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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 person responsible for putting a film together from a mass of developed footage - making decisions regarding pace - shot transitions - and which scenes and shots will be used
Plot summary
Editor
Minor studios
Iris out
2. A system for recording images on magnetic tape using a digital signal - that is - an electronic signal comprised of 0s and 1s
Storyboard
Out-take
Director
Digital video
3. A film that fuses the conventions of two or more genres
Script supervisor
Composition
Avant-garde film
Hybrid
4. A direct vocal address to the audience - Which may emanate from a character or from a narrative voice apparently unrelated to the diegesis
Subtext
Interpellation
Scratching
Voice-over
5. The details of a character's past that emerge as the film unfolds - and which often play a role in character motivation
Shooting script
Cut
Tight framing
Backstory
6. Smaller corporations that did not own distribution and/or exhibition companies in the studio era - including Universal - Columbia - and United Artists
Interpretive claim
Digital video
Score
Minor studios
7. A sound editing technique that links several scenes through parallel and overlapping sounds. Each sound is associated with one scene - unlike a sound bridge - where a sound from one scene bleeds into that of another
Letterboxing
Studio system
Lightning mix
Pulling
8. 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
Interlaced scanning
Academy Ratio
Travelling matte
Block booking
9. The use of editing techniques - such as a fade or dissolve - to indicate the end of one scene and the beginning of another
Shot transition
Closure
Charge coupler device
Subgenre
10. The imagined world of the story
Aperture
Color timing
Diegesis
Assistant Editor
11. A picture element - a measure of image density. There are approximately 18 million pixels in a frame of 35mm film and 300000-400000 in a video image
Backstory
Tilt
Pixel
Grain
12. A fiction film (often a comedy) that uses documentary conventions on fictional rather than real-world subject matter
Second unit
Low-angle shot
Mockumentary
Typecasting
13. Experimental film; Underground cinema;
Normal lens
Scratching
Line of action
Avant-garde film
14. The horizontal turning movement of an otherwise immobile camera across a scene from left to right or vice versa
Pan
Score
Long shot
Lightning mix
15. A series of individual drawings that provides a blueprint for the shooting of a scene
Storyboard
Director
Pan
Low-key lighting
16. A term that refers to the organization of an industry wherein one type of corporation also owns corporations in allied industries - for example - film production and video games
Oeuvre
Dye coupler
Screenplay
Horizontal integration
17. A shot that focuses audience attention on precise details that may or may not be the focus of characters
Sound bridge
Blocking
Cutaway
Trombone shot
18. A musical film in which each song and dance number is narratively motivated by a plot that situates characters in performance contexts
Prosthesis
Matte painting
Frozen time moment
Backstage musical
19. The length in minutes for a film to play in its entirety (for example - 120 minutes). Also referred to as 'screen time.'
Star system
Continuity error
Running time
Master positive
20. The first shot in a standard shot sequence. Its purpose is to provide a clear representation of the location of the action
Screenplay
Interlaced scanning
Establishing shot
Tableau shot
21. A device that projects photographs or footage onto glass so that images can be traced by hand to create animated images
Slow
Motivation
Rotoscope
Extreme long-shot
22. Wheeled platform with wheels that rotate - so the dolly can change direction
Syuzhet
Crab dolly
Brechtian distanciation
Iris in...
23. A technique of shifting the camera angle - height - or distance to take into account the motion of actors or objects within the frame
Foley artist
Wide-angle lens
Shooting script
Reframing
24. The plotline that surrounds an embedded tale. The frame narration may or may not be as fully developed as the embedded tale
Scene
Color consultant
Frame narration
Color timing
25. A process of blending the three elements of the sound track (dialogue - music - and effects) in post-production
Out-take
Three-point lighting
Mixing
Panning and scanning
26. The average length in seconds of a series of shots - covering a portion of a film or an entire film; a measure of pace within a scene or in the film as a whole.
Match on action
Average shot length
Focus puller
Newsreel
27. The narrative path of the main or supporting characters - also called a plotline. Complex films may have several lines of action
Line of action
ADR
Overhead shot
Split screen
28. Light striking the emulsion layer of the film - activating light-sensitive grains
Flashing
Exposure
Brechtian distanciation
Fog filter
29. The building block of a scene; an uninterrupted sequence of frames that viewers experience as they watch a film - ending with a cut - fade - dissolve - etc. See also Take
Block booking
Undercranking
Shot
Forced perspective
30. A system of constructing and arranging buildings and objects on the set so that they diminish in size dramatically from foreground to background - which creates the illusion of depth
Hybrid
Forced perspective
Phi phenomenon
Telephoto lens
31. An action film cycle of the late 1960s and early 1970s that featured bold - rebellious African American characters
Turning point
Blaxploitation
Slow
Master shot
32. A system for combining two separately filmed images in the same frame that involves create a matte (a black mask that covers a portion of the image) for a live action sequence and using it to block out a portion of the frame when filming the backgrou
Evaluative claim
Third-person narration
Soft light
Travelling matte
33. Early films that documented everyday events - such as workers leaving a factory
Green screen
Steadicam
Actualitas
Blue screen
34. Optical illusions created during post-production
Low-key lighting
Animation
Visual effects
Prosthesis
35. Author; A term popularized by French film critics and refers to film directors with their own distinctive style
Auteur
Average shot length
Negative cutter
Fast
36. A sound editing technique that links several scenes through parallel and overlapping sounds. Each sound is associated with one scene - unlike a sound bridge - where a sound from one scene bleeds into that of another
Genre
Soundtrack
Lightning mix
Recursive action
37. A camera shot taken at a large distance from the subject. Using the human body as the subject - a long shot captures the entire human form
Soft light
Neutral-density filter
Cutaway
Long shot
38. Invisible editing; a system devised to minimize the audience's awareness of shot transitions - especially cuts - in order to improve the flow of the story and avoid interrupting the viewer's immersion it in
Match on action
Overexposure
Continuity editing
Average shot length
39. A narrative - visual - or sound element that refers viewers to other films or works of art
Product placement
Continuity editing
Intertextual reference
Jump cut
40. A statement that presents an argument about a film's meaning and significance
Pulling
Interpretive claim
Motif
Star system
41. A crew member whose job is to measure the distance between the subject and the camera lens - marking the ring on the camera lens - and ensuring the ring is turned precisely so that the image is in focus
30-degree rule
Focus puller
Screenplay
Zoom out
42. A crew member whose job is to maintain consistency in visual details from one shot to the next
Master shot
Star persona
Continuity editor
Auteur
43. A shot in a sequence that is taken from the reverse angle of the shot previous to it
Diffusion filters
Direct cinema
Reverse shot
Backstory
44. 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
Long take
Horizontal integration
Academy Ratio
Digital compositing
45. (Automatic dialogue replacement) recording synchronized dialogue in post-production - cutting several identical lengths of developed film and having actors record the dialogue repeatedly
Color filter
ADR
Pushing
Major studios
46. The practice of Hollywood studios contracting out post-production work to individuals or firms outside the U.S.
Orthochromatic
Realist style
Outsourcing
Eye-level shot
47. A transparent sheet on which animation artists draw images.
Medium shot
Cel
Negative cutter
Saturation
48. The non-chronological insertion of scenes of events yet to happen into the present day of the story world
Glass shot
Zoom in...
Flashforward
Freeze frame
49. 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
Wide-angle lens
Long take
Interlaced scanning
Direct sound
50. A black masking device used to black out a portion of the frame - usually for the insertion of other images
Slow motion
Trailer
Intertextual reference
Matte