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Film Studies - Coggle Diagram
Film Studies
Soundtrack- The music that accompanies a movie.
Actor- A person who behaves in the manner of a character, usually by reciting scripted dialogue, in order to entertain an audience, especially in a play, movie, or television show.
Producer- A person who supervises and controls the administrative, financial, and commercial aspects of staging a show or performance or of creating and distributing a video or audio recording.
Film- Movies collectively, especially when considered as an art form.
Script- handwriting; the text of a play, TV program, or motion picture.
Special Effect- A visual effect added to a movie or a taped television show during processing.
Cameraman-a person who operates a camera, especially a movie or television camera.
Score- A film score is original music written specifically to accompany a film.
Blooper- Informal. an embarrassing mistake, as one spoken over the radio or TV.
Box Office- the office of a theater, stadium, or the like, at which tickets are sold.
Cast- The actors in a film, play, show, or movie.
choreographer- a person who creates dance compositions and plans and arranges dance movements and patterns for dances and especially for ballets.
cinema- movies collectively, as an art.
Movie Theater-a building or part of a building having seating for an audience and a large screen for showing movies.
Director- A person who supervises the creative aspects of a dramatic production or film and instructs the actors and crew.
Editor- a person having managerial and sometimes policy-making responsibility related to the writing, compilation, and revision of content for a publishing firm or for a newspaper, magazine, or other publication
Costumer- a person who makes, sells, or rents costumes, as for theatrical productions.
Critic- a person who judges, evaluates, or criticizes.
Dubbing- the act or process of furnishing a film or tape with a new sound track or adding music, sound effects, etc., to an existing one.
Extra- a person or thing that is additional.
Flashback- a device in the narrative of a motion picture, novel, etc., by which an event or scene taking place before the present time in the narrative is inserted into the chronological structure of the work.
Flash-forward- a device in the narrative of a motion picture, novel, etc., by which a future event or scene is inserted into the chronological structure of the work.
Grip- the act of grasping; a seizing and holding fast; firm grasp.
Hairstylist- a person who arranges or cuts hair; hairdresser.
Lighting- the arrangement of lights to achieve particular effects.
Negative- a negative statement, answer, word, gesture, etc.
outtake- a segment of film or videotape edited out of the final version, as because of a technical error.
Premiere- a first public performance or showing of a play, opera, film, etc.
sequel- a literary work, movie, etc., that is complete in itself but continues the narrative of a preceding work.
Puppeteer- a person who manipulates puppets, as in a puppet show.
reel- a spool on which film, especially motion-picture film, is wound.
Scene- a division of a play or of an act of a play, usually representing what passes between certain of the actors in one place.
set- to put (something or someone) in a particular place.
Stunt Man- a man who substitutes for an actor in scenes requiring hazardous or acrobatic feats.
Subtitle- a translation or transcription of spoken language in a television program, film, video, or video game, as of dialogue in a foreign language or speech that is audible but may not be easily understood, displayed as a graphic overlay on the lower part of the screen.
Synopsis- a brief or condensed statement giving a general view of some subject.
Studio- all the buildings and adjacent land required or used by a company engaged in the production of motion pictures.
Squib- a short and witty or sarcastic saying or writing.
Sound Effect- any sound, other than music or speech, artificially reproduced to create an effect in a dramatic presentation, as the sound of a storm or a creaking door. Abbreviation: SFX.
Voice over- the voice of an offscreen narrator, announcer, or the like.
Writer- a person engaged in writing books, articles, stories, etc., especially as an occupation or profession; an author or journalist.
Zoom In- (intr, adverb) photog films television to increase rapidly the magnification of the image of a distant object by means of a zoom lens.
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