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10-1
(AKA: TEN-ONE)
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I need to go to the bathroom"
number one. It can also mean "I am currently in the bathroom" or
that someone else being spoken of is for that particular function.
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10-2
(AKA: TEN-TWO)
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I need to go to the bathroom"
number two. It can also mean "I am currently in the bathroom" or
that someone else being spoken of is for that particular function.
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10-4
(AKA: COPY or TEN-FOUR)
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I understand your message."
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20
(AKA: TWENTY)
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for location, as in "What's your
twenty?" i.e. "where are you?"
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86
(AKA: EIGHTY-SIX)
|
See STRIKE
|
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ACCENT COACH
|
See DIALECT COACH
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ACTING VERBS
(AKA: ACTION VERBS)
|
Verbs used as tools by actors during the script and character analysis process of
developing their characters and their performances. Acting (or action) verbs are
assigned to words in a line, parts of lines, beats,
parts of scenes, whole scenes, perhaps even their characters' entire story archs,
and help actors find or determine motivations, desires, agendas, goals, emotional
or mental states, etc.
The director may be involved to one extent or the other in this process, and most
certainly later might adjust whatever performances result from this work, sometimes
just by tweaking, sometimes in great measure.
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ACTOR'S REEL
|
See REEL
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AD
|
See ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or AD
|
ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
(AKA: PICKUPS, sometimes RESHOOT)
|
Footage shot after the portion of a production relevant to the scene has wrapped,
in some cases after all production has wrapped. Additional photography is shot either
because something was inadvertently missed or a decision has been made to add or
change something in a scene or sequence.
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ADR
(AKA: AUTOMATED DIALOGUE REPLACEMENT, DIALOGUE LOOPING, DUBBING or LOOPING)
|
Also known as Dialogue Looping or simply Looping. The re-recording of dialogue
by actors in a sound studio during post-production, most often with the actors
speaking while watching playback of the scene to better accomodate lip
synchronization. The most common reason to use ADR is due to bad audio from the
production track (the audio recorded on the shoot site) or to change the
delivery of a line. "Bad audio" may be anything from too much
background noise, poor audio pick-up of the dialogue, or signal noise picked up
and recorded. Sometimes new dialogue is written and ADR is used to add/insert
such into a scene; though such added dialogue can only logically be placed in
the footage where the actor who speaks it has his or her face away from the
camera or is off screen.
This is also the process for replacing all the dialogue in a movie,
television, or video production with dialogue translated into
another language ‐‐ almost exclusively known as
"dubbing."
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AGAINST TYPE
(as in CASTING AGAINST TYPE)
|
To cast an actor in a role that seems unusual for her or him based on physical
appearance, age, mannerisms, traits, or race/ethnicity. It also can be because that
actor tends to be cast as characters extremely dissimilar to this role, perhaps even
the opposite of the role in question. Such as an actor who has made a career of
playing warriors, rough men, and gangsters, being cast as a very shy, feminine drag
queen. Or an actor who usually plays a house wife and doting mother being cast as a
hard-edge, no-nonsense politician.
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AGE RANGE
|
The range of ages than an actor can successfully play without the aid of makeup,
other special effects or CGI. A category of type.
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AP
|
See ASSOCIATE PRODUCER and/or
ASSISTANT PRODUCER
|
ARCHIVE FOOTAGE
|
See STOCK FOOTAGE
|
ASIDES
|
See SIDES
|
ASPECT RATIO
|
The measurement of the width and height of a movie screen, a TV
screen, a computer screen, or a cell phone screen, or the width
and height of the image appearing on one of these. The dimensions
of aspect ratios are given in a formula of width to height with two
numbers separated by a colon(x:y) where "x" is the
width and "y" is the height.
In cinema the height measurement for aspect ratio is placed at 1.
For TV and video the numbers are reduced to the smallest that
accurately reflect the difference.
Some of the most common aspect ratios are:
- 1.85:1 ‐ cinema
- 2.4:1 ‐ cinema
- 1.3:1 ‐ cinema
- 1.7:1 ‐ cinema
- 16:9 ‐ TV & video ‐ *equal to 1.7:1 ‐
**(the new TV standard & universal for High-Definition TV)
- 4:3 ‐ TV & video ‐ *equal to 1.3:1 ‐
**(the old TV standard)
For further information see
"Aspect ratio (image)" at WikipediA.
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ASSEMBLY EDIT
(AKA: ROUGH CUT)
|
An initial or early stage edit of part or all of a movie, video, or television
episode done more for the purpose of seeing how the action of the story-telling
works. Rarely will there be any special effects or post production, with the
possible exception of making sure the production recording of the dialogue audio
is synchronized if necessary.
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ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or AD
(AKA: FIRST ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, FIRST AD, SECOND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, or SECOND
AD)
|
In general, AD's on a movie or TV set are in charge of production schedules,
communication coordination between all production people and departments, oversee
adherence to union rules (on a SAG/AFTRA production), labor rules, safety rules,
monitor budgetary spending.
The first AD prepares the shooting schedules and the script breakdowns for principal
photography. He or she is the Director's right-hand person in managing the
production during the entire process of principal photography, coordinates
details of production operations, and often communicates directions to extra talent.
The first AD also monitors filming against the production schedule, and ensures that
union rules are adhered to as well as that labor contracts and location agreements
are followed. She or he also ensures that safety regulations are followed on set
(be it in the studio or on location). The first AD works with the unit manager and
the line producer to be sure expenditures stay within budget.
The second AD distributes information and reports, as well as cast notification.
The second AD works with the first AD on production preparations during principal
photography. He or she records all data relative to the working hours of the crew
and cast, and is primary in actively managing the extras cast. Second ADs prepare
cast and crew call sheets, production reports, and other documentation. Of course,
in the absence of the first AD, the second AD will assume her or his duties and
responsibilities.
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ASSISTANT PRODUCER
(AKA: JUNIOR PRODUCER)
(AKA: AP)
|
Assistant producers are literally assistants to a producer or producers, and assist
with the running of day-to-day operations and may have duties and responsibilities
related to the administrative, creative, or technical aspects of production, or any
combination of these, depending on the particular assistant producers, the particular
needs of the producers they answer to, or the particular productions for which they
are working.
Sometimes the title "assistant producer" can be interchangeable with
"associate producer,"
when the associate producer's work is the same as above. The differences being that
assistant producers always take this sort of particular active, substantive role in
the project and associate producers often do not take on such a role. "Assistant
producer" is never an empty title given to someone in the way that "associate
producer" sometimes is.
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ASSISTANT SCRIPT SUPERVISOR
(AKA: ASSISTANT TO THE SCRIPT SUPERVISOR or
SCRIPT SUPERVISOR'S ASSISTANT)
|
The assistant script supervisor reports to the
script supervisor and helps
him or her in the duties of script adherence and the maintenance of
continuity. In conjunction with
the latter responsibility, the assistant will take detailed photographs of the set
and possibly the actors' appearances (wardrobe and any other notable condition) at
the state they are in at the end of a shot or a scene, to have a visual record
for continuity matching for the next shot or scene where such is needed against the
just finished one.
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ASSOCIATE PRODUCER
(AKA: AP)
|
The title associate producer, in the end, can mean a lot of things, with varying
degrees of substance to the role and to the project, be it a movie, TV or video
production.
Associate producers may be one of many types of people who are actively involved in
a production or who initially contributed in some manner to the creation or
pre-production of the project. In other words, sometimes an associate producer is a
functioning part of the production who actively works on set or at least in
administration for the project; others times he or she has some original involvement
or made some passing contribution; or, especially in television, it may be
functionally an empty title that reflects no duties that can be associated with
"producing" the project.
In all screen media, functioning associate producers are essentially junior
producers with varying degrees of responsibility depending on the production or the
specific experience level of a given associate producer. They assist the producer
or producers with the running of day-to-day operations. People performing in such a
manner may be titled "assistant producer"
rather than "associate."
Associate producers may be in the project's offices, working the administrative side
rather than the production side. It may also be that they work only on a particular
segment or location, for instance they only contribute to scenes shot on location
in a particular place, either on set or somehow administratively with the arrangements;
they may even be local to the region of the shoot.
One who assisted or was involved but not the main force behind raising funds, making
arrangements, organizing some portion of pre-production or production, may be titled
Associate Producer. Also, Someone who has read and given feedback or advised on the
script, perhaps even helping with a revision, may be an associate producer.
Principal actors, especially in lead roles, may get an associate producers credit,
which is usually in title only, and a way to bump the actor's wage without touching
her or his actor's salary. This practice is more common in television than in movie
productions.
Also in television, especially studio live productions such as game shows or news
programs, associate producers may be those who do some writing, editing, organizing
scripts, running the teleprompter in news casts, or helping the editor by making
beat calls.
It may also be the title given to a first-time, or newer, producer who is on a
project in an apprentice sort of relationship with another type of producer who is
up the food chain.
Writer as Producer
*see "Writer as 'producer'" at Wikipedia
Star as Producer
*see "Star as 'Prodcuer'" at Wikipedia
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AUDITION
|
A trial event for actors (or other performers) where they usually perform a practical
demonstration of their acting or other relative skills and talents in order to be
cast in a production. Most professional acting training programs hold auditions
for slots, as well. Talent agencies may also audition perspective performers before
agreeing to represent them.
Actors are typically required to do a screentests
of a short performances, most frequently from
sides that the producers have provided before
the audition appointment (which may or may not have a requirement to be memorized).
Occasionally they are asked to bring in a prepared
monologue. Sometimes they are asked to
do cold readings from the script, on
the spot. An in-person, live audition may also be required, especially as a
callback audition.
Generally, the distinction between an "initial screentest" and a
"callback live audition" is very gray as there will usually be audiences
in the room for both, and both will be video recorded (or filmed). The big difference
will be that the screentest live audience is usually the
casting director and accompanying staff, and
call backs will be viewed live by production staff.
Other performers will perform appropriate music, choreography, or other routines.
Any auditioners may also be given pieces or challenges during the
audition to demonstrate the breadth of their ranges within their disciplines.
Often, now days, DIY screentests
are requested or allowed.
In some cases, an audition may be only an interview. In such cases it will typically
be a situation where those conducting the audition are already familiar with the
talent and skill level of the auditioner, thus only other variables are under
question, such as availability or perhaps a sense of whether the performer will be
a good match with the team and other performers involved in the project. The
interview-only audition is most common in movie productions where the auditioner is
a well-known actor.
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AUDITION REEL
|
See REEL
|
AUDITION SPECS
(AKA: AUDITION SPECIFICATIONS or AUDITION REQUIREMENTS)
|
The specific details of what is expected at an audition
or screentest. The specs will cover
any or all of type (including age range),
special skills (such as juggling, fencing, ballroom dancing, etc.), schedule
availability, or length and type of monologue,
if one is required. There may be other requirements, unique to individual
auditions. Usually sides are made available
before the audition, which the auditioning actor is expected to at least be
familiar with if not have memorized.
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AUTEUR
(AKA: PRODUCER/DIRECTOR)
|
In general today, an auteur is a film maker who is heavily involved in all or most
aspects of making a movie. He or she usually authors the screenplay, either solely
or is at least an equal collaborator. The auteur also directs, produces, and
controls the editing, if not being the actual editor. The preponderance of
short films can be considered
the work of auteurs. Such filmmaker is also as likely, if not more so, to be called
the "producer/director."
Originally the term applied solely to film makers who created a canon of films that
have a theme or unified sensibility with a commonality of artistic styles and movie
specific themes that showed the auteur's personal worldview. The context of these
movies in terms of the auteur's vision and worldview and the overall cumulative
artistic statement of the body of work was considered more critically relevant than
the technical proficiency of the auteur and of the production values of the films
themselves.
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BABY LEGS
|
Slang for the legs of a camera tripod.
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BACKGROUND or BACKGROUND ACTOR
|
See EXTRA
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B-ROLL
|
Footage that is a cut-away during an interview or documentary type movie, video,
newscast or other TV program. It's not principal footage in the movie or video
or segment. For example, a person is on screen describing an action or event and
the b-roll is shown while we still hear the person's voice. The b-roll will
usually be footage that correlates with what is being said, such as footage
from a crime scene while the news anchor tells of the crime, or footage of
his/her dance sequence while an actor tells us about his/her first time dancing
in a Broadway show. Though not always illustrative of the voice-over content,
b-roll usually is. There's rarely audio, and when there is, it's rarely not low in
volume, to not compete with the principal audio.
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BEAT
(AKA: BEAT CHANGE)
|
1) Dramatically: the moment when a character's intent or emotional status changes,
either slightly or altogether. Also, when a character's train of thought changes.
2) "Beat" as in timing: a brief pause before a character begins to speak
or take an action, each beat is usually a one count. *The beats in a scene are
often controlled or manipulated by the editor.
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BIBLE
|
See STORY BIBLE
|
BLUE SCREENING
|
See CHROMA KEYING
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BOGIE or BOGEY
|
A person who does not belong on set or in the shooting area on location. It
generally refers to people not connected to the production, yet cast or crew
members who should not be there are also bogies.
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BOGEY
|
See BOGIE
|
BOOM MIC
(AKA: BOOM)
|
A microphone at the end of a pole. The boom operator holds the pole so that the
mic floats outside the frame of the shot but is close enough to the actors to
pick up their dialogue. Often the boom floats above the actors, but can be
underneath the area that is the frame of the shot, or to either side, as well.
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BOOM OPERATOR
(AKA: BOOM OP)
|
The member of the sound crew who holds and extends the boom mic pole during the
shoot so the boom mic will successfully pick up the dialogue of the actors. The
boom op's goal is to keep the mic close enough to get the dialogue, but still
outside of the frame of the shot.
The history of film and television is replete with incidents of the boom mic
unfortunately making it inside the shot frame in the
final cut.
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BREAKING CHARACTER
(AKA: BREAKING)
|
When an actor slips out of character during shoot, even if for only
a moment, and behaves as hisself or herself. A common occurrence of
breaking while on stage is when an actor laughs involuntarily thus
losing composure and the behavior intended for the character, (also known as
corpsing).
Another common occurrence is when the actor makes an error, usually
a line flub, and outwardly expresses displeasure or frustration as
herself or hisself.
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BREAKING THE FOURTH WALL
|
When an actor or his/her character acknowledges the existence of the veiwing
audience (i.e.: the camera) thus ignoring the imaginary barrier (the fourth wall)
between the viewers and the universe occurring on the screen. When "the
actor" does it, it's usually an error, and will not likely be seen by the audience except for
in a live broadcast; often times the actor does not directly acknowledge the viewers
or camera but instead breaks character, which in itself can destroy the illusion,
or the suspension of disbelief, thus breaking the fourth wall. When "the
character" does it, it is built into the script and magically does not destroy
the suspension of disbelief ‐‐ it is the character speaking to the audience from
the world on the screen. Crew members can break the fourth wall, as well, most
commonly by dropping a piece of equipment off-screen. And cast or crew member's cell
phone ringing will break the fourth wall.
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BROADCAST TELEVISION
(AKA: BROADCAST TV)
|
Television programming made up of scripted and unscripted productions that are
broadcast over UHF and VHF bands on the airwaves ‐‐ as opposed to Cable, On-line,
and Satellite TV.
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BUILDING SOUND
(AKA: TO BUILD SOUND)
|
A sound designer "builds a sound" when he or she assembles together two
or more sound effects to create a new sound effect which is the product of those
sounds being edited and mixed together. The sounds assembled together may be from
the designer's sound library, they
may be Foley, or a combination of the two.
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CABLE PRODUCTION
|
In general terms, it is the manifestation and actions of bringing together
the elements for, and the execution to, the final cut
of a series, movie, or documentary, for distribution on a cable TV network
The most common usage of the term is for the portion of the process of making
a cable series, movie, or documentary that consists of any rehearsal and all
major or minor filming or video recording, or shooting of live cablecast, of all action
or performances involving all actors and other performers, or all subjects of a
documentary. As well, the filming, video recording, shooting of live cablecast of
all footage that does not include performers or other active subjects (people,
animals, or animations) is part of the production phase. Thusly, "in
production" means being in this period.
