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Test your basic knowledge |
Intro To Film Production
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. Character - Goal - and Conflict or Obstacles
Five Ways to Create a Parallel Action Sequence
Cross Cutting
Overheads
Three Essential Elements of Drama
2. Primary source of illumination in your scene. Usually it is a motivated light source.
Green Room
Treatment
Key Light
Reverberation
3. Light that separates the subject from the background by positioning a somewhat lower intensity light at a high angle and behind the subject. It traces the edges of the figure and creates depth.
Location Technical Survey
Lens Speed
Back Light
Low-Key Lighting
4. Transforming what is vague and internal into a series of viewable and audible actions and events
Pulling Focus
Fine Cut
Headshot/Bio
Dramatization
5. Reading from the script pages that actors are given minutes before the audition
Rim Light
Cold Reading
Shooting (Lined) Script
Fine Cut
6. Separate comfortable waiting space to put the next-in line actor. A place where actors can relax - drink some water - and go over their lines.
Pick-Ups
Zooming Out
Combination Move
Green Room
7. Sets up cables - holds second boom when necessary - and wrangles the cables when the boom operator follows a moving shot
Boom Operator
Cable Wrangler
Location Scouting
Pick-Ups
8. Sheets for each shooting day; they detail what portion of the script is being shot on a specific day - who needs to be on the set - when they need to be there - and how to get to the set.
Assistant Camera
Combination Move
Call Sheets
Zoom Lens (Variable Focal Length Lens)
9. Standard calling card. 8x10 photograph on one side and a resume on the other.
Unmotivated Move
Ambient Sound
Cover-Set
Headshot/Bio
10. Refers to the size of your subject in the frame
Combination Move
Treatment
Shot Size
Protagonist
11. Organized process by which you schedule and work with a number of potential performers to determine their suitability to your film
Camera Setup
Cross Cutting
Audition
Location Scouting
12. Legal document - signed before cameras roll - simply stating that the performer gives you the right to use his image and voice in your film
Circle of Confusion
Four Basic Elements in the Visual Language of Cinema
Talent Release
Motivated Lighting
13. Closely scrutinizing the location for its technical and aesthetic capabilities
Location Technical Survey
Plot
Peak Meter
Low-Key Lighting
14. Shooting Script - Overheads - and Storyboards
Direct Address
Blocking
Green Room
Three Pre-Visualization Tools
15. Legal document - signed before cameras roll - simply stating that the performer gives you the right to use his image and voice in your film
Cross Cutting
'In the Mud'
3/4 Back Light
Talent Release
16. Adjusting the optical center back toward the focal plane causing the image to become more wide-angle
Zooming Out
Props
Dramatization
Combination Move
17. Yields very dark and prominent shadow areas. Occurs when the fill light is considerable lower than the key - allowing areas to be submerged in shadows.
Low-Key Lighting
Direct Address
Shot List
Circle of Confusion
18. This type of move breaks the promise of showing something else to the viewer
Unmotivated Move
Cross Cutting
Shooting (Lined) Script
Author's Draft
19. The person who pulls focus
Focus Puller
Coverage
Shot Size
Cross Cutting
20. Loud - sudden sound that exceeds 0dB
Spike
Rim Light
Four Basic Elements in the Visual Language of Cinema
Reverse Shots
21. Narrative technique that involves intercutting between two or more separate areas of action in such a way that the viewer assumes the scenes are occurring simulataneously
Protagonist
Wild Sound (Non-Sync Sound)
Director of Photography
Parallel Action
22. Removing extraneous time and territory
Dramatization
Fill Light
Elliptical Editing
Gaffer
23. Organized process by which you schedule and work with a number of potential performers to determine their suitability to your film
Media File Indicators
Plot
Three Essential Elements of Drama
Audition
24. The movement of characters in the space
Author's Draft
Three Essential Elements of Drama
Blocking
Master Shot
25. Form used in film production to keep track of all the mise-en-sc
Green Room
Script Breakdown Sheet
Wild Sound (Non-Sync Sound)
Rim Light
26. Deciding where you want to shoot (the look - the access - the logistics - the sound - and securing it)
Location Scouting
Shot List
Protagonist
Overheads
27. The range of apparent focus along the z-axis
Dramatization
Treatment
Blocking
Depth of Field
28. Reading from the script pages that actors are given minutes before the audition
Cold Reading
Zooming In
Narrative Films
Prime Lens
29. Yields very dark and prominent shadow areas. Occurs when the fill light is considerable lower than the key - allowing areas to be submerged in shadows.
