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  2. Glossary of motion picture terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_motion_picture...

    Film stock made of nitrate, acetate, or polyester bases is the traditional medium for capturing the numerous frames of a motion picture, widely used until the emergence of digital film in the late 20th century. film theory film transition film treatment filmmaking. Sometimes used interchangeably with film production.

  3. Scleroscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scleroscope

    A scleroscope is a device used to measure rebound hardness. It consists of a steel ball dropped from a fixed height. The device was invented in 1907. As an improvement on this rough method, the Leeb Rebound Hardness Test, invented in the 1970s, uses the ratio of impact and rebound velocities (as measured by a magnetic inducer) to determine hardness

  4. Cinematography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinematography

    In the film industry, the cinematographer is responsible for the technical aspects of the images (lighting, lens choices, composition, exposure, filtration, film selection), but works closely with the director to ensure that the artistic aesthetics are supporting the director's vision of the story being told.

  5. Stock footage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_footage

    Stock footage companies began to emerge in the mid-1980s, offering clips mastered on Betacam SP, VHS, and film formats.Many of the smaller libraries that specialized in niche topics such as extreme sports, technological or cultural collections were bought out by larger concerns such as Corbis or Getty Images over the next couple of decades.

  6. Bullet time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_time

    The term "bullet time" was first used with reference to the 1999 film The Matrix, [2] and later in reference to the slow motion effects in the 2001 video game Max Payne. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In the years since the introduction of the term via the Matrix films it has become a commonly applied expression in popular culture.

  7. In-camera effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-camera_effect

    Cinematographer Elgin Lessley photographed Buster Keaton as nine members of a minstrel show in the opening of The Playhouse (1921). An in-camera effect is any special effect in a video or movie that is created solely by using techniques in and on the camera and/or its parts.

  8. Trope (cinema) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trope_(cinema)

    A "Mexican standoff" is a common film trope. In cinema, a trope is what The Art Direction Handbook for Film defines as "a universally identified image imbued with several layers of contextual meaning creating a new visual metaphor". [1] A common thematic trope is the rise and fall of a mobster in a classic gangster film. The film genre also ...

  9. CinemaScope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CinemaScope

    Camera negative film had larger grain than the film stocks used for prints, so there was a consistent approach in using a larger frame on the film negative than on prints. While the image area of a print has to allow for a soundtrack, a camera negative does not. CinemaScope 55 had different frame dimensions for the camera negative and struck ...