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CABLE TELEVISION
(AKA: CABLE TV)
|
Television programming made up of scripted and unscripted productions with signals
sent over cable systems ‐‐ as opposed to Broadcast, On-line, and Satellite TV.
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CALL SHEET
|
A daily sheet that lists which cast and crew members need to be on
set or location for listed scenes and what time each actor or crew
member is to report to said place. Assistant directors (usually 2nd
ADs or lower) or other PAs create and distribute call sheets. The
call sheets may often be printed, but are also often sent in emails.
They may also be posted in private groups on social media sites.
The call sheet could cover more than one day, perhaps covering the
whole production week, or longer.
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CALL TIME
(AKA: CALL, CAST CALL, or CREW CALL)
|
The time the cast and/or crew members are schedule to arrive on set, on location,
or for any preproduction or postproduction sessions.
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CALLED
(as in: to be "called")
|
To be scheduled to report to the set or location for rehearsal, performance,
wardrobe fitting, make-up, or some variety of publicity activity (such as a
photo shoot)
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CALLBACK or CALLBACK AUDITION
|
Any audition that occurs after an initial audition. Actors being called back
are being narrowed down for a part or parts in a production (usually one specific
role). In movies and television there may be multiple callbacks, usually each
additional audition is likely being seen by increasingly more important members
of the production team.
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CAPTIONS
|
See SUBTITLES
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CAST CALL
|
See CALL TIME
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CASTING DIRECTOR
(AKA: CD)
|
Casting directors (CDs) organize, manage and conduct
screentests or other initial
auditions and interviews for most (if not all) roles for a production, sending
forward all candidates that are deemed good contenders for the roles. They may or
may not further manage callback auditions,
depending on the agreements for each project. CDs tend to be second-parties
contracted in by the producers to provide this casting service. Usually CDs are
owners or associates of a casting agency.
Casting directors do not make the decisions about who will be cast in a production,
but they do act as filters, making available to the production only those auditioners
that are deemed right for the roles being cast.
Casting directors also are the liaisons between the actors (or other performers,)
or their agents/managers, and the the production team, dealing with wage negotiations
and other contractual agreements.
See "Casting Director/Agent" at www.media-match.com
for more detailed information.
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CASTING CALL
|
A published announcement about an audition or series of auditions for a production
which give all the vital information including dates, times, location, the
specifications of the characters and requirements for the actors or performers,
and any other details or requirements that are relevant.
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CATERING
|
Meaning as it does in other industries, catering is the food service
entity commissioned to provide hot meals to cast and crew during the
production of a movie.
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CATTLE CALL AUDITION
(or, simply CATTLE CALL)
|
An open audition for a movie, TV, video, or theatrical stage production, where
a large group of performers (actors, dancers, etc.) are gathered together to
audition for the production. Usually there was only some sort of general
casting call announcement made and specific appointments are not made; each
performer auditions in order of arrival or by means of some other on-scene
method of order selection. Rarely are cattle calls for bigger, principal roles
for actors. Usually they are for small, supporting roles, or for extra work.
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CGI
(AKA: COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGING)
|
The creation of images on screen in a movie or TV program by means of computer
graphics programming. The images may be static, but rarely are not dynamic animations.
CGI can be 2D (two-dimensional) but usually is 3D (three-dimensional). The craft
is used to create many illusions that were once created through
special effects, especially
explosions and action which takes place in outerspace.
Far more of a movie or TV episode may be CGI than most people realize. For example,
most of the buildings of Atlantic City in the outdoor scenes in the popular
HBO series
Boardwalk Empire are
actually CGI images added in post.
Very often that lake in the background or that crystal-clear or ominously cloudy
sky in a scene from your favorite movie is actually CGI.
CGI is not to be confused with the afore-mentioned
special effects, which are
effects executed in the physical world: a car that actually is exploded with
pyrotechnics, a great canyon that is painted on glass with actors then superimposed
in front of it to make it look as if they overlook it, a projection on a screen in
the back of the set of the vista on the side of a road moving as actors pretend to
drive in a car in front of it ‐‐ these are all examples of special effects.
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CHAMPAGNE ROLL
|
The 100th film roll (for a movie shot on film), or 100th digital down load (for a
movie shot digitally). The advent of this point in
principal photography is
recognized and celebrated by a champaign toast. It might also apply to the 100th
video tape cassette used, though video tape is infrequently used for DV movies,
far less than memory cards and hard drives.
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CHANGE PAGES
|
Pages for a script revision or rewrite that occurs during production. The new pages
are usually a different color. There might be multiple revisions of a section of
a script and each revision/rewrite will have its own color.
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CHARACTER ACTOR
|
An actor who plays a diverse and wide range of character types, and
who is typically well-skilled at both dramatic and comedic
performance. The character actor often plays odd and eccentric but
can just as easily play plain and reserved and the gambit of
dynamics between.
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CHASE PRODUCER
|
A chase producer works for talk shows and news programs as the one who finds and
schedules guests for interviews, i.e.: "chases guests." On news programs
the guests will be experts on relevant subjects, analysts, and other "talking
heads" for commentary segments. For talk shows, the chase producer is
responsible for all guest appearances, including musical guests, though the idea
for a particular guest may come from other producers or the host.
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CHEATER or CHEATER SHOW
|
See CLIP SHOW
|
CHEWING THE SCENERY
|
A term more common to theatre than film or television production.
See OVER-ACTING
|
CHIEF LIGHTING TECHNICIAN
|
See GAFFER
|
CHOKER
|
An extreme close-up of an actor's eyes, only. Think the classic stand-off sequence
between two gunslingers.
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CHROMA KEYING
(AKA: CHROMA KEY COMPOSITING, KEY MATTING, COLOR KEYING,
COLOR-SEPARATION OVERLAY, GREENSCREENING, or BLUE SCREENING)
|
Also known as key matting. The technique of
replacing a specific color ("chroma") with images that are not part
of the shoot and do not include that specific color, which is usually green or
blue, as in greenscreen or bluescreen.
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CINEMATOGRAPHER
(in most cases, the DP: DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY)
|
An expert in the art of filming or electronically recording images for a motion
picture by use of the appropriate camera or other recording device, with aesthetic
composition and selective lighting techniques.
The chief cinematographer for a movie is called the Director of Photography
(or "DP" for short), and is sometimes referred to simply as "The
Cinematographer,"
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CLAPBOARD or CLAPPER
|
See SLATE
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CLEAN SPEECH
|
A block of dialogue that was recorded with no audio errors or problems, and
thus it's unlikely that any ADR will be
necessary. Usually, clean speech needs to span a whole take, but sometimes a
significant portion of a take might be considered clean speech if it meets the
criteria, even if another portion does not.
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CLIP
|
An excerpt from a movie or a TV program. The most common use of a clip is when an
actor or other person associated with a movie or a TV series (such as director of
a movie) appears on a talk show to
promote said movie or program. If it is an actor, which it usually is, the clip
most likely to feature his or her work.
Clips are also shown at broadcast and cable television network
upfronts. Clips are also sometimes
shown at fan conventions such
Comic-Con or other similar conventions
for genre film and TV.
Clips are also what make up an actor, director, designer, or other production
person's sample reel, which will highlite
their past work.
Lastly, clips are used in clip shows.
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CLIP SHOW
(AKA: CHEATER or CHEATER SHOW)
|
An episode of a television series that uses a heavy amount of
clips from previous episodes. The story
in this clipshow episode will usually center around characters recalling past events
for whatever contrived reason, then the clips are used as flash-back. The main reason
for clipshows is to shoot an episode at a lower cost and at a quicker pace. Often
the shooting of new footage will be only one or two total days, and often using only
one set ‐‐ where the characters are doing their reminiscing. Usually there are no
guest stars appearing in
the new footage shot for a clipshow.
Sometimes a clipshow may be produced close to a series finale more to generate
more nostalgia and sentimentality than for budgetary reasons, though the lower
production cost is likely never unwelcome.
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CLOSE-UP
(AKA: CU)
|
A film, video, or still photography image where the subject image takes up a
significant portion of the frame. Usually the camera is close to the subject, but
sometimes the affect is achieved from using a zoom lense.
Not to be confused with an
"extreme close-up,"
where the subject is even larger in the frame.
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CO-EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
(AKA: CO-EXEC)
|
The co-executive producer is second in rank to the
executive producer in both movie
and television productions.
In a movie productions the co-exec will be delegated to directly handle or
to assist in responsibilities for production that are under the executive producer's
umbrella ‐‐ which means pretty much all operations ‐‐ reporting back to the exec.
There may be more than one co-exec, each taking on various parts under that umbrella.
one may deal with business management and administrative things; another may handle
creative aspects.
In a TV production the co-exec is very often a writer for the show, and may
be the head writer. Co-execs otherwise will often have the responsibility to attend
or monitor writing team meetings, if not a writer, and perhaps other production
team meetings. Co-execs are usually heavily involved in the creative development of
the show or series.
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CO-PRODUCER
|
In both movie and television productions, the co-producer is a writer who wrote
little or nothing in the screenplay or teleplay but made significant
contributions at table reads, or
during the revision or re-write process. In the United States, the co-producer
credit usually requires Writers Guild of America
approval.
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CODEC
|
A computer program for encoding and decoding digital data streams or signals for
transmission and storage. A codec is used for video editing, streaming media, and
video conferencing.
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COLD BRICK
|
A battery for any piece of equipment on a movie or TV production that is dead or
near dead and needs to be replaced in the equipment with a good battery and
recharged. The term is not often used as opposed to its opposite:
hot brick, as in, "DP needs a
hot brick."
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COLD OPEN
(AKA: TEASER SEQUENCE ‐‐ sometimes "teaser")
|
A scene or scenes from a TV program or a film, shown at the beginning before the
title sequences or opening credits. In sketch comedy or variety TV shows it will
usually be a sketch, often with a recurring theme or gag ‐‐ such as how the cold
open of Saturday Night Live
always ends with someone yelling, "Live from New York! It's Saturday night!"
Another good example of a recurring cold-open gag would be the purposefully bad puns
that always ended the cold opens of episodes of
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
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COLD READ
(AKA: SIGHT READ)
|
To read aloud from a script or other text, usually an actor during an audition
for stage or screen, with little or no rehearsal, practice or study in advance.
Cold reads are also common in acting and public address classes. In auditions,
where they are most common, they allow the auditor (director, producers,
casting director, or writers) to judge the actor's ability to quickly grasp at
least the fundamentals of the character and can help judge the actor's
appropriateness for the role being considered. Casting auditors are often
split on the merits of cold reads. Some find them very useful; others do not
believe such audition method helps in successfully casting a project. Actors,
too, are split on the merits of the cold read.
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COLOR CORRECTION
|
The process of making the colors in each shot match those from shots around it. It
also is the process and technique of changing the overall color temperature, shading,
vibrance, and/or intensity for an entire movie or program or some particular
section or sequence within such.
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COLOR KEYING
|
See CHROMA KEYING
|
COLOR-SEPARATION OVERLAY
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See CHROMA KEYING
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COMBINATION CUT
|
See SMASH CUT
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COME BACK ON THAT
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See GO AGAIN
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COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGING
|
See CGI
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CONSULTING PRODUCER
|
Consulting producers consult on screenplays or teleplays with the writers, often
because of expertise or a specialization in a particular subject or concept. They
frequently are former executive producers
or co-executive producers who
are no longer connected or no longer much involved with the production.
In some rarer cases, directors or cast
members will be consulting producers; such cast members are more likely to be in a
television series, and are very likely to be lead actors who have gained the clout
to have input on the further development and story lines of their characters.
Though, in film, major movie stars can be in this position, as well.
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CONTINUITY
|
1) The supervision of principal photography that keeps track of all properties,
settings, costuming and actions for each shot to make it possible to seamlessly
edit all shots in a movie together for correct and logical sequence of the movie
events regardless of what order each scene or part of a scene was shot. It
facilitates the appearance of consistent movement and occurrence of action, events
and images in the final cut of a motion picture, TV show or video.
2) in conjunction, Continuity is also the degree of which a film is self-consistent
without errors, jump cuts, or mis-matched shots and details; Continuity shooting
and editing moves the viewer seamlessly, unobtrusively, and logically from one
sequence or scene to another, propelling the narrative.
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CONTINUITY ERROR
|
Any point in a movie, TV show, or video that has mis-matched elements from a previous
point, usually from one scene or shot to the next. An example of a continuity error
would be an actor holding an object in the left hand in one shot, but in the
next shot ‐‐ representing the same action only an instant later ‐‐ the object
is in the right hand. It can also be a mis-match in lighting, or wardrobe, or any
noticeable change in appearance of an actor, the set, the location, a prop, a set
piece, or sound that is clearly not intended to have occured.
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CONTINUITY REPORT
(also known as the CONTINUITY SCRIPT)
|
A detailed report of all the conditions and elements of each shot photographed,
noting actions and movement from start to end by each actor (or animal), the
placement of props at the start and stop of the shot, weather conditions, lighting,
sound, the appearances of the set, the environment and the actors (including wardrobe,
hair, facial hair, makeup, etc.) ‐‐ basically any condition that should be the same
when the shot is married with the shot before and after it. This report is the
responsibility of the script supervisor.
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CONTINUITY SCRIPT
|
See CONTINUITY REPORT
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COORDINATING PRODUCER
(AKA: PRODUCTION COORDINATOR)
|
The coordinating producer (or production coordinator) manages and oversees the
overarching production schedule and organizes the staff teamwork. In the production
team hierarchy, coordinating producers/production coordinators are typically
positioned just below co-producers.
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COPY
(AKA: 10-4 or TEN-FOUR)
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I understand your message."
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CORPSING
|
"Corpsing" is specifically when an actor
breaks character
in an unscripted fit of laughter during a shoot or while onstage.
Legend says that the term originated from the idea that the
most inopportune time to laugh during a scene is when the actor is
playing a corpse.
In British theatre, "corpsing" is used more widely for an
actor breaking character in general, including when
going up,
or even when one's performance causes another actor to laugh or
otherwise break character. British lore says the term probably comes
from the idea of "murdering the scene."
Seasoned actors can, given the right circumstances save an unprompted
laugh by staying in character and presenting the laugh as coming from
that character. Obviously it would have to be a scene where it would
be appropriate for the character to laugh, and obviously if playing
a corpse would not be that time. Some actors can quickly turn the
corpsing laugh into another emotion, such as crying, again, only in
scenes where it would be appropriate.
See the following articles about corpsing:
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COSTUME DESIGNER
|
The person who designs costumes for a movie, television, video, or music video
production. Based on the script and in collaboration with either the
executive producer (or other
producers) or the
director, or both, the
costume designer creates the look of the characters by designing clothes and
accessories that fit each character and the era being depicted. As well they design
to meet the intended mood and concept of the production, choosing appropriate shapes,
colors and textures. The Costume designer also usually collaborates and cooperates
with the director of photography,
or the gaffer, and the producer and/or
director to be sure the costume design fits the production as a whole in terms of
thematic and visual correlation.
The designer may make or "build" costumes, use costumes in the production
company's or studio's collection (often with augmentation and tailoring), or buy,
rent, or lease costumes. The costume designer is also responsible for the
accessories the actors will need for their characters, such as canes, hats, gloves,
shoes, jewelry, etc., with such items often being key to helping define the
perception of a particular character.
The costume designer usually is who creates the costume plot, which is the written
chart of what particular costumes or pieces of clothing the actors need for each
scene or segment of the movie, program or video.
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COSTUME DRAMA
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See <PERIOD PIECE
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CRAFT SERVICE
|
The department that provides food and beverages on-set and on-location throughout
the production day for the entirety of the company, all crew, all cast. Craft
service may be as simple as a table with snacks and bottles of water to a room
with a large variety of foods and beverages ‐‐ much depends on the size of the
budget and the production.
The food and beverages provided throughout the day are, themselves, called
"craft service," like the department. Full, hot meals are called
"catering," and though the Craft Service department is usually
responsible to provide those meal (on a union shoot, it is), such meals are usually
brought in from an outside source ‐‐ a restaurant or independent catering service.
