The physical place where the film occurs.
What is location
Low and high are two types.
What are angles
The relationship between the brightness of something in comparison to its surroundings.
What is contrast
The turning point and most intense moment.
The main character/POV, often the good guy.
What is protagonist
The special outfits actors wear when in the film.
What are costumes
This type of camera position usually only includes the actors face in the frame.
What is close up
This lighting style results in a brightly lit frame with soft lighting and minimal shadows.
What is high key lighting
The conclusion, ties together all the loose ends.
What is resolution
The opposition to the protagonist, often the bad guy.
What is antagonist
Actors wear these to enhance their look or better suit a role when filming.
What are cosmetics
This type of camera position usually only includes the actors waist and up.
What is medium shot
This lighting style accentuates shadows, has high contrast, and dark tones.
What is low key lighting
The beginning, before any change/action.
What is exposition
A warning or indication of a later event, subtly shown earlier on.
The world, environment, background, floor, etc., that is filmed on.
What is staging/set design
Panning, tracking, hand-held, and crane are types within this camera/filming category.
What is movement
This lighting style includes a light source positioned behind the subject, facing the camera.
What is back lighting
The series of conflicts, events, and decisions that lead to the climax.
What is rising action
When events or words are the opposite of what is meant/expected.
What is irony
Objects actors use while filming to enhance the performance.
What are props
This type of camera position is also seen as the establishing shot.
What is long shot
This lighting style has bold contrast between shades of light and dark.
What is contrast lighting
The events that follow the climax, cooldown the story.
Not the main focus of a story, but has an impact. Often alongside either the pro/antagonist.
What are supporting characters