Film Vocabulary
From David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson, Film Art: An Introduction (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1993):
Story:
In a narrative film, all the events that we see and hear, plus all those that we infer or
assume to have occurred, arranged in their presumed causal relations, chronological order,
duration, frequency, and spatial locations. Opposed to plot, which is the film's actual
presentation of certain events in the narrative.
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. Opposed
to story which is the viewer's imaginary construction of all events in the narrative.
Narration:
The process through which the plot conveys or withholds story information. The narration
can be more or less restricted to character knowledge and more or less deep in presenting
characters' mental perceptions and thoughts.
Diegesis:
In a narrative film, the world of the film's story. The diegesis includes events that are
presumed to have occurred and actions and spaces not shown onscreen.
Nondiegetic insert:
A shot or a series of shots cut into a sequence, showing objects represented as being
outside the space of the narrative.
Diegetic sound:
Any voice, musical passage, or sound effect presented as originating from a source within
the film's world.
Nondiegetic sound:
Sound, such as mood music or narrator's commentary, represented as coming from a source
outside the space of the narrative.
From The All-Movie Guide Film Glossary:
1. "Incarnations of the Story"
Diegesis:
The narrative elements of a film that are shown or immediately inferred from the content
of a film. Though implication is not the primary focus, diegesis is a methodological
analysis for discerning the exact nature of the film including all of the action and
dialogue.
{"Diegetic" -- refers to things which exist within the "world" of the film's narrative. Non-diegetic or extra-diegetic elements of a film do not "exist" or "take place" in the same plane of reality that the character's inhabit. For example, presumably the characters within an action film do not "hear" the rousing theme music that accompanies their exploits. that music is extra-diegetic, but still part of the film.}
Narrative:
A term denoting a story in any form of human expression where no single individual is
telling the story.
Narrative Film:
Narrative films can include a large corpus of fiction and nonfiction films including
documentaries and dramas though the genre is predominantly fictitious. Narrative films
primarily concentrate on story lines and can include character development but the drama
and usual fiction are emphasized.
Plot:
The events in an individual narrative and how they are arranged. Arguably the plot and the
story are not the same.
{Narrative includes everything that is supposed to have happened in the "story";
plot is more concretely the scenes that are presented in the film, in the precise order in
which they are presented. -- Hank}
Story:
The specific unfolding of a sequence of events in a film. It includes character
involvement, settings, and an order that superimposed in an arbitrary manner by the screen
writer or by a parallel historical sequence through which the themes are
developed. The story is general whereas the plot is specific and includes both internal
and external relations to the work.
2. "Basic Elements of a Film"
Frame:
Frames in essence are still images that are collected in quick succession, developed, and
projected giving the illusion of motion. Each individual, or still, image on motion
picture film is referred to as a frame.
Shot:
In the process of photographing a scene a shot refers to one constant take by the camera.
It is most often filmed at one time with a solo camera.
Sequence:
Segments of a film narrative that are edited together and unified by a common setting,
time, event or story-line.
Sound Track:
That portion of the sound film medium to which are recorded the dialogue, music, narration
and sound effects. The sound head and film gate on a film projector are physically
separated from one another. This gap is covered during the recording of a sound-film by
keeping the soundtrack recording a few frames head of the photographic image. The sound
passes over the projector head at the same time the photographic image passes before the
projector's light aperture/lens (the film gate).
3. "Basic Manipulations, and Assemblings of the Basic Elements"
Cutting {a.k.a. Editing}:
The process of changing from one shot to another accomplished through the camera or by the
splicing of shots together by the cutter (editor). This is also referred to as editing,
the preferred term, and includes the decisions, controls, sensibilities, vision and
integrative capabilities of the individual editing (cutting) artist.
Invisible Cutting:
Editing procedures that are so well-formed that the viewer is not aware that a splice has
taken place. This is particularly important in action sequences because the audience is
psychologically intent on the moving images that a cut in the film -- an unobstrusive cut
-- is not noticed. This can easily be contrasted with Eisenstein's technique of quick cuts
and jump cuts from one scene to the next without transition so as to unnerve the audience
and evoke emotional responses in them.
{From the Complete Film Dictionary: Shot/Reverse Shot Technique: A technique of cutting developed by the Hollywood studios in which the camera switches between two conversants or interacting individuals. ... See invisible cutting.}
Montage:
In the production and editing of film this term has come to refer to a seemingly unrelated
series of frames combined so that one scene quickly dissolves into the next, shifting
categories, effects and settings in such a manner as to convey a quick passage of time or
an abstract unity through thematic devices such as meter, rhythm, tonality, and
intellectuality (viz Eisenstein). Continuity, if it exists, is not captured in a frame by
frame juxtaposition but rather through an abstraction. (Also see
"mise-en-scene".)
Synchronization:
Correctly aligning the photographic and audio portions of a film so that the image and
sound is heard and seen simultaneously.