On a SAG/AFTRA production, the Craft
Service department is responsible to provide a full hot meal for cast and crew
every six hours. For non-union shoots, it's best practice but not a requirement.
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CREW CALL
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See CALL TIME
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CU
|
See CLOSE-UP
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CURTAIN CALL
|
In a movie production a "curtain call" is a sequence at the end
of the film, of short clips, outtakes, or still photographs, usually before the
closing credits, featuring each main principal actor with her or his name
accompanying. It is tantamount to the recognition of each actor by the audience in
a stage production curtain call. Though
not a standard practice in films, when it does occur, it's likely in a comedy or
other lighter movie, and usually when there are many principal actors, or a large
amount of cameo appearances.
In a television production a "curtain call" will appear at the end
of the series finale for a program (usually a situation comedy) that was filmed or
taped in front of a studio audience. The cast will, after finishing the last scene
of the series, take their bows in front of the studio audience in the exact fashion
of a theatrical production. In many of these cases, the cast took bows in front of
the audience as a standard practice after each episode was wrapped, but the difference
here is that the finale curtain call is shown as part of that last episode.
Sketch comedy shows such as
Saturday Night Live also
have a curtain call as the last minute or so of each show, where the cast members
and guest players gather on stage to thank and say goodnight to the studio audience
and the viewing public. Late night talk shows and variety shows have a similar
practice, but usually it is just the host.
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CUTAWAY
(AKA: INSERT)
|
An inserted shot, though usually related shot, to interrupt a continuous shot
of action. Usually after the cutaway shot we return to the first shot. The
cutaway almost always relates to the action of the continuos shot: some action
or other visual that sets up or introduces a broader scope of action or illustrates
the point of the main footage. In conjunction with these other purposes cutaways
are often also used to cover obvious edits in the main action (jump cuts or
deletions of portions of the main shot) or to allow the marriage of portions
of two takes, versions, or shot setups of the main footage. In non-fiction work
(such as news or documentaries) cutaways are similarly used. They are especially
used in such work to cover jump cuts and to insert what are known as
"noddies." Noddies are insertions of the interviewers being shot,
after an interview, repeating their questions and nodding, since on location,
there is usually just one camera to shoot an interview, and it's usually
trained on the interviewees. These post-interview pick-ups are then inserted,
in continuity, to break up the monotony of only seeing the interviewee, and to
cover edits.
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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DAILIES
|
See RUSHES
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DAY PLAYER
|
Supporting actors with speaking roles in a movie or TV program who work on set
on a daily basis without a long-term contract or agreement. In movies, day
players may be in several scenes, in television productions they frequently are
only in one scene.
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DAYTIME TALK SHOW
|
A talk show that appears during the
day, usually between mid-morning to late afternoon, Monday through Friday.
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DAYTIME TELEVISION
(AKA: DAYTIME TV)
|
The programming period of the week for Broadcast Television generally considered
to be 6:00 a.m. through 8:00 p.m. (U.S. Eastern Standard Time), Monday through
Friday. The programming aired during this period is generally morning shows, news
magazine formatted shows (usually in the morning), talks shows, network game shows,
and serialized soap opera. With very
few exceptions, all these types of programs have a new episodes for each weekday.
Most of the morning shows and news magazine shows are either produced by a
national television network or produced locally by the station on which they air.
Soap operas are network productions. TV talk shows and game shows are a mix of
network and syndicated productions with the occasional locally-produced show.
Often the earlier morning hours feature local morning news broadcasts. Most local
stations produced their own local evening news at 6:00, and often with a 5:30 p.m.
edition as well. At 6:30 p.m., there is usually an edition of the network-produced
nightly news on network-affiliated stations.
Many local stations produced their own programming for children, with such
programs often airing in the afternoon after children have come home from school or
early morning before they leave for school. Networks have gotten out of the business
of such programming for children, but at one time, CBS produced the long-running
Captain Kangaroo (starring
Robert Keeshan), which aired in
the pre-school hours from 1955 till 1984, though some of its run toward the end was
during weekend programing.
*Sometimes "Daytime TV" is defined as starting at about 9:00 a.m.,
after the morning shows and news magazines are over.
For more, see "Daytime television" at Wikipedia.
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DEUS EX MACHINA
(AKA: "GOD FROM THE MACHINE," sometimes "MACHINE OF THE GODS")
|
A plot device in a movie, TV program, play, or prose fiction literature that employs
a sudden, unexpected resolution to an insurmountable dilemma. This resolution is
invariably an unlikely, often hard-to-believe, occurrence, often executed by a new
character or one who was previously so minor to the story she or he could have been
cut. Modern audiences tend to not be willing to accept such a resolution with the
possible exception of in farcical comedies.
"Deus ex machina" was a convention of ancient Greek theater, where
actual machines, usually cranes, were used to push an actor up through a trap door
or lower them from above. In present day it is most frequently criticized as lazy
writing.
See the page on "Deus ex machina"
at Wikipedia.
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DIALECT COACH
(AKA: ACCENT COACH [British])
|
An expert in national and cultural accents and dialects who works with an actor to
create the accent, voice, and speech pattern of a character for a stage or screen
production or for voice-over work. If
dialect coaches are not wholly familiar with the dialect in question they will do
original research into the dialect, accent, speech patterns, etc., in some cases
immersing themselves in the geographic region where the dialect (etc.) is common
or native. Coaches usually prepare and provide written and often recorded materials
for their students, and will run them through exercises, both generic and usually
also consisting of the actors' lines from their script. The coaches also give their
students feedback as to the authenticity and clarity of the students work with the
dialect.
Often in the dialect work with students the
International Phonetic Alphabet
(IPA) is employed.
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DIALOGUE LOOPING
|
See ADR
|
DIRECTOR
|
In general terms, the director on a film project can be considered the captain of
the ship; in television she or he is best called the traffic cop.
Directors for the camera have a wide and varied scope of duties and authorities,
depending on the medium in which they are working, and also depending on the
particular projects they are working on.
In movie productions the director is the primary artistic leader who governs
the creative content in all aspects from the performances by the cast members,
principal photography,
sound effects,
Foley sound,
special effects, and the editing all the
way to the final cut.
Usually the director has a significant amount of creative control, if not total
creative control, over the artistic elements of the production. Sometimes there
will be restrictions on artistic freedom that is dictated by the producers or the
studio, based on goals and visions set for the project during its development.
Often a director's artistic decision is vetoed simply due to budgetary concerns.
Depending on the project, the film director will have authority, responsibility,
or input over any and all of casting, script development, script editing,
cinematography (any or all of shot composition, shot selection, and perhaps even
lighting), and the film editing of the movie.
It's not uncommon for film directors and their
directors of photography
(DPs) to work in collaboration which each other, the DPs using their expertise to
give the directors screen images and the visual feelings they want, while the
directors relay on the DP's skills and are open to creative ideas and suggestions
from the DPs.
On a production where the director can be called an
auteur, he or she will have much
tighter control over all creative, and probably many managerial, aspects of the
movie. Quite often such directors will be primary or solely responsible for casting,
and may be the director of photography, or will at least occasionally operate the
camera. They'll probably also be the primary driving artistic force behind all other
creative design aspects such as costuming and and set design. Auteurs' film
productions are almost always independent films.
New film makers, just starting out, frequently shoot several
short-subject films that are
independent auteur productions, sometimes with that director performing almost all
the production duties, or with a small crew, with each member wearing more than one
production hat.
In large, big-budget movie productions, the directers might relinquish some
director's duties by delegating the shooting of some scenes or sequences of less
dramatic principality or complexity to the second unit.
This is also true in episodic television productions, especially such programs as
single-camera procedural
dramas like CSI.
In television productions the director traditionally directs the activities
involved in making a television program and is part of a television crew.
The duties of a television director vary depending on the type of production:
multiple-camera or
single-camera, and variants
within those two categories, with directors generally having more overarching
creative input in single-camera productions, which are shot and produced virtually
like movies, with the caveat that the
executive producer
(the show runner) has ultimate creative control.
In multi-camera productions, especially such things as news, sports news, sporting
events, talk shows and game shows, the director is responsible for "calling"
the broadcast or video recording, supervising the placement of professional video
cameras (camera blocking), lighting equipment, microphones, props, graphics, and the
overall pacing and feel of the production. In a dramatic arts production, the
television director's role can be similar to a film director's, giving cues to actors
and directing the camera placement and movement. In a television show composed of
individual episodes, the television director's role may differ from a film director's
in that he or she will usually work only on some television episodes instead of
being the auteur of the entire production. In an episodic television production,
the major creative control will likely reside with the television producer(s) of
the show. However, the director has input, whether it be how, if, and why something
can or can't be done.
Other than quickly calling out commands, the television director is also expected
to maintain order among the staff in the control room, on the set, and elsewhere.
A news studio might have multiple cameras and few camera movements. In a sports
broadcast, the director might have 20 or 30 cameras and must continuously tell each
of the camera operators what to focus on.
While the director is responsible for specific shots and other production elements,
the producer (typically seated behind the director in the second row of chairs in
the control room) coordinates the "big picture," including commercial
breaks and the running length of the show.
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DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
(AKA: DP, sometimes simply, "Cinematographer")
|
The Chief Cinematographer on a movie or TV production set, responsible for the
design and processes of filming or digital video recording the movie or TV show to
meet the specified vision of the director. The DP will directly or indirectly
administrate all of the following duties: selection of film stock (if the
project is shot on film), number and types of cameras, and what lenses will be
employed; with digital video, the sort of movie types used or converted to,
and adjacent DV equipment; the design of the lighting for each scene and
selection of lights and paraphernalia to accomplish that design; and the
composition of all shots in collaboration or consultation with the director;
and any film developing and film printing or digital rendering. Some directors
will take a more involved stance with some of these responsibilities, others
will leave most or all of this entirely to the DP's discretion.
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DIRECTOR'S REEL
|
See REEL
|
DIY SCREENTEST
*as in "Do It Yourself"
(AKA: SELF-TAPED AUDITION, DIY AUDITION or DIY VIDEO AUDITION)
|
A self-made digital or analog video recorded audition by an actor or other
performer for consideration of being cast in a screen or stage production project.
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DISASTER SHOW
|
1) An episode of a television program where a large series of problems occur during
production. Disaster shows are more likely during shows with live broadcasts, such
as sketch comedy, or shows that tape in front of live studio audiences. The problems
may be one, some, or all of camera or other technology malfunctions, mis-cuing of
sound or light cues, malfunctions of special effects, props or set pieces missing,
breaking, or somehow not working properly, performers making errors or having
accidents during performance. Sometimes a particular performer or crew member can
have their own personal distaster show, with only their own work having a series of
problems. Theatrical productions or their casts/crews can also have a disaster show.
2) a program where the subject is one or more disaster, usually a documentary,
but might also be a narrative program.
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DOLLY
(AKA: CAMERA DOLLY or DOLLY TRUCK)
|
A platform for a camera that is mounted on wheels that usually are laid over tracks
(dolly track) so that the camera may smoothly move toward or away, on a horizontal
plane, from the subject being shot. The camera and camera operator are on the
platform which is pushed or pulled by a crew member known as the dolly grip. The
resulting shot is known as a dolly shot *(see below).
Steadicams now often replace the dolly use, though the resulting shot is still
known as a dolly shot.
Independent film makers have improvised their own dolly trucks, with film maker
Kevin Smith innovating the use of
a wheel chair as a dolly for dolly shots, a practice that has since become common.
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DOLLY SHOT
|
To dolly a shot means to move the camera into (toward) or out from (back away
from) the subject of the shot. This is not a "zoom in" or a
"zoom out" where the focal point of the lens is changed to make the
subject image closer or farther away while the camera stays stationary. In a
dolly shot the camera may or may not be mounted on a dolly truck, which may be
mounted on tracks or have wheels. Now the term means any shot where the camera
operator moves the camera toward ("dollies-in") or away from
("dollies-out") but with the same lens zoom for the whole shot, and
regardless of the means of transport (walking, dolly truck, wheel chair,
the latter made famous by
Kevin Smith as a dolly method).
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DOPE SHEET
|
A document that lists what scenes and shots have been completed for a movie or
television production. The dope sheet is usually maintained by the assistant
camera operator, if not, then it is maintained by a second AD,
a PA, or an
AP.
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DRESS REHEARSAL
(AKA: DRESS)
|
The final rehearsal of an episode of a television production, generally
sitcoms, entertainment talk shows, and
sketch comedy shows, that is a full run with all actors in full costume & makeup,
and that includes all the technical aspects of lights, sound, special effects that
will not be incorporated during post.
Usually it will be the only full-run rehearsal, and the only rehearsal done in
continuity from first segment to last segment. For sitcoms and sketch comedies, the
dress will almost always be run in front of a studio audience*; there will be no
stops unless something goes far amiss. Since the camera work is rehearsed, dress
rehearsals are recorded and the some footage may be used as coverage in case there
is a problem during principal photography,
which is the official production recording of the episode, and is shot later the
same day as the dress. For instance, the dress rehearsal for
Saturday Night Live
begins at 8:00 pm on Saturday, with the live broadcast performance at 11:30 pm.
*Dress rehearsal and the actual production shooting have seperate audiences.
Sitcom and sketch comedy show dress rehearsals are performed in front of a studio
audience so the producers and writers can gage the effectiveness of jokes and gags
based on the audience response. Moments that fail will be revised, rewritten, or
possibly cut, before the principal photography or live broadcast later that day.
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DUAL DIALOGUE
|
In a script (screenplay or stage play) dual dialogue is when two
characters are speaking at once. The most common way that dual
dialogue is shown on a script page is for the two character's lines
to be displayed next to each other.
LLOYD
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BARNEY
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You can't tell me that you went all the way down there just
to say nothing no to one, not even the idiot that started this
whole thing! Just what the hell is wrong with you?
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I'm sick and tired of everybody expecting me to fix this!
I am not the one who told your sister about the stupid
dog dying or about the house catching on fire! So, excuse me,
I'm going to lunch!
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Most script-writing software will format dual dialogue in this
side-by-side manner. The side-by-side method is not the only way to
indicate dual dialogue, but it is a favored manner in all of the
film, TV, and theatrical industries.
Triple dialogue may also be formatted side-by-side, though not all
scriptwriting software will format three side-by-side. If more than
three people are talking simultaneously, usually there are directions
to indicate such and each character's lines are on the page as usual.
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DUBBING
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See ADR
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DV MOVIE
(AKA: DIGITAL VIDEO MOVIE)
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A motion picture, television or web program, or video that is shot
and/or delivered through digital information technology rather
than analogue information techinology ‐‐ i.e.: the images
are constructed and decoded using computer bianary language rather
than analogue wave-length signals. In this new millennium a DV
movie is most likely to be carried on a computer storage device
(such as a hard drive, a thumb drive, or a data disk), on a DVD,
or transmitted over the world-wide web. But a DV movie can also
be recorded on video tape.
A DV movie may be in Standard Deffinition (SD), or any of the
varities of High Deffinition (HD), from 720 to 5000 K.
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EASTER EGG
|
A message, image, reference, or feature hidden, sometimes in plain sight, in a
movie, TV program, video game, or other medium, usually electronic. Derived, of
course, from the traditional definition of an Easter egg (the actual colored egg),
this connotation originated in video games, but has been adopted by the entertainment
industry in general. The egg may somehow relate to another story in the same
universe, it might be a private joke between designers or techs, or it could be
some sort of homage. The term is increasingly being applied to theatrical plays and
novels and short fiction stories.
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ECU
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See EXTREME CLOSE-UP
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EDIT PRODUCER
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Edit producers are assistant producers who coordinate the editing process. They
work directly with project editors and are liaisons between the editors and
producers up the food chain. On some television productions, the editing producers
may take part in conceiving stories or story ideas and/or be involved in the
development or writing of scripts.
