The Film Experience Final

2 September 2022
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100 test answers

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In order to possess validity, interpretation of a movie needs to be:
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grounded in the explicitly presented details of the surface story
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The essential quality that separates movies from all other two-dimensional pictorial art forms...
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movement
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All ubiquitous commercial, feature-length movies share the same basic and important element of:
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narrative
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The "invisibility" of meaning in movies is largely due to:
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their rapidly and constantly changing images not giving the viewer time to contemplate them.
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Unlike photography and painting, films are constructed from individual:
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shots.
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Because most movies seek to engage viewers' emotions and transport them inside the world presented onscreen, the visual vocabulary of film is designed to:
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play upon those same instincts that we use to navigate and interpret the visual and aural information of our "real life."
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The manner in which movies from various countries and societies present their narratives is often profoundly affected by
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cultural tradition.
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As opposed to "film" or "cinema", the term "movies" is applied to:
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motion pictures that entertain the masses at the multiplex.
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Why are movies worthy of serious study, as opposed to being merely an outlet for escape or entertainment?
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Seriously studying movies allows people to understand how movies shape the way we view the world.
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A shot is best defined as:
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an unbroken span of action captured by an uninterrupted run of a motion-picture camera
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Why is light the essential ingredient for movies?
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Movie images are made when a camera lens focuses light onto film stock.
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In the abortion clinic scene from Juno, the content is ____, while the form is _____.
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Juno in the waiting room; décor, patterns, implied proximity, point of view, moving camera, sound.
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What is the meaning of verisimilitude?
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A convincing appearance of truth.
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Usually, each of the systems that become the "complex synthesis" of a movie is:
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highly organized and deliberately assembled.
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Persistence of vision:
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mind retains image a fraction longer than it sees the image.
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Which of the following does NOT demonstrate the movie principle of "dynamization of space" and/or "spatialization of time"?
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A live, theatrical drama is presented in which scenes play out a single set meant to depict a city police station.
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The modern film is projected at:
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24 frames/second
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Content is defined as _____, and form is defined as _____.
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The subject of an artwork; the means by which that subject is expressed and experienced.
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Phi phenomenon:
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illusion of movement by successive events
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Which of the following cannot be evoked from the manipulation of light on film?
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Editing.
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A central concern of science fiction is:
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technology versus humanity or science versus soul
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A central concern of horror films is:
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fear of death and insanity
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How is "narrative" used in a broad conceptual context?
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***To denote any cinematic structure in which content is selected and arranged linearly
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Why have genre films been prevalent since the advent of cinema?
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they appeal to audiences' desire for predictability over novelty.
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What is generic transformation?
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***the process by which a particular genre splits off into multiple sub genres.
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A central theme of the gangster genre is:
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anyone, regardless of how humble his origins, can obtain the American dream; nevertheless, the criminal will be punished.
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Why can categorizing movies into strict classifications be problematic?
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***because many movies defy exact classification by any standard.
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A central concern of the Western is:
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wilderness versus civilization.
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A central concern of the musical is:
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telling the story through song and dance
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What is the definition of genre?
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***The categorization of narrative films by the stories they tell and the ways they tell them
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What does the setting of a film consist of?
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The time and place in which the story occurs.
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Narrative cannot exist without the protagonist possessing:
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a goal
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What is the primary narrator in every movie?
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The camera
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What is a crisis in a movie?
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When a protagonist must face a seemingly insurmountable obstacle.
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A film in which the action is captured by a camera unbound by the constraints of time, space
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omniscient narration
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What is direct address narration?
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First-person narration delivered directly to the audience, breaking the "fourth wall"
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What is narration?
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The act of telling the story
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What does the first act accomplish in a typical narrative movie?
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Introduces the setting and character and established what and who they are.
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What is a backstory?
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The experiences or events that occur before the start of a movie's narrative.
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What is an example of a first-person narrator?
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A voice-over from a private investigator, who talks about the past events of his life as the movie images show what he is speaking of.
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_____ is the process by which the look of settings, props, lighting and actors is determined.
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design
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Open framing:
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characters move freely within an open, recognizable environment
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Mise-en-scène:
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the sum of everything the audience sees, hears and experiences
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Two key aspects of composition are ____.
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framing and kinesis
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Although each thing that is seen within a shot may not have a meaning in and of itself, it is the ____ of these things that provide overall meaning.
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Combination
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Which of the following falls under the supervision of a movie's production designer?
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The costumes, set construction, and hairstyling.
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The planning of the placement and movement of figures and camera is a process known as _____.
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blocking
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The organization, distribution, balance, and general relationship of actors and objects within the space of each shot is called _____.
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composition
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Kinesis refers to:
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movement of figures within the frame and the apparent movement of the frame
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When a character in a movie handles a tennis racket, a glass of beer, or a shovel, the object is known as a _____.