'In the Mud'
Four Basic Properties of Sound
Low-Key Lighting
Combination Move
30. Adjusting the optical center away from the focal plane and therefore increasing the magnification power of the lens (telephoto)
Zoom Lens (Variable Focal Length Lens)
Shot List
Boom Operator
Zooming In
31. Lens that has one fixed focal length for more precise manipulation of image quality
Prime Lens
Sound Recordist
Key Light
Combination Move
32. Not limited by the linear characteristics of video tape. We can move around in the footage in any direction - instantaneously. All film projects - whether shot on film of DV are edited on NLE. All visual and aural components must be turned into dig
Nonlinear Editing System
Director of Photography
Spike
Gaffer
33. Sound bouncing off surfaces. Results in a booming or echo-y sound as the signal duplicates itself over and over again which is refereed to as 'acoustically live.'
Zooming Out
Reverberation
Cutaway Shot
Zoom Lens (Variable Focal Length Lens)
34. Drawings of shots - arranged on paper in the order they appear in a sequence
Four Basic Elements in the Visual Language of Cinema
Storyboards
Shooting (Lined) Script
Low-Key Lighting
35. Expresses the director's visual strategy for every scene in the film. It shows you what shots are used to cover a scene and in how they connect together as an edited scene. Camera angles - shot sizes - camera moves - etc. are all marked.
Shooting (Lined) Script
Depth of Field
Wild Sound (Non-Sync Sound)
Cross Cutting
36. Refers to the size of your subject in the frame
Shot Size
Camera Setup
High-Key Lighting
Fill Light
37. Lighting unit that is 45
Levels
Assistant Camera
3/4 Back Light
Cable Wrangler
38. To alternate between two or more scenes when editing a sequence
Cross Cutting
Fine Cut
Circle of Confusion
Overheads
39. List of all the shots that make up the film in the order in which they will be shot
Shot List
Focus Puller
Setting Levels
Location Technical Survey
40. First complete version of the narrative in proper screenplay format
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41. Drawings of each scene from a bird's eye perspective. They help figure out important details like the axis of action - camera placement - and blocking.
Overheads
Camera Setup
Depth of Field
Nonlinear Editing System
42. Adjusting the optical center away from the focal plane and therefore increasing the magnification power of the lens (telephoto)
Blocking
Cover-Set
Spike
Zooming In
43. A type of location sound that isn't recorded simultaneously with the picture. Two types are Ambient Sound and Location Sound.
Cable Wrangler
3/4 Back Light
Wild Sound (Non-Sync Sound)
Script Breakdown Sheet
44. Sound that includes both room acoustics and background noise
Ambient Sound
Wild Sound (Non-Sync Sound)
Three Pre-Visualization Tools
Combination Move
45. Refers to the loudness of a signal as it enters the audio recorder which determines the strength of the recorded audio signal
Levels
Rule of Thirds
Headshot/Bio
Coverage
46. Frequency - Amplitude - Timbre - and Velocity
Depth of Field
Four Basic Properties of Sound
Location Technical Survey
'In the Mud'
47. The look of the environment in which your scenes take place - and the choice and design of the objects and costumes employed in the film have a profound impact on the tone - the characterizations - and the meaning of your movie.
Art Direction
Zooming Out
Sound Recordist
Motivated Move
48. The strategy of using movie lights to duplicate where light would logically be emanating from
Motivated Lighting
Audition
Master Shot
Shot Size
49. Shots that don't require any actors to be present like landscapes - location-establishing shots - and shots of objects and cutaways
Plot
Four Basic Elements in the Visual Language of Cinema
Pick-Ups
Levels
50. The strategy of using movie lights to duplicate where light would logically be emanating from
Reverse Shots
Motivated Lighting
Script Breakdown Sheet
Headroom