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EDITOR
(AKA: FILM EDITOR, MOVIE EDITOR or VIDEO EDITOR)
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The editor of a movie, TV or video production literally assembles the scenes of
the project in the correct order, either by means of a computer editing software or
by attaching each piece of film or video tape in the correct sequence (though the
latter two are not often practiced anymore, especially the physical assembly of tape,
which was always rare). The editor also incorporates the specific shots used for
each moment in each scene. Along with putting each scene in proper order, the editor
also controls the timing and rhythm of each scene by how much of the pauses between
action and dialogue are used or removed from the footage. The editor usually works
in consultation with the project director. Some directors give the editors a lot of
discretion to use their own judgement, others keep tight control over the decisions
of both shots used and pacing.
Often, in independent productions, and in some case, studio productions, the director
is the editor, especially if she or he is an auteur.
Many short films have the director as editor.
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EIGHTY-SIX
(AKA: 86)
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See STRIKE
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ELEVATOR PITCH
|
In general, an elevator pitch is a fast way of introducing to one or
all, yourself, an idea or concept, a project, or simply a connection.
The term is derived from the idea that it should take only the time
to pitch that one would spend during the typical elevator ride with
the person being pitched to ‐‐ less than a minute, closer
to thirty seconds. It needs to be succinct, memorable and compelling.
It needs to pique interest.
In the movie, TV (broadcast, cable, or on-line), theatre, and
literature publishing industries, the elevator pitch will be directed
at whomever it is can approve your perspective project or can get
the proposal infront of the right person. It's often verbal but can
just as often be written on paper or electronically.
For screen and stage projects the elevator pitch is often describe
as an extended
logline,
and might be included in the roman numeral pages before a script
begins the story pages. It may even be a cover page for a
treatment.
This article at
Screen Craft has good
information:
"How Writers Can Master the Elevator Pitch,"
by Ken Miyamoto
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EP
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See EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
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ESTABLISHING SHOT
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In both movie and television productions, it is the first shot of a scene, which
introduces the audience to the location or the space where the scene is taking
place. Occasionally there will be titles at the bottom of the screen to identify
the location, such as "FBI Headquarters, Quantico, Virgina," or "The
Office of Smith, Jones, and Doe, Esq." Sometimes an establishing shot is simply
a still photograph, such as the establishing shot of the New York City apartment
building used frequently on Friends.
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EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
(AKA: EP ‐‐ *In television, often SHOW RUNNER and/or HEAD WRITER)
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In the hierarchy, only top executives at the movie studio, television network, or
streaming service have more authority over a project than the executive producer,
and that is only because such entity is commissioning or has bought a franchise on
the product to put out through their respective venues. But in terms of the direct
hierarchy of the production, the executive producer is the top boss.
In movie productions executive producers are the masters of the finances,
either putting up some ‐‐ perhaps all ‐‐ of the money themselves, or pitching to
potential financial backers (for an independent film) or pitching the movie to a
studio in hopes they will pick it up and back its production. In the case of
independent films, they also are responsible to secure the distribution deals. Often
executive producers are in some manner involved in the development of the project,
beyond finances, from somewhat to heavily. In some cases the concept for the movie
was their idea.
Once a movie gets the greenlight
the executive producer may or may not be involved with any further production
development, but they are very likely to be heavily involved with the financial
and business aspects, such as budgets, contracts and executive operations.
In television productions (network, cable, & streaming) there are several
types of executive producer, and a particular show may have more than one, and a
particular executive producer may fit into more than one of these categories:
- Show Runner ‐‐ the highest ranked exec (the "chief
executive") who is in charge of all aspects of the production, responsible
for daily management of the show, and oversees, and probably takes the lead in,
the creative development. In most cases the original show runner for a TV
production is the, or one of the, show creators.
In non-narrative TV, especially news programming, the EP usually works for the
lead talent, such as the news anchor of the program, and runs the broadcast,
cablecast, or production recording, calling the minute-to-minute editorial shots,
and generally overseeing the pre-production of each episode. But the EP defers
final authority and approval to the lead talent (who, in a news program is
usually considered the managing editor).
- Head Writer ‐‐ The head writer of the writing staff is one of the
executive producers if not the only one, as she or he may also be the show runner,
though sometimes the Co-executive producer
is the head writer. As suggested, the head writer is most responisble for the
teleplays generated
- The CEO or equivalent head of a production company that produces and
distributes an original syndicated program is an executive producer.
- Some producers for a program may be promoted to the level of executive
producer.
- The Show Creator ‐‐ even if such has diminished his or her active
involvement in the production of the show, or has departed, altogether, he or
she still has a credit as Executive Producer.
- In television, EPs do have authority over directors,
whom usually they have hired and can fire, but they usually leave the directors
to their own discretions.
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EXPOSITION
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The dissemination (or "exposing") of information about characters or
other aspects of the universe of a story in order to make the story being told
clearer and in the right context for the audience.
Exposition can be done in clever manners that make the introduction of the information
smooth and perhaps even matter-of-fact. The danger is that exposition can also be
clumsy and seemed forced and unnatural, which calls attention to it and may take
the audience members out of the story, out of their
suspension of disbelief.
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EXT.
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A part of the slug line at the top of a scene in a script for a movie, TV show,
or video production, that indicates that the scene will take place in an
exterior location, i.e.: outdoors. The scene will not necessarily actually be
shot outdoors, but, might be shot on sound stage simulating the outdoors.
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EXTERIOR SCENE
(AKA: "EXT.")
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A scene from a screenplay, teleplay, or video script that happens in the outdoors.
The term applies to where the scene takes place in the universe of the script,
not where it is actually shot. The slug line may read, "EXT. THE TAYLOR
BACK YARD...." but it may be shot on a sound stage made to look like the
Taylor back yard, rather than an actual outdoor location.
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EXTERIOR SHOOT
(AKA: "EXT.")
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A shoot for a movie, TV show, or video production that is done in the outdoors,
rather than on a sound stage or inside any other building.
*Though an "EXT." slug line in a script only indicates that the
scene takes place in an exterior location, within the universe of the story ‐‐
the scene may have actually been shot on a sound stage made to look like the
outdoors.
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EXTRA
(AKA: BACKGROUND or BACKGROUND ACTOR)
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A cast member in a movie, television, video or streaming production who has no
lines and is usually part of some sort of crowd or group, be it on a street or
other exterior location, or an office or other interior location.
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EXTREME CLOSE-UP
(AKA: ECU)
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A film, video, or still photography image where the subject image takes up all or
most of the frame, even more so than a close-up.
Usually the camera is close to the subject, but sometimes the affect is achieved
from using a zoom lense.
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EYES ON
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for when a needed item or person is
spotted or found, as in "I have eyes on the prop gun," or "I have
eyes on Mr. De Niro." Though "Mr. De Niro" would probably have
a code name.
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FEATURE FILM
(AKA: FEATURE-LENGTH, FEATURE-LENGTH FILM, FEATURE, FULL-LENGTH, FULL-LENGTH
FEATURE, FULL-LENGTH FILM)
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A movie that is at least forty minutes in length, but is usually over seventy
minutes, with the standard being eighty to one-hundred-twenty minutes.
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FEATURED ROLE or FEATURED PLAYER
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Usually means a "supporting role," but sometimes is used to parse out
supporting roles that are of more significance to the story arch, such as the
lead character's best friend who acts as a sounding board throughout the movie,
or the antagonist of the film, if such roles are not at
lead role status.
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FIELD PRODUCER
|
Field producers select or recommend shooting locations outside of a movie or TV
studio set and coordinates the productions at those locations ("in the
field"). Along with managing and coordinating field production, field producers
may also be the location scouts, if not having scouts report to them, they may
operate cameras (for such things as news magazine or talk show productions), and
they may be considered production assistants reporting to a producer up the food
chain (possibly one of the segment producer,
coordinating producer, or
line producer). For TV productions
such as Reality TV, news magazine, or
TV talk shows, it's generally expected that field producers develop a good, strong
report with the cast or the participant subjects, who will be on screen, to get
smoother cooperation and/or better interviews from such people.
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FILE FOOTAGE
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See STOCK FOOTAGE
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FILM
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1) as a noun: a thin flexible strip of celluloid or other material coated with
light-sensitive substance for exposure in a camera, used to produce photographs or
motion pictures.
Also, a synonym for movie (as in motion picture).
2) as a verb: "to film" is the act of photographing moving pictures for
a movie, television (broadcast, cable, or streaming), or video production via film.
The recording of the audio in the action is typically, but not always, involved.
*Often the photographing (recording) via digital video is referred to as
"a film" or "filming," though such uses are technically
incorrect.
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FILM EDITOR
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See EDITOR
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FILMING
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1) as a noun: the portion of the production of a movie, television
(broadcast, cable, or streaming), or video production that involves photographing
in moving pictures via film. The recording of the audio in the action is typically,
but not always, involved. "A filming" may refer to the overall process for
the production, or some smaller segment, such as a day or a scene.
2) as a verb: the act of photographing moving pictures for a movie, television
(broadcast, cable, or streaming), or video production via film. The recording of
the audio in the action is typically, but not always, involved.
*Often the photographing (recording) via digital video is referred to as
"filming," though the use is technically incorrect.
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FINAL CUT
(AKA: LOCKED EDIT or LOCKED VERSION)
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The final edited version of a movie, television program, or video, with all aspects
of the production locked in place as "finished": scene edits, any and all
special effects, post-production animations and CGI, all color correction, all
sound mixing, sound effects, ADR, Foley sound, all music score and incidental
music added in, and all titles imposed. The absolute finished version of the movie
as approved by the director and producer. May also be called the "locked
version" or "locked edit."
Related: IN THE CAN
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FINAL DRAFT
(AKA: LOCKED DRAFT or FINISHED DRAFT)
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The final version of a (screenplay
or teleplay, ready to submit to the
producers for production. This does not mean that further rewrites or revisions will
not be made during production, in fact, such are likely, and sometimes (often)
considerable changes are made.
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FIRST ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or FIRST AD
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See ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or AD
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FIRST TEAM
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The principal actors on a set or on location.
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FLYING IN
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When a person or item is in route to its destination on set or location, as in
"The prop weapons are flying in," or "There are two grips flying in,
right now." Especially used over walkie-talkies.
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FOCUSING LIGHTS
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The act of aiming a light of a group of lights at a specific area
of the stage. The light focus will include the parameters of the
space being lit.
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FOLEY
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Sound created and designed for a movie to be synchronized with action or to
otherwise enhance the action of a scene. Most sound in a movie is actually
Foley sound (created sound) that represents the sound associated with the
action but often in reality is something else: twisting a rack of celery in
front of a microphone to create the sound of cracking bones is a famous example.
The term "Foley" may be used as a general term to mean all added
sound and sound effects; purist will only refer to newly created sounds, done
originally for the sequence in a movie, as Foley, and will call all other sound,
brought in from the sound library as SFX (sound effects), or simply as
"library sound." The term Foley is derived from the name of early
sound effects artist Jack Foley,
who pioneered the processes and artform of Foley work in motion pictures.
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FOLEY ARTIST
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The sound designer who creates sound effects and noises to the edit of the
movie in post-production. Far more than half the sound heard is added by the
Foley artist, including things as simple as footsteps, liquid poured into
glasses, papers being shuffled, to more exotic and dramatic sounds as gunshots,
punches, thunder, explosions, and much more. Traditionally Foley artists would
watch a run of a film sequence as it was projected with props that mimic
the sound of the action, and record the Foley sound in synchronization with the
action on the screen. Today Foley is often added by computer synchronization;
sometimes it is a mix of both methods.
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FOUR BANGER
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A long trailer for a movie or TV production, with four doors, that may be used for
one of several purposes: as an office area on location, as any of a variety of
production rooms (editing suites, storage, etc.), as one or more dressing rooms,
or as a green room.
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FOURTH WALL
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The imaginary barrier, or "wall," between the veiwing audience and the
world on the screen. Poetically the Fourth Wall means the veiwers witness the
action in the world of the movie or TV show, and the characters in that world are
not aware of the veiwers' presence (i.e.: the camera). The veiwers are "eaves
dropping" on the story being played out on the screen. When the actors or
characters acknowledge the existence of the veiwers, that is known as "breaking
the fourth wall."
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FPS (Frames Per Second)
(AKA: FRAME RATE)
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The number of frames (still images; pictures) per second in a video or movie.
Usually lowercase: fps.
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FRAME RATE
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See FPS
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FRAMING
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The visual composition of the images that will be seen on the screen in a movie,
TV, or video production. The framing includes consideration of what will be
included in the shot, and where all objects and elements will appear in the frame,
and thusly on the screen.
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FRANKEN-EDIT
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See FRANKENBITE
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FRANKENBITE
(OR: FRANKENBITING or FRANKEN-EDIT)
|
A frankenbite, or franken-edit is an edit of two or more pieces of partially-to-completely unrelated
events, moments, or dialog, to create the illusion that something has happened that
did not. It is a staple editing technique on
Reality TV productions. On occasion,
some of these events, moments and dialog may be deliberately coached or
manipulated out of the cast members of the show. The purpose of frankenbiting is
to create or enhance dramatic tension and conflict to better appeal to the
viewing audience.
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FULL-LENGTH FEATURE, FULL-LENGTH FILM, or FULL-LENGTH MOVIE
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See FEATURE FILM
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FULL SHOT
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See WIDE SHOT
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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GAFFER
(AKA: CHIEF LIGHTING TECHNICIAN)
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Heads the electrical department on a movie or television production. The gaffer
oversees the execution of the lighting design, supervising the setup of lights or
other light sources for each shot in the production. Gaffers could be involved in
creating the lighting design, either designing by themselves or in collaboration
with their directors of photography,
if the DPs are not the sole designers, which occasionally they are.
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GAFFER TAPE
(AKA: GAFF TAPE, GAFFER'S TAPE, CAMERA TAPE, or SPIKE TAPE)
|
A tape used in movie, TV, video, and theatrical productions, as well as still
photography. It is a heavy cotton cloth pressure-sensitive tape that has strong
adhesiveness. Gaffer tape is designed for temporary usage so when removed it does
not harm what it is applied to and it leaves no residue, even if it has been applied
to surface or object for an extended period of time. It is used to secure things
together and is frequently used to tape cords to the floor or wall so they do not
become a hazard to the artists and crew members who need to work in the areas where
the cords are. Gaffer tape is most commonly matte black (or dark gray) but also
comes in other colors, which are often used to "spike" where items on
a set (movie, TV, or theatrical) are to be place, and used as "marks"
(in movie or TV productions) where actors are to move to or to stand.
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GO AGAIN or COME BACK ON THAT
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I didn't understand or catch
that; please repeat the message."
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GO FOR (NAME THAT WAS CALLED)
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo response from a crew member when
her or his name was called by another, who said, perhaps, "John for Jane."
Jane would respond, "Go for Jane," meaning, "I hear you calling for
me, what do you need to tell or ask me?"
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GOFER
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A lower-rung production assistant
or personal assistant who
runs a variety of personal errands and tasks for production staff or talent.
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GOING BIGGER
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For an actor to "go bigger" means he or she intensifies or exaggerates
whatever emotional state her or his character is relaying. It does not mean to
"get louder" (though in some instances volume may be part of the
equation). It simply means to amplify whatever emotional state is in question,
slightly, greatly, or somewhere in between.
The director may also say "give more."
*as opposed to pulling back
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GOING OFF WALKIE
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for when a crew member is turning off
her or his walkie-talkie for any reason during the production day. The crew person
will simply say something like, "Jane here, going off walkie."
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GOING SMALLER
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See PULLING BACK
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GOOD CHECK
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo that is a response to affirm to another
crew member who has called "walkie check" over the system to be sure their
unit is working that it is indeed working.
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GREENLIGHT
|
To approve a movie or television project and allow it to go into production. The
authoritative perogatives of executives and movie, television, streaming or independent
production studios, or of executive producers for independent film productions.
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GREENSCREEN
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The technology of placing actors or objects in front of an evenly lit
greenscreen background. Through computer programming, the green is then
rendered invisible and other footage or images can be imposed as the background
imagery. Greenscreen work now replaces the older bluescreen because it has been
proven easier to separate key green from other foreground colors. The general
technology, regardless of color, is known as chromakeying. Greenscreen work can
also be completely computer graphic generated, rather then being shot on a set
with a greenscreen backdrop, so long as the background is pure green. Computer
generated characters that are blended with real life footage, are an example of
such totally graphic generated greenscreen footage to superimpose over other
footage.