Framing:
Properly surrounding the subject of a shot by the edges of the actual boundaries of the
film. All that is seen in the viewfinder of a camera does not always translate directly
into the proper centering of the subject. Framing is a technical nuance learned in the
process of photography.
{Involves camera angle, distance, and arrangement of objects and people in front of the
camera (the "mise-en-scene". Important in framing is the way that the edges of
the screen make a sharp distinction between what is seen and what is not seen, what is
included and what is excluded, in a particular frame.}
4. "Basic Elements of the Camera Setup"
Camera Angle:
This term refers to the point of view held by the focal point of the camera when it is
positioned for shooting. Included in the angle is the perspective given by the camera to
the depth of focus, height and width of the particular object and action being
photographed. The angle also refers to whether the shot is taken from behind, in front,
from the side or from the top or bottom of the particular view. Terms appropriated for
these various angles include eye-level angle, high-angle, low-angle, sideview angle and
the "Dutch" angle.
Distance:
Distance refers to the amount of relational space between the audience and the character
on the screen. Though the characters are two-dimensional and the audience is distinctly
separate from the screen by dead space (virtual reality in the theatre has not
yet been developed) the camera's perspective, in effect, attempts to provide the amount of
space desired subject to the director's discretion. This space often results in the
interaction and psychological connection between the characters and the audience. The
connection is achieved through the dynamics and varying degrees between long shots, medium
shots and close-ups.
Establishing Shot {a.k.a. "Master Shot"}
At the beginning of a film, episode or scene within a film, a wide-angle or
"full-shot" is photographed for the purpose of identifying the location or
setting. Thus the audience has established, or been given the opportunity to surmise an
orientation. It also helps to establish the distinctions between the general locale and
the specific details -- from subsequent shots -- within the general context.
{The Establishing shot is a wide-angle shot and/or a long shot. -- Hank}
Perspective:
Spatial relationships. In film (painting, photography, theatrical performances, et cetera)
perspective refers to the accurate depiction of three-dimensional space on a
two-dimensional surface. (In experimental forms of film, of course, the accurate depiction
is redefined.) Height and breadth come naturally to the surface but the added dimension of
depth must be constructed through cameras, lenses, sets, and designs during composition.
(See "anamorphic lens" and "composition".)
5. "Basic Camera Movements"
Camera Movement:
Conventional uses of the camera to obtain camera angles and various perspectives while
filming include panning, tilting, tracking or zooming of the camera. These camera ploys
are also known as camera movement and rarely does the camera remain static. When a
movement does occur, however, the camera comes to a rest providing a smooth transition to
the scene. Movements are coordinated with the action in a scene so that the camera does
not go in the opposite direction of the action (i.e. action left-to-right.) Of course,
many alternative and experimental methods are used in the film industry and camera
movement is no exception.
Dolly:
Cameras and other equipment, such as microphones and lights, are often carried around the
set on movable platforms. These are dollys and are independently moved by the dolly grip
so that the technician, be s/he cameraman, audio or lighting technician, can keep their
concerns focused. Dollys are often run on tracks for special dolly pans, chinese dollys,
or for mere structurally smoothness. Most of the time, dollys are used for camera work and
can include booms for the cameras which allows for the lowering, raising and pivoting of
the camera. All of these shots can be achieved simultaneously with an horizontal movement
of the camera upon the dolly track.
Dolly Shot:
A camera perspective, on a moving or stationary subject, obtained while the camera is in
motion on either a dolly or a camera truck. When the camera is so mounted and moves toward
a closer proximity of the subject it is called "dolly-in"; likewise, when the
camera is so mounted and moves away from the subject it is referred to as
"dolly-out".
{From the Complete Film Dictionary: Tracking Shot: ... So called because it is sometimes photographed from a dolly that moves on tracks, also refers particularly to a shot in which the camera follows the movement of a subject.}
Crane:
A large camera dolly that can raise the camera as much as twenty feet above the ground.
The crane has the capacity to move forward and backward and is usually operated by
electronic controls. Motions are generally silent and the crane allows shots
to be made over a wide ranging area providing great access to cover shots.
Pan:
From the Greek "pan" meaning "all" this movement of the camera is
achieved by moving the camera while turning it on an horizontal access. At least four
functions are served by this technique including an all encompasing view of the scene, a
device for leading the audience to a particular person or place, following a person or
vehicle across a distant scene, or giving the audience the visual images and perspective
as seen by a character when turning her/his head.
{A turn of the camera up or down on the vertical axis is called a "tilt." --
Hank}
{From the Complete Film Dictionary: Zoom
Shot: A shot taken with a zoom lens in which the focal length of the lens
changes from wide angle to long focus or the reverse so that the camera seems to move in
to (i.e., "zoom in" to) or away from (i.e., "zoom out" from) the
subject while the camera actually remains stationary.}
Konigsberg, Ira. The Complete Film Dictionary. New York: Meridian, 1987. .