All Those Types!
How Bright and Colorful!
That Shot, Though...
On Purpose
CUT! RETAKE #114
100

Typically includes only documentaries

Realism

100

Illuminates one side of a face/object; darkens the other half

Side Lighting

100

An example of this would be the detailed view of an eyeball.

Extreme close-up

100

Nearly all sounds heard in the film, including ambient sounds (bird or footsteps) and intentionally added sounds (gun shots)

Special Effects

100

Two shots overlap. The first shot gradually disappears as the second shot becomes more prominent

Dissolve

200

Emphasizes symbolic characteristics of objects and people and excels in dealing with ideas

Expressionism/Formalism

200

Around what year did color begin to be used more widely in films?

The 1940s

200

Camera as a direct participant in action; often takes viewpoint of a character

Subjective (point of view)

200

Usually a long shot or extreme long shot offered at the beginning of a scene to provide context for later shots

Establishing Shot

200
A transitional sequence of rapidly editing images that suggest the passing of time/events

Montage

300

This is also called "Formalism"

Expressionism

300

What does the color blue symbolize?

Cold, chill, serenity, tranquility

300

A panoramic view of an exterior location, photographed from a great distance (up to 1/4 mile away)

Extreme long shot

300

Often used to heighten tension or to give the audience a moment to absorb what has just happened

Silence

300

Alternating shots between two or more locations to suggests events are occurring at these places simultaneously

Cross Cutting/Parallel Editing

400

Characters are appealing and slightly romanticized.

Classicism

400

Soft, ethereal semi0silhousetting; often used in love scenes

Backlighting

400

Photographed from high above the subject, often looking straight down at the subject (there are two terms for this)

Bird's Eye View (outdoors)/Overhead (indoors) Shot

400

Disorienting, abrupt, transition between shots; usually involves a drastic change in time and space

Jump Cut

400

Editing is done more for dramatic intensity and emotional emphasis than for purely physical reasons

Classical Cutting

500

This film type has a loose plot with no clearly defined beginning, middle, or end

Realism

500

What do warm colors (red, yellow, orange) symbolize in film? (many answers...)

Aggressiveness, violence, stimulation; come forward or "pop" in most images

500

Camera physically moves sideways or backward/forward, often to follow a character or object without any cuts

Tracking shot

500

Showing unrelated shots to make a transition among the shots; alone the shots seem unrelated, but when combined, they comment upon each other and form a relationship

Juxtaposition

500

Editing to preserve the fluidity of an event without having to actually show all of it

Cutting for Continuity

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