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GREEN ROOM
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In both television and theatre productions (not so much movie productions) the
greenroom is a room or designated space in a back stage or close by area that
serves as a waiting room and lounge space for performers before, during (when
they aren't "on") and sometimes after a performance, especially in
theatre if there is another performance of the show later in the same day. The
origin of the term is usually attributed to the account of the rooms
historically being painted green, though green rooms are rarely, if ever, green,
today.
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GUEST ROLE, GUEST SPOT, or GUEST STAR
|
Any supporting role on episodic television that is key to the plot of an
episode or a story arch. Most guests roles are for one episode only, but some
characters return in subsequent episodes (making them recurring). The character
is usually in multiple scenes during the episode, but may only be in one if it
is a key scene for the story, or especially because of the star-status of the
actor. For instance, a cameo by a particularly famous and successful actor may
be billed as a Guest-Star appearance (and with a hefty paycheck) when it would
otherwise be considered Day Player work at, or only a little more than,
SAG/AFTRA scale (the minimum allowable
wage).
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GILLIGAN CUT
|
See SMASH CUT
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GUIDED IMPROV
(AKA: GUIDED IMPROVIZATION or GUDIED IMPROVIZATIONAL ACTING)
|
A form of improvizational acting where
the actors have no script of lines but do have facts, details, or goals that are
to be reached (perhaps all of these), so that they are not free to go wherever
they wish with their improvisations, but still are free in terms of their lines and
usually some big measure of the emotional life of their characters in the scenes or
the story.
A situation where this most prevalent is with actors who have been hired by medical
schools or law schools to play the roles of patients, clients, or witnesses, armed
with fact sheets but no script and expected to improvise based on the details they've
been given to help teach the medical or law students.
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HEAD WRITER
|
The top ranking writer for a television program, in charge of the
writers room, who is virtually
always either an executive producer
or a co-executive producer, and
if an executive producer, may also be the show runner.
The head writer may be also be a supervising producer
rather than exec or co-exec producer.
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HEADSHOT
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A close-up or medium close-up portrait photograph of a performer, usually in portait
orientation, and usually 8"x10" sized, submitted with the performer's
résumé at audition.
Traditionally headshots were in black-and-white, but that custom is generally out
of favor for color prints.
Some producers and/or
CDs may also accept 5"x7" or
4"x6" headshot prints.
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HOLLYWOOD REVERSE
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See REVERSAL SHOT
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HONEYWAGON
|
A port-a-potty
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HOT BRICK
|
A fully-charged battery for any piece of equipment on a movie or TV production.
Most often referring to a walkie-talkie battery, but also to a camera battery, or
any other battery for any equipment.
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HOT SET
(AKA: LOCKED SET)
|
A movie or TV set (sound stage or
on location) where shooting a
particular scene, or shooting in general, has not concluded and set pieces, props,
and all other visual conditions must not be moved or altered so that when shooting
resumes continuity is not compromised.
Only authorized persons may be on the set for any reason, and even fewer are
authorized to touch or move anything.
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IMPROVIZATION
(AKA: IMPROV or IMPROVIZATIONAL ACTING)
|
The genre of acting that uses the art of improvising lines and scene development
on the spot without a script or previous preparation, or with very vague outlines
of one or both. The most important element is that no author has written any
specific lines for the actors to say, even if intent has been previously determined
to one extent or another.
The most prolific examples of improv are improv comedy troupes such as the famed
Second City, which originated out of
Chicago, The Upright Citizens Brigade,
also founded in Chicago, or The Groundlings
(Los Angeles).
But there is also dramatic improv acting both on stage and in movie or TV productions.
Often in the latter two there will only be moments that are improvised rather than
whole productions. It may be as simple as an actor improvising one line in a scene,
or some, most or all of a particular scene may be improvised.
Actors may also be hired by medical schools or law schools to play the roles of
patients, clients, or witnesses, armed with fact sheets but no script and expected
to improvise based on the details they've been given to help teach the medical or
law students. This may be referred to as "guided improv."
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IN THE CAN
|
Usually referring to movie projects, "in the can" means the movie (or
other production project) has reached final cut
and is awaiting release or disposition of release. In the case of a television or
on-line program (episodes or whole seasons), it is awaiting broadcast, cablecast,
streaming, or upload to on-line availability.
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IN PRODUCTION
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See PRODUCTION
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INDEPENDENT FILM
(AKA: INDY or INDY FILM)
|
Any movie not produced by a major studio. Indies may have a big budget, going
into the millions, or may have a small budget to no-budget. The ones with a
bigger budget may have well-known actors attached, even "stars,"
often why the producers were able to raise large liquid capital to make the film,
because a distribution deal and a box-office return is more likely with a
high-profile actor or two attached. Small or no-budget movies are less likely
to have known actors and less likely to be
SAG/AFTRA union productions. Small
indies are produced for the film festivals or other non-commercial purposes
including simply the love of the craft.
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INDUSTRIAL FILM
(AKA: INDUSTRIAL, INDUSTRIAL MOVIE, INDUSTRIAL VIDEO, INSTRUCTIONAL FILM,
INSTRUCTIONAL MOVIE, INSTRUCTIONAL VIDEO)
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A movie or video produced for a business, institution, organization, industry,
or some other form of organization, with the purpose of any or all of instruction,
education, orientation, or persuasion. Such projects are not produced for, nor
intended for, commercial sale or use, but are for consumption by the specific
intended audiences in an exclusive and non-public fashion.
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INSERT
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See CUTAWAY
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INSTRUCTIONAL FILM, INSTRUCTIONAL MOVIE, or INSTRUCTIONAL VIDEO
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See INDUSTRIAL FILM
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INT.
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A part of the slug line at the top of a scene in a script for a movie, TV show,
or video production, that indicates that the scene will take place in an
interior location, i.e. inside a building or other enclosed structure, such as
a car, airplane, etc.
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INTERIOR SCENE
(AKA: "INT.")
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A scene from a screenplay, teleplay, or video script that happens inside a
building or other enclosed structure, such as a car, airplane, etc.
Though the term applies to where the scene takes place in the universe of the
script, not where it is actually shot, it is unlikely in modern productions for
an interior scene to be shot outdoors. In early film making, sets were built
outside with three walls and no ceiling or roof in order to utilize sunlight as
the lighting for the shoot, often with portable side walls that could be
removed to even further utilize sunlight. Such technique has long been
antiquated and unnecessary with ever advancing studio lighting technology.
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INTERIOR SHOOT
(AKA: "INT.")
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A shoot for a movie, TV show, or video production that is done on a sound
stage, or inside any other building or human-made structure, rather than in
the outdoors.
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INTERNAL DIALOGUE
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Thought, emotions, and attitudes conveyed to the audience by an actor through
physicality, facial expressions and/or other movement, without the use of dialogue.
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INTIMACY CHOREOGRAPHER
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See INTIMACY COORDINATOR
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INTIMACY CHOREOGRAPHY
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See INTIMACY COORDINATION
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INTIMACY COORDINATOR
(AKA: INTIMACY DIRCTOR or INTIMACY CHOREOGRAPHER)
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The person who designs and arranges the movements and actions of
actors in sequences of sexual intimacy on screen between characters,
be it graphic or more subtle. The goal and purpose is to create an
environment for the actors that is safe and does not cross any
inappropriate boundaries while still creating a performance that
rings true.
One major purpose is to avoid the sense of, or the actual perpetration,
of sexual harassment or sexual abuse, whether that might come from
one of the performers involved, from the director, or from anyone
else on the production team.
The other major purpose is to create an environment that, beyond
the avoidance of sexual harassment or abuse, still otherwise is an
environment that fosters he feeling os safety and comfort for all
involved, especially the performers acting out the intimacy.
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INTIMACY COORDINATION
(AKA: INTIMACY DIRECTION or INTIMACY CHOREOGRAPHY)
|
The design and instruction of movements and actions for actors in
sequences of sexual intimacy on screen between characters, be it
graphic or more subtle. The goal and purpose is to create an environment
for the actors that is safe and does not cross any inappropriate
boundaries while still creating a performance that rings true.
One major purpose is to avoid the sense of, or the actual perpetration,
of sexual harassment or sexual abuse, whether that might come from
one of the performers involved, from the director, or from anyone
else on the production team.
The other major purpose is to create an environment that, beyond
the avoidance of sexual harassment or abuse, still otherwise is an
environment that fosters he feeling os safety and comfort for all
involved, especially the performers acting out the intimacy.
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INTIMACY DIRECTOR
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See INTIMACY COORDINATOR
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INTIMACY DIRECTION
|
See INTIMACY COORDINATION
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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J CUT
(AKA: J EDITS)
|
A type of split editing technique in movie, TV, or video editing where the audio
from the following scene or shot overlaps the picture from the preceding scene or
shot, so that the audio edit happens before the visual edit, so that it starts
over the end of that previous scene or shot.
The J cut is a soft transition, much like a lap dissolve,
from one scene to the next, or one shot to the next. It is used frequently as part
of reversal edits for scenes when
characters are in conversations that have been shot
over the shoulder.
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JOHN FOR JANE
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo when one person is asking to speak to
another specific person on the walkie-talkie network, as in "John for
Jane."
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JUMPCUT
(or JUMP CUT)
|
A cut involving an interruption to the continuity of time and
action, where the image or images in the first shot closely match
those of the next shot, but it seems as if the image or images have
suddenly moved or changed size, or both, and that an instant, or
more, of time has been lost.
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KEN BURNS EFFECT
|
A pan and/or zoom effect used in motion picture production from still
photography or graphics. It is a technique to place still imagery in motion
pictures but, due to the usually slow zooms and pans (as well as fade-ins,
fade-outs and cross-dissolves), keeps the incorporation of the stills from being
static. The effect can be achieved by actually physically moving a camera across
an actual printed photo/graphic or zooming in/out of the image; however most
digital movie editing software have applications to achieve the Ken Burns Effect.
The name of the effect comes from Documentary Director
Ken Burns' extensive
use of the effect in his documentaries, but the effect predates his work. He
credits Documentary Filmmaker
Jerome Liebling as
teaching him, but the process goes back to the early 1960's, at least.
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KEY MATTING
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See CHROMA KEYING
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KEYING (RE: WALKIE-TALKIE)
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for when someone is accidentally
holding down the Talk button on his or her unit, sending out unintentional dialog
or sound.
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KILL
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To turn off a piece of equipement or machinery.
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KILL YOUR DARLINGS
(AKA: KILL MY DARLINGS, KILL MY LITTLE DARLINGS, KILL YOUR LITTLE DARLINGS,
MURDER MY DARLINGS, MURDER MY LITTLE DARLINGS, MURDER YOUR DARLINGS, MURDER YOUR
LITTLE DARLINGS, ETC.)
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A poetically phrased editorial edict attributed to novelist William Faulkner. To
"Kill your darlings" means, in the literary sense, to go back during the
revision process and cut any elements, any words, sentences, passages, perhaps
entire chapters, that though you, as the author, love, you must concede do not
serve the work, and may be detrimental to it.
In the terms of film making or television production this will mostly apply to the
director and/or the
screenwriter (or
executive producer) but will also
apply to anyone else on the creative team: any of the myriad of designers, or
anyone contributing creative input, and translates into whatever creative elements
such are responsible for.
see "How to 'Kill Your Darlings' and Survive the Process," by Ruthanne Reid.
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L CUT
(AKA: L EDIT)
|
A type of split editing technique in movie, TV, or video editing where the audio
from the preceding scene or shot overlaps the picture from the following scene or
shot, so that the audio edit happens after the visual edit, so that it continues
over the beginning of that next scene or shot.
The L cut is a soft transition, much like a lap dissolve,
from one scene to the next, or one shot to the next. It is used frequently as part
of reversal edits for scenes when
characters are in conversations that have been shot
over the shoulder.
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LAP DISSOLVE
|
A transition in a movie, TV program or video which is a double-exposure of a
fade-out of one scene or shot overlapping a fade-in of the next scene or shot,
making the former seem to dissolve into the latter. Though they can be used for
transitions from one shot to the next within a scene, they are far more common as
transitions between scenes.
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LATENIGHT TALK SHOW
|
A talk show that appears late at night,
usually no earlier than 11:30 pm, (after the 11:00 news, if on Broadcast TV), and
usually Monday through Friday nights.
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LEAD ROLE, LEAD CHARACTER, or LEAD ACTOR
(AKA: MALE LEAD, FEMALE LEAD, LEADING MAN, LEADING WOMAN, or simply "THE LEAD")
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The most important role/character in a movie or TV program. In some cases there are
more than one lead role, such as in a romance film or romantic comedy, where both
"the guy" and "the girl" are equally important ‐‐ think
Sleepless in Seattle.
Also, some movies or TV shows feature an ensemble cast where several characters are
considered as leads, such as in The Monuments Men
or The West Wing.
The lead role, or roles, will be the character, or characters, the story is about
or centered around, and the lead tends to be one of the, if not the, driving
force behind the plot.
Of course, lead roles are always principal roles.
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LETTERBOX
(AKA: LETTERBOX SCREEN. LETTERBOXING)
|
To reformat the
aspect ratio
of a movie, TV program, or video to reduce the width to fit onto the
new screen aspect ratio that has a smaller width. This leaves space,
that is almost always black, above and below the images of the footage.
If the original height of the footage matched the height of the screen,
the screen would be too narrow for the whole width of the images.
See PILLERBOX
for the similar reformatting, but dealing with reducing for height
that fits.
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LIBRARY FOOTAGE
|
See STOCK FOOTAGE
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LIGHT FOCUS
(AKA: LIGHTING FOCUS)
|
The area of the set that is lit by a specific light or groups of
lights.
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LIGHT SOURCE
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1) on screen, the direction and quality of light as it hits a scene and the
subjects in the scene.
2) the actual source of illumination of light for a given scene or situation.
It may be electrically generated, created by some sort of flame or other natural
source, such as sun light, moon light, or star light. On a movie or TV set, it
is electrically generated, with or without diffusion of other manipulations.
At an exterior location, it is usually natural light, which is most likely to
be sun light, somehow filtered, diffused or reflected; sometime this natural
lighting is enhanced by an electronic source.
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LIGHTING CONTINUITY
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The degree in which lighting in a scene is consistent in terms of quality and
perceived directionality from shot to shot. Also the degree in which the overall
lighting in the film is consistant from scene to scene, wherever such continuity
is necessary.
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LINE PRODUCER
|
For both movies and televison, line producers are next in rank after the
co-executive producer. They are
the hands-on managers of production staff and daily production operations. Line
producers hire (and usually fire) production staff. Usually they receive the credit:
"produced by (....)."
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LINE READING
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The manner in which the actor says the line as the character, the emotional and
attitudinal interpretation and expression given to the line as performed. It also
touches on the pacing and any pauses between two or more words or portions of the
line.
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LINE STUDY
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The process actors go through to learn their lines. It can be as simple as the
act of memorizing the lines, but may also mean the actors work to interpret the
characters' emotional and mental motivations for the things they say
*(see script analysis).
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LOCATION SHOOT
(AKA: ON LOCATION)
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Filming or DV recording that takes place in a location that isn't fabricated
for the production (i.e.: not a soundstage or an exterior structure that was
built by the art department), but is a real area or structure. Very often it is
an outdoor location (Exterior shooting), it may be a famous or otherwise
well-known location, or a real place such as a home, an office, a store, a
hospital, etc.
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LOCKED DRAFT
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See FINAL DRAFT
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LOCKED SET
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See HOT SET
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LOCKED UP
(AKA: TO LOCK IT UP)
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A set or location is locked up when it is declared a
hot, or locked, set. All cast, crew,
and staff are on alert.
"Lock it up" means "Don't let anyone unauthorized through, and don't
touch anything." Very frequently this command goes over the walkie-talkies to
PAs stationed at strategic points on the set or on location.