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prop.
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Depth of field refers to the distances in front of the camera and its lens in which the subjects are_____.
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In apparent sharp focus
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During production, the crew most closely associated with the camera consists of ______.
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the camera operator, and the first and second AC
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One camera position and everything associated with it is called _____.
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a setup
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A _____ is the basic building block of a movie.
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shot
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The compositional principle that divides the frame horizontally and vertically in order to visualize the height, width, and depth of cinematic space is called ______.
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the rule of thirds
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When an extreme long shot shows a wide view of a location and provides some background information, it is also known as a(n) ________.
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establishing shot
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The main source of illumination used in three-point lighting is the _____.
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key light
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A film stock's speed refers to its _____.
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sensitivity to light
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If you are a cinematographer and the director asks you to photograph just the lips of an actor, what type of shot is she asking for?
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extreme close-up
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Although the director's vision shapes a movie's mise-en-scène, the cinematographer must make decisions about:
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how to photograph the movie.
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What is "montage" in the Hollywood sense of the word?
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A sequence of shots, often with superimpositions and optical effects, that shows a condensed series of events.
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When used in continuity editing, shots in a shot/reverse shot sequence are often framed in what way?
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Over the characters' shoulders.
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Which of the following is NOT an effect of editing?
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To communicate information about a character merely by facial reactions.
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How does a film editor typically fulfill his or her responsibilities for the spatial relationships between shots?
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By placing shots together so that the sense of the overall space suggested on screen shifts and expands.
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What is parallel editing?
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The cutting together of two or more lines of action that occur simultaneously at different locations.
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What is the basic building block of film editing?
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the shot.
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Which of the following constitutes a cinematic ellipsis?
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A cut between a shot of woman contemplating diving off the high-dive board and a shot of her emerging from the water.
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What are the fundamental building blocks of continuity editing?
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Master shots and the 180-degree system.
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Which of the following is an element that the film editor does NOT manipulate?
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Mise-en-scène.
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How does an editor control the rhythm of a film?
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By varying the duration of the shots in relation to one another and thus controlling their speed and accents.
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Which of the following is one of the challenges movie actors confront?
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Interruptions by camera, lighting, and sound adjustments.
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The Stanislavsky system of acting trained students to:
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bring their own experiences and feelings to their roles.
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Which of the following is most likely to draw an audience to a movie?
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A famous actor.
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a personality actor:
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takes his or her personae from role to role
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When actors are repeatedly given particular kinds of roles based on their looks rather than their talent or experience, they are _____.
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typecast
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Which of the following best characterizes a naturalistic style performance?
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The behavior is believable and recognizable.
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An extra is:
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a nonspeaking or crowd role that receives no screen credit
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The Method (or Method acting) did not make a major impact on Hollywood until the 1950s because:
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the studios were reliant on the star system and were not interested in the process of acting.
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Why did the first screen actors use exaggerated gestures, emphatic expressions, and the mouthing of words to bring their characters to life?
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They were adapting the acting style of 19th-century theater.
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Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of great screen acting?
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disunity
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Which of the following is NOT a way in which sound volume shapes an audience's interpretation of a scene?
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Medium loudness may suggest something important.
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Which of the following is NOT a phase of sound production?
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scoring
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With regard to sound, what is the crucial difference between sound and silent films?
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A sound film can emphasize silence, but a silent film has no option.
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Which of the following is NOT a function of silence?
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It may help an audience anticipate what might happen next in the plot.
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Why is ADR used?
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To rerecord sound originally recorded on the set.
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What is the difference between diegetic and nondiegetic sound?
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Diegetic sound originates from a source within a film's world; nondiegetic sound comes from outside that world.
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Which of the following does NOT describe what happens during the process of sound mixing?
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Dialogue is recorded.
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Most film sounds are constructed _____.
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during postproduction
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Which of the following are excluded from a film's soundtrack?
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a director's rehearsal notes.
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How do environmental sounds typically function in a film?
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They provide information about a film's setting and action.
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What is the primary function of a script supervisor?
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To record details of continuity from shot to shot.
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The three phases of postproduction include:
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editing, preparing the final print, bringing the film to the public.
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The preproduction phase may include all of the following EXCEPT:
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shooting footage.
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According to the textbook, what is the approximate average total cost to produce and market a Hollywood film today?
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$100 million.
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During the production phase, the principal activities of a director include all of the following EXCEPT:
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developing a marketing strategy.
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What are the three machines that bring images to the screen in three distinct stages?
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Camera, processor, projector.
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The video image consists of pixels, which is short for:
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picture elements.
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All of the following statements about digital technology are correct EXCEPT:
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Digital pixels bear a physical relationship to the original input.
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In traditional film production, the cinematographer controls the photographic image by advising on all of the following EXCEPT:
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actors' performances.
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What is the largest format of film stock?
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IMAX