical films) or everyday life (as in realist
Front projection
Day for night
Hollywood Blacklist
Formalist style
36. A property of older television monitors - where each frame was scanned as two fields: One consisting of all the odd numbered lines - the other all the even lines. If slowed down - the television image would appear to sweep down the screen one line at
Color timing
Interlaced scanning
Shot
Voice-over
37. Lighting design that provides an even illumination of the subject - with many facial details washed out. High-key lighting tends to create a hopeful mood - in contrast to low-key lighting
Omniscient narration
Zoom lens
High-key lighting
Matte
38. A series of individual drawings that provides a blueprint for the shooting of a scene
Storyboard
Soviet montage
Hybrid
Direct cinema
39. The reverse of Iris in: an iris expands outward until the next shot takes up the entire screen
Progressive scanning
Go-motion
Hybrid
Iris out
40. Lighting design that provides an even illumination of the subject - with many facial details washed out. High-key lighting tends to create a hopeful mood - in contrast to low-key lighting
Runaway production
Forced perspective
High-key lighting
Compositing
41. The horizontal turning movement of an otherwise immobile camera across a scene from left to right or vice versa
Matte
Pan
Video assist
Dailies
42. Early films that documented everyday events - such as workers leaving a factory
Take
Actualitas
Swish pan
Telecine
43. Light striking the emulsion layer of the film - activating light-sensitive grains
Matte painting
Focus puller
Exposure
Motivation
44. A lens with a variable focal length that allows changes of focal length while keeping the subject in focus
Travelling matte
Rack focus
Speed
Zoom lens
45. The distance in millimeters from the optical center of a lens to the lane where the sharpest image is formed while focusing on a distant object
Extreme close-up
Release prints
Focal length
Two-shot
46. A contemporary modification of the standard three-act structure that identifies a critical turning point at the halfway mark of most narrative films
Computer-generated imagery (CGI)
Four-part structure
Synthespian
Score
47. A technique of running the motion picture camera at a speed slower than projection speed (24 frames per second) - in order to produce at a fast motion sequence when projected at normal speed. The term derives from early film cameras - which were cran
Typecasting
Reframing
Blockbuster
Undercranking
48. The classical model of narrative form. The first act introduces characters and conflicts; the second act offers complication leading to a climax; the third act contains the danouement and resolution
Three-act structure
Grain
Hard light
Overlapping dialogue
49. A technician responsible for splicing and assembling the film negative to the editor's specifications
Genre
Negative cutter
Tight framing
Two-shot
50. A scene transition in which the first frame of the incoming scene appears to push the last frame of the previous scene off the screen horizontally
Rear projection
Genre conventions
Glass shot
Wipe