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LOCKED EDIT
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See FINAL CUT
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LOCK IT UP
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See LOCKED UP
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LOCKED VERSION
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See FINAL CUT
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LOGLINE
(AKA: LOG LINE)
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A short, one or two sentence summary of a script (screen or stage)
or book that succinctly describes the protagonist, the conflict,
and any emotional hook. It might give a sense of the theme, but is
more likely to suggest the premise.
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LONG SHOT
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See WIDE SHOT
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LONG TAKE
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A shot set up of continuous shooting with no cuts that lasts several
minutes to many minutes and often involves complicated movements of
the camera and actors, sometimes over a span of distance from the
start of the shot until the end.
The famous "walk-and-talk" scenes in the TV show,
The West Wing
or the long, dramatic
cold opens
in earlier seasons of
ER
are two good examples of long takes.
When there is a lot of action and movement in long takes they are,
by necessity well-planned with the actions of the camera, crew, and
actors meticulously choreographed. The pressure is on for the whole
team because one error by anyone and the whole shot must be reset
and the done all over again from the beginning.
Some long takes are more static with the actors staying in one
location, though there may be substantial movement within that frame,
such as many
master shots,
which are usually broken up in the editing room with
close-ups,
etc., of specific actors during the scene. The camera in such
master shots may not move much or at all. In some cases, the
camera operator will have a
steady-cam
and will move the focus of their lense between actors during the
long take. When no close-ups or
medium shots,
etc., are cut in, a master shot is a long take.
*A multi-cam
shoot of a longer scene can technically be called a "long take,"
but since there will be cuts between different angels from different
cameras, it is usually not referred to as such.
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LOOPING
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See ADR
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LOW-BUDGET PRODUCTION/MOVIE
(AKA: LOW-PAY MOVIE PRODUCTION/MOVIE)
|
A non-union (i.e. non-SAG/AFTRA)
independent movie production or video with a budget for the production that in
general is low. In accordance, the pay for all or most participants, especially
the actors, is at low wages, sometimes simply token stipends. There is no
minimum salary required.
This is not to be confused with a SAG/AFTRA Ultra-low Pay contract production,
which is sanctioned by the union, but has minimum wage requirements and various
rules that the producers must follow.
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LYRIC VIDEO
|
A music video
of a song, typically produced for veiwing on such services as
YouTube or
Vimeo, that shows the lyrics of
the song on screen as they are sung in the recording. Usually there
is either one still image throughout the length of the video, but
it may also consist of a montage of photos. Occasionally there may
also be live action footage or animation.
Lyric videos may be official videos, produced by or commisioned by
the artists or their record companies, but are also, frequently,
unauthorized productions created by fans.
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MacGUFFIN
|
An object that the main character or characters pursue for which is a plot devise
of the script but for which the nature of the object has no true importance to the
story. Any object would work just as well as the MacGuffin: jewelry or money or
bricks of gold in a heist movie would all work equally. In the other hand, The
Sword in the King Arthur tale or The One Ring in
Lord of the Rings are
not replaceable as they are integral to the story and thus are not MacGuffins.
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MAGIC LIGHT
(AKA: MAGIC HOUR, or GOLDEN HOUR)
|
Natural sunlight just before dusk and just after dawn that gives a movie scene a
warm, soft look that is golden-orange in color. These times of day are known as the
"Magic Hours"; again, they occur for that half hour before sunset and
after sunrise. They're also known as the "Golden Hours."
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MAKE THE DAY
|
During the shoot of a video, motion picture or television production,
"making the day" means to get all shots done that are on the schedule
for the day.
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MARTINI SHOT
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The last shot of the day.
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MASTER SHOT
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A wide shot with the camera positioned
far enough away that all or most action in the scene, as well as all or most of the
set for the scene, are in the frame of the shot. A good example of a master shot
would be a scene of a family eating dinner, where all characters at the table are
in the shot. Close-ups of individuals might be intercut into the scene in post
production.
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MASK
(as in to obscure a view)
|
The act of putting up an object or material (masking) that blocks the view of
anything from the camera lense.
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MASKING
(as in obscuring a view)
|
1) as a noun: Any object or material that blocks the view of
anything from the camera lense.
2) as a verb: the act of putting up an object or material to block the view of
anything from the camera lense.
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MCU
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See MEDIUM CLOSE-UP
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MEDIUM CLOSE-UP
(AKA: MCU, sometimes MEDIUM SHOT)
|
A film, video, or still photography image where the subject image is large enough
in the frame to be the obvious focus, but does not take up most or all of the frame.
The camera is pulled back enough from the subject that they or it is not in
close-up, but still featured in the
frame. Sometimes the affect is achieved from using a zoom lense.
Sometimes also referred to as a medium shot, though medium shot is more often used
when there are multiple subjects, such as several people or several items.
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MEDIUM SHOT
(sometimes MEDIUM CLOSE-UP)
|
A film, video, or still photography image where,usually, multiple subjects are large
enough in the frame to be the obvious focus, but do not take up most or all of the
frame. The camera is pulled back enough from the subjects that they are not in
close-up, but still featured in the
frame. Sometimes the affect is achieved from using a zoom lense.
Sometimes also referred to as a medium close-up, though medium close-up is more
likely used when there is only one subject.
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MONOLOGUE or MONOLOG
(AKA: SOLILOQUY)
|
An extended delivery of spoken word, which can be considered at least a long
paragraph in length, spoken by an actor who is often alone in a scene or shot. Even
when other characters are in the scene and are shown, there may only be quick
reaction-shot cutaways of them.
Monologues are much rarer in movies and television programs than they are in stage
plays, but they do occur. Often they will be a narrative
voice-over. Most frequently they will be
key moments at a dramatic high spot in a movie, such as
Jack Nicholson's speech from the
witness stand as Col. Jessup in
A Few Good Men or
Tom Hanks' soliloquy, toward the
end of
Castaway, as his Chuck
Nolan pines over the loss of his true love, Kelly
(Hellen Hunt).
Auditions for screen productions, including screentest
auditions, may require, or at least allow, actors to perform a monologue that would
be considered relevant to the role or roles the actor seeks. There probably would
be a time restriction in length (such as one minute) and there might be a request
for contrasting dramatic intent (i.e.: dramatic and comic).
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MONTAGE
(SOMETIMES: SERIES OF SHOTS)
|
A series of short clips, of still photos, or a combination of the
two, that are used in a movie, program (TV, streaming, or web), or
video, to tell a story, or advance the larger story, in a condensed
fashion. A good example is the montage towards the beginning of the
animated feature, Up,
which, in just a few minutes, tells the story of Carl's and Ellie's
life together from meeting as children, marrying, and growing old
together, with the sequence ending with Carl as a widower. The
movie then moves on with the main plot of the story.
Though sometimes referred to a "series of shots," that
term is more appropriate for a sequence that is more random and
does not focus on conveying a story, such as the opening sequence
of a series (TV, streaming, or web).
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MOS
|
To shoot a scene "mos" means to shoot without purposefully recording
associated sound to the action. Audio may be recorded off a camera's on-board
mic but will not be used. Omitting or not utilizing sound from a shot, when the
subjects don't speak or create useful sound can save time and relieve the film
crew of certain requirements, such as remaining silent during a take. In
post-production, a mos take may have added to it one or more of miscellaneous
sounds recorded on location, music, voice-overs, ADR (Additional Dialogue
Recording), or sound effects. In production reports "MOS" is used to
indicate that the shot has no synchronous audio track.
"MOS" stands for "motor only sync" or "motor only
shot." Although legend purports that Director
Erich Von Stroheim couldn't
pronounce "without sound" correctly due to his accent so he said
"Mit out sound."
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MOVE IN
(AKA: DOLLY IN)
|
As suggested, to move the camera forward and closer to the subject of the shot.
This is usually not used to describe zooming in with the lense, but rather the
action of actually moving the camera closer.
The camera may be handheld, shoulder-mounted, on a dolly truck, or any other means
by which the camera is put into motion.
*see also dolly shot
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MOVIE EDITOR
|
See EDITOR
|
MOVIE TRAILER
(AKA: TRAILER)
|
A short film or video, shown in movie theatres, on TV, and on-line, using specifically
picked moments from a film to promote said film to potential audiences. The trailers
for TV are usually commercials and thus are no longer than 60 seconds, and are sometimes
only 30 seconds, or even shorter. The trailers shown in movie houses and on-line
can be longer, sometimes even several minutes. The longer trailers may include
soundbytes from cast members, the
director, or others on the production team.
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MP4
|
A compressed movie file format used primarily for on-line streaming. The MP4 is
compressed in size considerably from the uncompressed file version and is thus
easier for computers and smart TVs to download and play.
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MULTIPLE-CAMERA PRODUCTION
(AKA: MULTI-CAM PRODUCTION, MULTI-CAM, MULTIPLE-CAMERA SHOOT, MULTI-CAM SHOOT,
MULTIPLE-CAMERA PROGRAM, or MULTI-CAM PROGRAM,)
*(historically "three-camera....")
|
A method of movie, television or video production where all or most scenes are shot
using several cameras, all focusing on different elements of the scene, usually
meaning different actors in the scene, or different angles of the same actor or
actors.
It is the standard for live studio television programming such as news programs,
talk shows and game shows, with the first being a live broadcast or cablecast and
the latter two video tape for later broadcast/cablecast. It is also the standard
method to produce television situation comedies, which are also usually shot in
front of studio audiences.
The typical method of multiple-camera shooting will have two cameras left and right
in the camera area (occasionally including portions of the scene area), which will angle
in to shoot close-up shots ("crosses") of characters primary in the scene,
keeping trained on these actors during the performance. Meanwhile one or two cameras
will shoot master shots.
Multiple-camera shoots facilitated a great expedience and continuity
by capturing multiple images and actions during one performance take of the scene.
It eliminates the need to do multiple shot set-ups, and greatly reduces the amount of takes
necessary to capture the different action elements of a moment in the story line ‐‐
I.E.: there are much fewer starts and stops, and no waits as the crew re-sets
everything for the next shot set-up of the same moment. And, as suggested above,
it almost virtually eliminates the chance of continuity errors.
For live studio television productions, like game shows or talk shows, multiple-camera
shooting simply creates a more interesting visual look, by being able to switch to
different cameras to better capture interesting things happening on the sound stage.
In these situations there may also be cameras, often shoulder mounted steady-cams,
that will shoot images of the audience reacting to the action on stage. Think
Ellen or
Jerry Springer.
Such multiple-camera shoots do constrain choices for lighting and camera angles.
The lighting has to be more general, and usually brighter, to assure good light for
all the areas of the stage. Some camera angles are impossible, at least in scripted
fictional shows, because of the risk that other cameras or portions of the studio
that are not part of the set come into frame, thus
breaking the fourth wall.
There is more flexibility in terms of camera angles on the set of a game show or
talk show, since the fact that it is on a sound stage is acknowledged by everyone,
so there is no fourth wall to break.
In scripted multiple-camera television productions the directors will likely
be on the floor; choices of shots from each of the cameras will be chosen during
the editing process.
In live broadcast or live studio audience studio multiple-camera television
productions (news, game shows and talk shows), the directors are usually in the
control booth calling which camera (and its shot) will be the one going to the
broadcast or the master recording, at any given moment. Though all camera shots are
recorded throughout the take or the broadcast for shows that will be distributed
later rather airing live, in case there is a need to re-edit the master recording,
substituting one or more shots.
In dramatic TV series or TV movies productions may occasionally employ
multiple camera shooting, usually at specific locations, or for particular sequences
or scenes. This will be more likely a special circumstance, with such productions
far more likely to shoot most of the episode and the production in general as
single-camera.
Historically, multi-camera shoots were "three-camera shoots," as three
cameras were traditionally used. Now at least four cameras are very frequently used.
Though on a movie production set, multi-camera can simply mean two or more.
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MURDER YOUR DARLINGS
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See KILL YOUR DARLINGS
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MUSIC SCORE
(AKA: SCORE or SCORED MUSIC)
|
Music (most often original instrumental music) used to enhance or influence a
particular ambience, mood or emotional feeling for a moment, a scene, or the
overall movie or episode.
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MUSIC VIDEO
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A video that is shot on digital or analogue video, or on film, that features a
musical recording. Usually the artist or band who recorded the music is shown in the
video, often performing the song, and most frequently in a pantomime performance
set to the finished studio recording. The music is also usually a single from an
album by the artist, and the main purpose of the video is to promote sales of the song
and the album it is from.
Music vides also often show scenes that illustrate the lyrics or meaning of the
song. The artists may or may not appear in such renditions. Often actors or models
appear in such videos. Some videos show a mixture of the artist performaning the
song and illustrative footage.
In the 1960s and early 1970s these videos were known as "promotional clips."
The first promotional clips that were shot specifically as their own entities, what
can assertively be called the first Music Videos, were for The Beatles' double-A-side
single "Paperback Writer" and "Rain," which were shot and
released in 1966. Before that, any musical clips that were used in this fashion
(usually on variety shows),
were excerpts from movies, such as clips of sequences from musical
movies or rock-&-roll movies featuring the likes of Elvis Presley,
or, frankly, The Beatles.
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NARRATIVE FILM
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A film that tells a story (usually, but not necessarily, fictional) with
characters who act and usually speak to illustrated the story line. The
characters are portrayed by actors, trained animals, or are animated
representations of such, or even anthropomorphism of objects, with any voicing
done by human voice actors. The story is presented as reality regardless of any
fantastical elements of the supernatural, science fiction, fantasy, magic
realism, etc.
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NO-BUDGET PRODUCTION/MOVIE
(AKA: NO-PAY PRODUCTION/MOVIE)
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A non-union (i.e. non-SAG/AFTRA)
independent movie production or video with no budget for the production. In
accordance, all the participants, actors and crew are volunteering their time and
efforts to the project with no financial compensation. Union members can only
participate in such projects in the narrowest of circumstances that all involved
official acts of charity or some political action situations.
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NON-UNION PRODUCTION
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A film, video or webcast production that is produced without the use of members of
any of the professional unions associated with movie or video production. None of
the crew or cast members are in any of the associated unions. All such productions
are independent productions (i.e.: not associated with any corporate movie studios,
nor broadcast, cable and streaming networks). Typically such productions are either
low-budget or
no-budget productions. In some
rare cases, the producers pay the cast and crew reasonably well.
"Non-union production" does not necessarily mean "non-commercial
venture"; sometimes the producers do attempt to market the finish product, and
are not always unsuccessful.
In some circumstances SAG/AFTRA actors can
appear in a non-union production, but it must meet narrowly specific criteria as
stipulated by SAG/AFTRA, and it cannot be a
feature-length film.
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NON-VERBAL
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See INTERNAL DIALOGUE
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NOTES
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Critiques, instructions, and FYIs from various members of the production team to
other members. Notes are intended to improve and enhance performances and the
production.
Directors will give notes to actors and production staff. Designers may give notes
to directors and other production staff, and sometimes actors. In television,
the executive producer, who runs
the show, will give notes to any and all production staff and cast. In both movies
and televisions, studio executives usually give notes to the producers and directors.
Kudos about what was done well also fall under the term, "notes."
Notes will also be given during any post mortem
meetings.
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OFF-BOOK
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Actors are "off-book" when they have their lines committed to memory and
do not need to refer to their scripts.
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OFF WALKIE
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for any time a crew member has
his or her walkie-talkie turned off during the production day.
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OFF-SCREEN CHARACTER
(AKA: OFF SCREEN CHARACTER, or UNSEEN CHARACTER)
|
A character in a movie, TV, streaming, or on-line production who is
not on screen, either during a particular scene or for the length of
the program. The character's voice may be heard, or they may be
a character who is only spoken of but never appears in production
on screen or by audio. The character who is only referred to but
never appears may or may not be significant to the story, but
usually plays some significant part in at least one aspect of the
program's plot line if not the overall program.
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ON IT
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I understand what you
want and I'm working on it."-- Only to be used if the task has begun,
otherwise, the response should be "10-4" or "copy" to indicate
understanding of the task but that it hasn't been started.
