Reference no: EM133326323
Assignment:
1. Any voice, musical passage, or sound effect presented as originating from a source within the film's world is (diagnostic/diegenotic/diegetic). If it originates outside the film (as most background music) then it is (non-diagnostic/non-diegetic/non-diegenotic)
2. The (180-degree rule/left line/360-degree rule) describes a convention where the camera stays on one side of the axis of action throughout a scene; this keeps characters grounded compositionally on a particular side of the screen or frame, and keeps them looking at one another when only one character is seen onscreen at a time.
3.(Vertical/Tilt/Shift) describes a shot moving the camera up or down, whereas (horizontal/turn/pan) describes camera motions left or right.
4. A (tracking shot/ go shot/ moving shot) is a mobile framing that travels through space forward, backward, or laterally.
5. The framing of a shot can be described based on how much the human frame is displayed. A(Face/Close up/Near) is a shot where one object or a person's head is in frame, with the (near face/extreme close up/very near) showing a much closer view of a single body part or object. The
(type answer) shot typically shows the torso of one or more people, and a (type answer) shot contains all or most of the subject's body. The (type answer) shit is a shot covering large sections of landscape, often making the human subject small in frame.
6. The (directional match/pointed match/eyeline match) is a cut where the first shot shows a person looking off in one direction and the second shows a nearby space containing what they see.
7.(Quality/Faithfulness/Fidelity) describes the extent that the sound is faithful to what the viewer perceives it to be. For example, if we see a dog barking, a scene attempting (Quality/Faithfulness/Fidelity) would have the sound of a dog barking as well.
8. An (set-up/creation/establishing) shot usually involves a distant framing, that shows the spatial relations among the important figures, objects, and setting in a scene. Typically, the first few shots in a scene are (set-up/creation/establishing) shots, as they introduce us to a location and the spacial relationships inside it.
9. How did the additions of sound, and then color, change the development of films throughout the 1920's to the 1960's?
10. What was the Paramount Decision of 1948, and what effect did it have on the production of film in the late 60's and 70's?
11. What changes in production, genre, and development has CGI brought to the film industry? Predict and explore possible changes you think CGI will create in the coming years.