Film Vocabulary Terms: Editing, Cinematography, and Sound

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Last updated 5:30 PM on 6/12/26
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51 Terms

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180° system

The continuity approach to editing dictates that the camera should stay on one side of the action to ensure consistent left-right spatial relations between elements from shot to shot.

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associational form

A type of organization in which the film's parts are juxtaposed to suggest similarities, contrasts, concepts, emotions, and expressive qualities.

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Backlighting

Illumination cast onto the figures in the scene from the side opposite the camera, usually creating a thin outline of highlighting on those figures.

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CGI

Computer-generated imagery: using digital software systems to create figures, settings, or other material in the frame.

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Cinematography

A general term for all the manipulations of the film strip by the camera in the shooting phase and by the laboratory in the developing phase.

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close-up

A framing in which the scale of the object shown is relatively large; most commonly, a person's head seen from the neck up, or an object of a comparable size that fills most of the screen.

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constructive editing

Editing that suggests a scene's space by providing only portions of it, without an establishing shot.

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continuity editing

A system of cutting to maintain continuous and clear narrative action, relying on matching screen direction, position, and temporal relations from shot to shot.

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Contrast

In cinematography, the difference between the brightest and the darkest areas within the frame.

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Crosscutting

Editing that alternates shots of two or more lines of action occurring in different places, usually simultaneously.

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Cut

In filmmaking, the joining of two strips of film together with a splice OR, in the finished film, an instantaneous change from one framing to another.

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deep focus

A use of the camera lens and lighting that keeps objects in both close and distant planes in sharp focus.

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deep space

An arrangement of mise-en-scene elements so that there is a considerable distance between the plane closest to the camera and the one farthest away.

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depth of field

The measurements of the closest and farthest planes in front of the camera lens between which everything will be in sharp focus.

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diegetic sound

Any voice, musical passage, or sound effect presented as originating from a source within the film's world.

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Editing

In filmmaking, the task of selecting and joining camera takes OR, in the finished film, the set of techniques that governs the relations among shots.

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elliptical editing

Shot transitions that omit parts of an event, causing an ellipsis in plot duration.

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establishing shot

A shot, usually involving a distant framing, that shows the spatial relations among the important figures, objects, and setting in a scene.

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film noir

"Dark film," a term applied by French critics to a type of American film, usually in the detective or thriller genres, with low-key lighting and a somber mood.

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Flashforward

An alteration of story order in which the plot presentation moves forward to future events and then returns to the present.

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Frequency

In a narrative film, the aspect of temporal manipulation that involves the number of times any story event is shown in the plot.

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graphic match

Two successive shots joined so as to create a strong similarity of compositional elements (e.g., color, shape).

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internal diegetic sound

Sound represented as coming from the mind of a character within the story space.

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jump cut

An elliptical cut that appears to be an interruption of a single shot.

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long shot

A framing in which the scale of the object shown is small; a standing human figure would appear nearly the height of the screen.

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Referential meaning

Allusion to particular items of knowledge outside the film that the viewer is expected to recognize.

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Explicit meaning

Significance presented overtly, usually in language and often near the film's beginning or end.

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Implicit meaning

Significance left tacit, for the viewer to discover upon analysis or reflection.

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Symptomatic meaning

Significance that the film divulges, often against its will, by virtue of its historical or social context.

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mise-en-scene

All of the elements placed in front of the camera to be photographed: the settings and props, lighting, costumes and makeup, and figure behavior.

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montage sequence

A segment of a film that summarizes a topic or compresses a passage of time into brief symbolic or typical images.

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Motif

An element in a film that is repeated in a significant way.

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narrative form

A type of filmic organization in which the parts relate to one another through a series of causally related events taking place in time and space.

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nondiegetic sound

Sound, such as mood music or a narrator's commentary, represented as coming from a source outside the space of the narrative.

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Pan

A camera movement with the camera body turning to the right or left.

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Plot

In a narrative film, all the events that are directly presented to us, including their causal relations, chronological order, duration, frequency, and spatial locations.

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point-of-view shot (POV shot)

A shot taken with the camera placed approximately where the character's eyes would be, showing what the character would see.

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racking focus

Shifting the area of sharp focus from one plane to another during a shot.

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Ramping

Changing the speed of photographed motion within a single shot.

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reestablishing shot

A return to a view of an entire space after a series of closer shots following the establishing shot.

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shot/reverse shot

Two or more shots edited together that alternate characters, typically in a conversation situation.

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sound bridge

At the beginning of one scene, the sound from the previous scene carries over briefly before the sound from the new scene begins.

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special effects

A general term for various photographic manipulations that create fictitious spatial relations in the shot.

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Storyboard

A tool used in planning film production, consisting of comic-strip-like drawings of individual shots or phases of shots with descriptions written below each drawing.

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Style

The repeated and salient uses of film techniques characteristic of a single film or a group of films.

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synchronous sound

Sound that is matched temporally with the movements occurring in the images.

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three-point lighting

A common arrangement using three directions of light on a scene.

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top lighting

Lighting coming from above a person or an object.

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Underlighting

Illumination from a point below the figures in the scene.

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Unity

The degree to which a film's parts relate systematically to one another and provide motivations for all the elements included.

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