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ON-LINE AUDITION
(AKA: ELECTRONIC AUDITION, INTERNET AUDITION, ONLINE AUDITION, ON LINE AUDITION, WEB AUDITION)
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A live audition
with the casting person or people in one physical location and the
auditioning performer in another, done via computer link-up over
the internet (aka: world wide web) through a remote-networking
videotelephony software such as
Apple Facetime,
Skype,
Webex, or
Zoom.
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ON-LINE PRODUCTION
(AKA: STREAMING PRODUCTION, or WEB PRODUCTION)
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1) Productions that are produced to be view via the internet,
either by downloading from a server to one's computer or smart device or streaming
to one's computer, smart device or on one's TV via a streaming device, such as
Apple TV,
Fire TV,
or Roku TV, through a streaming service
such as
Amazon Prime Video,
Apple TV+,
Hulu,
or Netflix.
Also productions meant to be viewed on websites such as from a domain owned by
the producer or on such websites as YouTube, as
well as in podcast form (which
may be either streamed or downloaded).
2) the production process of making any such programming.
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ON-LINE SERIES
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See WEB SERIES
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ON-LINE TELEVISION
(AKA: ON-LINE TV, STREAMING TELEVISION [TV], or WEB TELEVISION [TV])
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Television programming made up of scripted and unscripted productions that is
uploaded to a server and can be downloaded for viewing on a computer or a smart
device, or streamed to a computer, smart device, or a television through the
facility of streaming equipment, such as
Apple TV,
Fire TV,
or Roku TV, through a streaming service
such as
Amazon Prime Video,
Apple TV+,
Hulu,
or Netflix.
On-line tv programing may also be viewed at websites such as on a domain owned by
the producer or on such websites as YouTube, as
well as in podcast form (which
may either be streamed or downloaded)-- as opposed to Broadcast, Cable, and
Satellite TV.
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ON LOCATION
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See LOCATION SHOOT
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ONE-CAMERA TELEVISION PRODUCTION
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See SINGLE-CAMERA TELEVISION PRODUCTION
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"ONE NAME" FOR "ANOTHER NAME"
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo when one person is asking to speak to
another specific person on the walkie-talkie network, as in "John for Jane."
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OPEN AUDITION
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Any audition being held (for actors or any other performers) that is open in
general for anyone to audition, rather than for specific actors (etc.) being
called in. Usually there are no appointments set, but even appointment based
auditions can be considered "open" if anyone who calls can get a spot
as long as one is available. Call backs will not be "open," as the
production team is now being selective about whom they audition.
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OPTION
(As in ARTIST'S OPTION)
(AKA: OPTION CLAUSE)
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The option on an artist can mean several things.
1) For actors hired for a television or streaming series there will
be a clause ("the option clause") in their contract that
gives the producer, production company, or studio the exclusive
right to extend the contract for an additional time period, usually
a season or multiple of seasons. A typical example is that the actor
is initially hired for something like two seasons with an option for
two or three more. If the producer, et al, "picks up the
option" when that second season is finished, or near finished,
then the actor is committed to whatever the extension is. If the
option is not picked up, the actor is dropped from the cast and is
free from the contract, and likely at least temporarily is out of work.
For other artists the meaning above is similar, such as a recording
artist may sign a contact for two albums with an option on two
more, as an example.
2) When an actor has auditioned for a project they may be optioned,
which means that they have been put on a short list of candidates
for the role and the producers, et al, want the actor's availability
during the production dates for the project. Different producers and
productions may have options on the same actor, which will be ranked
as "First Option," "Second Option," etc., based
on the order the actor was optioned ‐‐
(see "What it means to be Optioned" at Casting 101).
Being optioned for a project does not mean the actor has been hired,
it simply means they are in the final, or close to final casting
process. There is likely to be at least one more
callback audition.
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OPTION
(As in TO OPTION A SCRIPT or SERIES)
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To "option" a
screenplay,
teleplay,
or series is to pay the author (or creator) for the exclusive option
to purchase the rights to produce the work in the future. The material
will by optioned by a producer, production house, or studio, and will
have an expiration date. During option period (often between six months
to two years, with the average being one year) the author/creator cannot
shop the work to anyone else.
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OPTION PERIOD
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The period of time that an
optioned
script or series cannot be shopped around by the writer/creator since
a producer, production house, or studio has payed for exclusive
option to produce the work. An option period typically is between
six months to two years, with the average being one year. After the
period expires the writer/creator is free to submit the work to others.
The option might also be renewed with the same entity.
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OVER-ACTING
(AKA: CHEWING THE SCENERY)
|
When actor gives a broad, hammy, over-the-top performances when such is not called
for. Often such a performance will up stage
any other actor in the scene.
Note 1: some roles or some projects, on the contrary, actually call for such
big, overbearing performances, especially if the role or material is comedic, or
stylized.
Note 2: sometimes, "over-acting" does not quite meet the heights of
"chewing scenery," but still may be too big for what is needed for the
moment; or simply means that the perfomance is not appearing like natural behavior.
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OVER THE SHOULDER SHOTS
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See REVERSAL SHOT
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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PA
|
See PRODUCTION ASSISTANT
See PERSONAL ASSISTANT
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PAN SHOT
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A movie shot taken where the camera is stationary (usually fixed on a tripod or
jib) and turns on an axes from left to right or vise versa for a shot that spans
a geographical area, such as the horizon, or a room. The shot motion may to some
extent be diagonal, but going from left to right or right to left must be the
main element of the movement. If the camera is not fixed in one spot but is
literally moves from left to right (right to left), meaning if the camera is in
side ways motion via the camera operator walking or otherwise moving from place
to another, that is not a pan shot but rather a tracking shot.
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PEDESTAL SHOT
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To moving the camera up or down while maintaining a stationary axis, i.e.: not
tilting the camera up or down, but actually moving the entire camera up or down.
The shot motion may to some extent be diagonal, but going up or down must be
the main element of the movement.
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PERIOD PROP
(AKA: period property)
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A prop
for a proudction that is specific to a time period in the past.
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PERIOD PIECE
(SOMETIMES: COSTUME DRAMA)
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A movie, television prodoction (broadcast, cable, or streaming),
play, novel, or short story that takes place in a time other than
what is current, espcially if more than a decade or so beforehand.
In movies, screen productions, or plays, a period peice may also be
referred to as a costume drama (even if a comedy) because the
appropriate historcal
costuming
is antiquated by current standards, espcially for stories that take
place more than a century in the past.
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PERSONAL ASSISTANT
(AKA: PA or GOFER)
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Personal assistants in a production are usually assigned to a particular talent
(actor or other performer) or one of various upper-echelon members of the production
team, such as the director, the line producer, the assistant director, the director
of photography, etc. to help meet that person's personal needs. These PA's may run
personal errands, drive the talent or production staff, get refreshments and food
from craft service, catering, or restaurants, or help with many behind-the-scenes personal
needs. Sometimes PA's may also be called "Gofers." Some of these duties
may cross over into the territory of duties performed by
production assistants, also
called "PA's," but personal assistants, again, usually are specifically
assigned to particular talent or production people, and their duties rarely if ever
are directly involved in production.
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PICK UP THE OPTION
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When a producer, production company, or studio exercises the
option clause
in an actor's contract and extends the contract for a predetermined
period of time.
Other artists have similar clauses, such as a record label may
pick up the option on a recording artist for one or more additional
albums.
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PICKUPS
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See ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
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PILLERBOX
(AKA: PILLERBOX SCREEN, PILLERBOXING)
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To reformat the
aspect ratio
of a movie, TV program, or video to reduce the height to fit onto
the new screen aspect ratio that has a smaller width. This leaves
space, that is almost always black, on the left and right of the
images of the footage. If the original width of the footage matched
the width of the screen, the screen would be too short for the whole
height of the images.
See LETTERBOX
for the similar reformatting, but dealing with reducing for width
that fits.s
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PILOT EPISODE
(AKA: PILOT)
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The first episode made for a broadcast, cable, streaming or web-based
television series, or a potential one. The usual purpose is to be
the prototype for the proposed series and is presented in hopes that
the network will be impressed by the pilot and will pick up, or
greenlight,
the project to be produced as a series. If greenlit, often the network,
especially a broadcast network, will not order a full season's worth
of following episodes, but rather a half-season or so.
Usually a web-based series will be independently produced and offered
on-line by the creators of the show, thus the pilot is simply the
first episode, and needing a greenlight from a network to produce
more is not necessary.
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POST MORTEM
(AKA: POST MORTEM MEETING or POSTPRODUCTION MEETING)
|
More common in televeision productions than movie productions, a post mortem is a
meeting of production staff after a production has wrapped ‐‐ in TV it would be when
the production of an episode has wrapped. The team discusses the successes and the
failures of the production and how to make improvements.
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POST PRODUCER
(AKA: POSTPRODUCTION PRODUCER)
|
Typically employed at a postproduction house, the post producer manages the
postproduction process, including
editing, color correction, grading and enhancing, the dubbing of all sound and music,
computer generated images, animation, other visual effects, and all opening and
closing titles.
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POSTPRODUCTION
(AKA: POST)
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The editing (choosing and assembling shots/scenes) and other work done on a
movie, TV show, or video after the end of principal photography. Besides the
basic editing to put the scenes and their chosen shots together in the correct
sequence, it will consist of other work to get the project to its final cut,
such as color correction, grading and enhancing or adding any and all of the
following components: sound, Foley sound, ADR (Automatic Dialogue Replacement),
music (themes, scores, & any sound-effect music such as music coming from a
radio in a scene), computer generated images, animation, other visual effects, and
opening & closing titles. Depending on the amount and complexity of the
components to be incorporated, post-production can take months, and in some
cases more than a year, to complete.
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POV
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I.E. "Point Of View"; A camera angle in which the camera shows the
visual perspective as seen from any particular person's or object's position.
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PREPRODUCTION
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The process of bringing the elements together to make a film, a TV show, or a
video production. Preproduction includes any and all of developing the script,
funding the project, recruiting the production team, auditioning and casting the
actors, finding the studios and locations where the production will be shot, and the
major organization and planning of shooting the movie, program, or video, once most
or all these previous elements are in place. It's also not uncommon for some hefty
portion of the promotional gameplan to be laid out in preproduction.
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PRIMETIME TELEVISION
(AKA: PRIMETIME TV)
|
The programming period of the week for Broadcast Television generally considered
to be 8:00 through 11:00 p.m. (U.S. Eastern Standard Time), every day of the week.
The programming aired during this period is generally television network
produced scripted productions such as dramas and comedies, along with unscripted
productions such as reality TV shows (like Survivor) and evening game
shows (like Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?), news magazines (like
60 Minutes), seasonal sports (think Monday Night Football), and
variety shows, though this latter genre has fallen out of fashion in the Third
Millennium. With few exceptions these programs are schedule to air once a week at
the same time each week.
Networks also show special programming that is not part of the regular scheduling,
such as special holiday programming (scripted movies or specials, variety specials,
concerts), mini-series, news magazine specials, special sporting events (like
The World Series or the Summer Olympics), special news coverage (major
breaking news, Presidential Conventions, The State of the Union, etc.), and major
awards shows (such as The Academy Awards).
Primetime is traditionally the period of time for brodcast TV with the most television
viewers, thus it is the block when networks and local TV stations can charge the most
for commercial advertising slots. The more popular a program, the high its ratings, the
more can be charged. The advent of cable and satellite television, and now streaming television
services is challenging this financial landscape by offering more alternatives
(especially with the on-demand capabilities of all three), yet, Primetime TV is still
lucrative.
*Technically, 60 Minutes begins its broadcast at 7:00 p.m on Sunday, but it
is still considered to be primetime programming.
For more, see "Everything You Need to Know About Primetime TV " at the balance.
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PRINCIPAL ACTOR
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An actor who is in a principal role.
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PRINCIPAL PHOTOGRAPHY
|
The major, significant filming or video recording of a movie, TV program, or
video involving the lead and supporting actors or, in a documentary, the subjects.
It can also mean the shooting of the major footage as opposed to supplemental
b-roll.
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PRINCIPAL ROLE
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A role for an actor in a movie, television program or video that is not an
extra or a background role. Any speaking or singing role is principal. Certain
types of non-speaking roles are also principal if the actions taken by the
performer are somehow specialized or critical to the story, such as dancers or
the non-speaking thug who kills the lead character's wife in Act
I then leads the lead character on a ten-minute,
on-screen chase through Queens. Certainly a lead character who is deaf, will be
"non-speaking," but will meet the classification of a principal role,
rather than being an extra or background.
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PRODUCER
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As a generic, umbrella term, the producers in both film and television are
those in charge of all operations, responsible for financial backing, budgets, the
hiring of production and administrative staff, the casting of performers, and all
technical, and logistic elements of the project. However, usually the director of
a film has artistic autonomy over the project, subject to the budgetary or marketing
prohibitions set by the producers.
As the specific term of "producer" as a level in the rank-and-file of
producer categories the producer is just below the supervising producer on the
totem pole and is further defined thusly:
In movie productions producers are responsible for physical facilities,
including equipment. A writer who has contributed a small amount to a screenplay,
in a U.S. production, and thus is not eligible by the
Writers Guild of America rules to be credited as
a writer will be titled as producer. In both cases the producer's credit will read:
"produced by (....)."
In some smaller indepedent movie, video or webcast productions, whether they
be low-budget,
no-budget, well-paying,
short-subject, or
feature-length, the "producer"
may be the project's auteur and
essentially the cheif executive producer
and may fill the roles of many of the varying classifications of producers as listed
below.
In television productions, as well as governing physical facilities and
equipment, like for a film, a TV producer may have written all or most of a series
episode or of a stand-alone project. Former
executive producers who have
stepped out of that role but still write for the show are categorized as producers,
as well. For episodic TV, producer credits are used for individual episodes and
usually require approval from the Writers Guild of America if work on the teleplay
is involved. Again, in all these cases, the producer's credit will read:
"produced by (....)."
There are many classifications of producers, in both film and television, listed
here in typical order of rank and authority:
- EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
- CO-EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
- LINE PRODUCER
- SUPERVISING PRODUCER
- PRODUCER *(see "As the specific term of 'producer,'" above)
- CO-PRODUCER
- COORDINATING PRODUCER/PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
- CONSULTING PRODUCER
- ASSOCIATE PRODUCER
- ASSISTANT PRODUCER
- CHASE PRODUCER
- SEGMENT PRODUCER
- FIELD PRODUCER
- EDIT PRODUCER
- POST PRODUCER
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Bear in mind that not all projects will employ all these categories of
producers. The larger the project, the more likely the army of producers
will be larger. Smaller productions will have fewer producers who take on
more of the spectrum of responisibilities
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PRODUCER/DIRECTOR
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See AUTEUR
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PRODUCTION
(AKA: PRODUCTION PERIOD)
(Related: IN PRODUCTION)
|
In general terms, it is the manifestation and actions of bringing together
the elements for, and the execution to, the final cut
of a movie, television program, video. or documentary.
The most common usage of the term is for the portion of the process of making
a film, video, TV program, or documentary that consists of any rehearsal and all
major or minor filming, video recording or shooting of live broadcast, of all action
or performances involving all actors and other performers, or all subjects of a
documentary. As well, the filming, video recording, shooting of live broadcast of
all footage that does not include performers or other active subjects (people,
animals, or animations) is part of the production phase. Thusly, "in
production" means being in this period.
Sometime used as a synonym for "movie", "program," etc.
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PRODUCTION ASSISTANT
(AKA: PA, or GOFER)
|
Production assistants may be responsible for one or more of many different duties
to help with production, depending on who the PA works for or with, and
depending on the size and scope of the production. In the production office
environment personal assistants will do clerical work, handling phones, run errands,
and other miscellaneous office work. On the set they may directly assist producers,
directors, and other upper-echelon members of the production team, helping with
many behind-the-scenes needs or they may do "gofer" work: driving
production people or talent, making pick-ups and delivering things, or getting
refreshments and food from craft service, catering, or restaurants. Some of these
duties may cross over into the territory of
personal assistants, also
called "PA's," but the latter usually are specifically assigned to
particular talent or production people.
