Sound
Ambient Sound - Background noise
Foley - Added sound effect to emphasise an on-screen noise ( e.g footsteps)
Incidental Music - Music to enhance an atmosphere
Dialect and Accent - Speech and language
Sound Mix - When sounds are layered
Soundtrack Score - When pitches, volume etc is changed
Dialogue - Someone talking (speech)
Non-Diegetic Sound - Sound you can’t see (birds, narrator etc)
Diegetic - Sound that you can see (dog barking)
Establishing sound - Sound that is used from the beginning of a scene
Mise-En-Scene
Establishing Props - Prop that is used from the beginning of a scene
Casting and Performance - Actors have to be casted before they perform
Colour - Colour of everything overall
Lighting - Light used within scene (dark, light)
Make-up - Make-up used on face or areas of the body
Costume - What the actors are wearing
Set Design - Design of the set (materials used)
Studio Set - Fake set
Location - Actual real-life area
Camera
Focus Pull - Maintaining the sharpness of filming
Deep Focus - Everything is in focus
Shallow Focus - One thing is in focus
Rule of Thirds - Aligning a subject with 3 lines
Framing - When the camera focuses on certain events
Hand-held - When camera is being held in hands
Track - When the camera is on a smooth track
Tilt - When the camera is tilted
Pan - Moves on straight surface (panorama)
Canted Angle - When the camera is slanted to one side
Low Angle - Looking up at actor (masculine)
High Angle - Looking down at actor (feminine)
Over the Shoulder Shot - When camera is filmed over the shoulder
Point of View Shot - Short scene which shows what the actor is looking at
Two-shot - When two people are in the shot
Long Shot - Distance shot
Close Up - Zooming in on actor
Direct Address - When actor is speaking into the camera
Editing
Pace - The speed of the action in the shot
Motivated Cut - Connecting two scenes: Searching the object of & the object of interest
Prominence - Screentime
Ellipsis - (A morning routine e.g important bits)
Long Take - Shot in the film which is a lot longer than the other shots in the film
Dissolve - Transition used to dissolve and change into a different scene
Cutaway - Interruption of a continuous filmed action & inserting a view of something else
Crosscutting - Action occurring at the same time in two different locations
Intercutting - Cutting out unnecessary parts (beginning is suspended until the end)
Match on Action - Cutting different views and different angles for the same clip (Barton)
Eye-line Match - When the audience sees what the character on-screen is seeing
Shot/reverse Shot - Switching for a conversation
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