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PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
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See COORDINATING PRODUCER
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PRODUCTION SOUND
|
All sound that is actually recorded when a scene is shot, including all
dialogue and any other sound, whether it is intended to be there or not.
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PRODUCTION SOUND MIXER
(AKA: PRODUCTION SOUND ENGINEER, SOUND MIXER or SOUND ENGINEER)
|
The recording engineer who is responsible for the recording all actors'
dialogue and other purposeful sound or sound effects as performed in a scene
on set or on location. The Production Sound Mixer selects the microphones and
recording equipment used on the set and in most cases operates them. He or she
will also supervise the boom operator, and will oversee the mixing of sound from
multiple microphones which are recording dialogue and effects. The Production
Sound Mixer is also responsible for recording the sound ambiance and room tone
for all scenes, and will document any
wild tracks.
In bigger productions the Production Sound Mixer is the head of the sound department
on the set.
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PRODUCTION TRACK or PRODUCTION RECORDING
|
The analog or digital audio recording track of all sound that was actually
recorded when a scene was shot, including all dialogue and any other sound,
whether intended to be on the track or not.
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PROP or PROPERTY
|
Any object in a production that is used by the actors as their characters, in other
words any inanimate or mechanical object or devise an actor interacts with in a
meaningful manner to tell the story. Examples of props: weapons, eating utensils,
a pen & notepad, a computer keyboard, food or drink (that is consumed or handled).
Sometimes things that are otherwise considered
set pieces will become props if the
actors/characters use them in a significant manner. For instance a dinning room
chair will still be considered a set piece if all the actor does is pull it out and
sit on it as an act incidental to the scene. If it becomes a bone of contention
between to characters in the story who argue over where it goes in the room, and each
keeps moving it to make a point, or if pulling the chair out to sit on it is
significant to the plot of the scene or overall story, it is now a prop.
Conversely, any item mentioned in the first paragraph above is not a prop, but
rather a set piece if it is on the set but is not used by the actors/characters.
These items may also be referred to as
set dressing.
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PROPERTY MASTER
(AKA: PROP or PROPS MASTER)
|
The props master is responsible for procuring or making, and overseeing any
props needed for a movie, television, or
video production. He or she will design a properties plot based on the dictates of
the script and in consultation and cooperation with the
director, the
production designer, the
director of photography,
the script supervisor and the
costume designer, all with the
goal of a unified stylistic and aesthetic look and feel to the production.
In movie productions The property master comes on board during preproduction, where
she or he develops the stylistic concept of the props, then remains during
principal photography to
oversee the management, integration and use of the props.
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PRORES
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A line of intermediate video codecs used
in the video editing process, which has higher video quality than end-user codecs,
but requires significantly less expensive disk systems compared to uncompressed
video. ProRes supports up to 8K DV resolution. It was developed by
Apple, Inc.
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PULL BACK
(pertaining to camera movement)
(AKA: PULL OUT or DOLLY OUT)
|
As suggested, to move the camera backwards and away from the subject of the shot.
This is usually not used to describe zooming out with the lense, but rather the
action of actually moving the camera away.
The camera may be handheld, shoulder-mounted, on a dolly truck, or any other means
by which the camera is put into motion.
*see also dolly shot
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PULLING BACK
(pertaining to performance)
(AKA: GOING SMALLER)
|
For an actor to "pull back" (or "go smaller") means she or he
diminishes or plays down whatever emotional state his or her character is relaying.
It does not mean to "get quieter" (though in some instances volume
may be part of the equation). It simply means to reduce whatever emotional
state is in question, slightly, greatly, or somewhere in between.
The director may also say "give less."
*Though "going bigger"
is the term usually used for the opposite of this, "pulling back" is more
commonly used for this than is "going smaller."
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PUNCH UP
(As in: To punch up a script)
|
A type of revision of a script that usually involves adding more humor, but could
also entail adding more of another aspect such as drama or more historically accurate
facts or culturally accurate dialogue (slang, idioms, colloquialisms, etc). Usually
another writer is hired to come for the punch up, perhaps more than one writer.
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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QUICK CUT
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See SMASH CUT
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go to the alphabetical index for this page
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RAIN DATE
|
A type of pickup shoot that is prescheduled in case of a problem on the
originally scheduled shoot day, such as undesirable conditions at a location
(rain, unexpected traffic, etc.)
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READ-THROUGH
(AKA: TABLE READ)
|
Traditionally the first rehearsal for a movie, TV show, or play. It is a
read-through of the script with the actors and the director, and sometimes others
from the creative team. As the name suggests, the actors, et al, sit around a
table and the script is read from beginning to end. It allows for all to hear
the show in continuity so all get familiar with the words and what each actor
brings on board, though it is understood that the actors are giving a colder
read and have done little or no development on their characters, therefore a
performance level read is not expected.
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REALITY TV
(AKA: REALITY TELEVISION or REALITY PROGRAMMING)
|
A genre of television programing that ostensibly presents itself as showing a
genuine account of the events and actions that are seen on the program. Typically,
such programming features "real people," as opposed to professional
actors, who are the focus and subjects of the series. The Reality is,
however, that the events on Reality TV shows are highly manipulated to present a
highly entertaining forty-two minutes of television each week. Though these programs
are not scripted, there is a team of producers and writers who collaborate to
conceive conflicts and plot twists, and either manipulate or out-and-out direct
the participant cast members to take actions and say things to manifest these
conflicts and plot twists. Beyond that, many occurrences are edited to create the
illusion of conversations, conflicts, romances, and other events that never
actually happened ‐‐ a practice known as
frankenbiting. As the result of
all these manipulations and maneuverings, many moments or particular aspects are
partially or totally staged.
Reality TV, in the end, does not reflect the reality of what happens in the events
it displays on its episodes. It is manufactured television just like any scripted
TV show is. But Reality TV can be produced on a far smaller budget than scripted
television and yield big advertising revenue due to the genre's great popularity
and high ratings. For a few further insights into the veracity, or lack thereof, of
Reality TV, see:
In one of the most common configurations of Reality TV, these "normal citizens"
are theoretically continuously recorded on camera, virtually twenty-four hours a
day, with what are considered the most choice, interesting, and entertaining moments
culled for the edited version that makes it to the TV screen. Such programs are
designed for entertainment value rather than informative merit. The most common
presentation is one where these "normal people" are in isolation, in a
house or building they cannot leave (as in
Big Brother) or an alleged
remote area of wilderness (as in
Survivor). The participants
compete against each other, often in teams, to meet challenges. Often the cast
members vote at the end of each episode to eliminate one or a few fellow cast
members from the show. The last cast member remaining wins the overall contest and
usually takes home large cash prize, usually one million dollars.
Examples of other variations of this contest theme, but that eliminate the claimed
isolation factor and that are focused far more as straight competitive games or
contests are:
There is also the versions of the genre with the concept that the TV audience is
eavesdropping into the personal or professional lives of the subjects. Popular
examples of this are:
In some Reality programs, such as
Being Bobby Brown,
Dancing With the Stars, or
Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List ,
people who are already celebrities when they start into the show ‐‐ rather than
becoming celebrities as the result of the show ‐‐ are in the cast, often being the
driving focus of the show.
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REEL
(AKA: ACTOR'S REEL, AUDITION REEL, DIRECTOR'S REEL, SAMPLE REEL)
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An assembled edit of clips of an actor's performances, a director's, editor's or
designers work in different films or TV programs. The selected clips should
highlight the best of the actor's or other's work as well as showing that person's
range with her or his work. Each clip should only be a long as necessary to convey
the work; in fact, the entirety of the reel should be a short as possible without
shortchanging the featured artist.
"Reel" is a legacy term referring to the days when one would literally be
a 16mm film reel. In this third millennium, one's reel is most likely to be a
digital movie file that can be viewed or downloaded from a website, or can be sent
as an email attachement. It may also be on a blue-ray or DVD disk, and perhaps
occasionally on a video cassette tape ‐‐ though this last one is not as likely.
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REHEARSE or TO REHEARSE
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The action of learning and practicing any or all elements of the final version of
a movie, TV, or video production, or a scene or segment therein, with the goal of
mastering such to prepare for production shooting.
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REHEARSAL
(AKA: REHEARSAL PERIOD, REHEARSAL PROCESS, IN REHEARSAL)
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The time set aside, or in some cases the period, during the production or
preproduction of a movie, TV, or video production when the production crew and the
cast practice the dramatic and/or technical elements of the production or a scene
or segment therein to evolve such to successful performances in front
of the camera. Some specifics may include the director's and the actors'
collaboration to find the portrayals of the characters that work best and best tell
the story of the script through the interpretive eyes of the director, the producer,
the show runner, or some variation of these. Aspects that may be rehearsed usually
include the movement of the actors, the cameras, and any set pieces that might move
during the shooting of the scene or scenes. In other words, the process and
practice of bringing all the elements of what will be shot into a coherent
whole that is ready to be shot by the camera.
For movie productions there usually is not a rehearsal period, rather usually
each scene is rehearsed, if at all, on the day the scene is shot, and usually just
prior, and tends to focus on technical issues rather than actor's emotional
perfomances. Actors may rehearse their scenes with each other off set during the
frequent "down time" on set (in TV and video shoots as well).
Some movie directors do schedule a rehearsal period to work with the actors on
character and intent, but more often such rehearsal period, which always happens
in a theatrical production, does not happen.
In television, most specifically in multi-camera narrative programs ‐‐ the standard
for sit-com productions ‐‐ there is more likely to be more rehearsal, culminating
with a dress rehearsal in front of a studio audience. The Dress will be shot both
so crew can rehearse, and also in case footage shot at dress is needed as coverage to
substitue for a moment or scene that had problems during principal photography shoot,
that which generally happens later the same day as Dress, and usually in front of
a different studio audience. In many ways, multi-camera rehearsals and productions
are similar to rehearsals for a theatrical play or musical.
For television talk shows, which are also multi-camera productions, rehearsals are
right before the episode is shot, and focus on technical aspects ‐‐ though the
musical guests or any more elaborate perfomances and skits will also be rehearsed.
Single-camera TV productions and rehearsals are mostly exactly like movie
productions and rehearsals, save that, for episodic programs, because of the
constraints of schedule ‐‐ one episode must be wrapped so the next can be started ‐‐
there will not be an extended "rehearsal period" before production,
though such could happen for a made-for-TV or made-for-cable movie.
All different production types will start with a table-read rehearsal, however,
with very few exceptions.
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RESHOOT
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Just as the name suggests, to reshoot a scene, a portion of a scene, or particular
shots, at a later time due to some sort of problem with the original shoot or because
of some revision of the scene or sequence. Sometimes it will be to create a
different version such as to reduce or eliminate "adult content" and
create a more "family friendly" version for a market that demands it.
Sometimes referred to as a
pickups, though pickups
more often refer to shooting additional material.
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REVERSAL EDIT
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The editing of reversal shots.
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REVERSAL SHOT
(AKA: REVERSALS, REVERSE SHOT, REVERSE ANGLES, OVER THE SHOULDER SHOTS, or
HOLLYWOOD REVERSE)
|
Camera shots taken of the same action from two different angles, usually within
a 120-180 degree parameter of angles from each other. Most frequently, but not
exclusively, used in dialogue scenes, so that the two reversal shots can be
edited together using each in alternate moments of the action to get
perspectives that favor one of the two subjects more than the other. The most
common reversals for dialogue are "over-the-shoulder" shots that show
each character speaking over the shoulder of the other character. Reversals are also
used in other sorts of sequences, usually to help heighten drama between two subjects
that are about to clash (physically or emotionally); sometimes reversals are simply
used to keep a sequence interesting visually.
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REVISION
(AKA: SCREENPLAY REVISION or SCRIPT REVISION ‐‐ sometimes: REWRITE)
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The act of altering a script, or portions thereof, to improve it and address
specific problems. Revisions can, and usually do occur all the way up through
principal photography.
There may even be slight revisions of some lines in
postproduction, with actors
coming back in to replace dialogue via ADR
or in reshoots or
pickups.
NOTE: To "punch up" or
"sweeten" a script are both
forms of revision.
*Generally differentiated from a "rewrite," which is usually considered
to result in more significant changes to the script than a revision.
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REWRITE
(AKA: SCREENPLAY REWRITE or SCRIPT REWRITE ‐‐ sometimes: REVISION)
|
The act of significantly altering a script, or portions thereof, to improve it and
address specific problems. Big rewrites of a whole script, as defined here, usually
occur in preproduction, but can
happen in production if
it becomes clear there is a problem with the script or some circumstance dictates
the need for a major change in the script ‐‐ such as the loss of an actor in a
major role.
*Generally differentiated, as here, from a "revision," which is usually
considered to result in less significant changes to the script as a whole than a
rewrite.
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RHUBARB
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See WALLA
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ROOM TONE
|
A recording, usually between one to two minutes long, of the natural ambient,
atmospheric background noise ‐‐ or "silence" ‐‐ on a set or at a
location. The purpose is to serve as background noise when the original production
sound has to be eliminated for some reason; it will keep the ambient sound
consistant throughout the scene, by matching the ambient sound from shots that
still use original production recording.
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ROUGH CUT
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See ASSEMBLY EDIT
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RUSHES
(AKA: DAILIES)
|
The first processed footage from what was shot the same day or in the recent past,
made available for viewing by the director, actors and other production crew for
scrutiny of any and all aspects of the performance, look and feel of said
footage. In today's film world, where much footage is digital and readily
available, the terms "rushes" or "dailies" may be used to
label instant playback viewing of footage, on set, right after it is shot.
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SAG/AFTRA
|
The
Screen Actors Guild/American Federation of Television and Radio Artists,
the combined union for professional performers who work in the movie, television
and radio industries in the U.S. market. After years of failed attempts, SAG
and AFTRA finally merged into one union in 2012.
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SAG/AFTRA SCALE
(AKA: SCALE)
|
The minimum wage a SAG/AFTRA union member
can be paid for work on a set. The scale depends on type or medium of the work
and the type or medium of the set.
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SAMPLE REEL
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See REEL
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SATELLITE TELEVISION
(AKA: SATELLITE TV)
|
Television programming made up of scripted and unscripted productions with the
signal transmitted from a satellite ‐‐ as opposed to Broadcast, Cable, and On-line
TV.
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SCALE
|
See SAG/AFTRA SCALE
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SCORE
|
1) VERB: To compose the music score
for a movie or television program. In some cases one may be considered to have
scored a movie or program by selecting music composed by others.
2) NOUN: the music score.
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SCORED MUSIC
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See MUSIC SCORE
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SCRATCH TRACK
|
A temporary sound recording intended to be replaced later. This most commonly
will be the dialogue recorded during a shoot at an exterior location where the
production team is aware that there will be too much extraneous noise and the
dialogue will need to be re-recorded in the studio, via ADR, and, as well, Foley
sound or other sound effects will be added to highlight other action and the
sense of of location, such as footsteps, nature sounds, street noise, etc.
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SCREENPLAY
|
The script for a movie, and that which meets the proper formating as required by
the movie industry.
see "How to Write a Screenplay: Script Writing Example & Screenwriting Tips."
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SCREENTEST
|
An audition for a movie or television program where the actor is recorded on
video or film performing for the camera but usually without correct wardrobe or
even any sort of set suggestive of the project. The idea is for casting directors,
the producers and/or the director to see how the actor looks and feels on screen
in relation to the role he or she is auditioning for.
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SCREENWRITER
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The person who authors a screenplay
or teleplay.
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SCRIPT ANALYSIS
(AKA: SCRIPT STUDY, TEXT ANALYSIS, or TEXT STUDY)
|
The examination of a script to understand and interpret its elements. Thorough
analysis will look in detail at the structure of the story, to motivations of the
characters, whatever symbolism is present, what theme or themes are inherent in
the text, subtext and subplots, and any other aspects that are present in the
script.
To some extent or another most of those involved with the production will analyse
the script. Directors will need to have as broad and as complete an understanding
of their interpretations of their scripts as possible. The designers likewise need
to have a firm understanding and interpretation, though they will work in close
consultation with their directors, whose visions of the script take precedence.
Actors need, at a bare minimum, to analyse their characters' mental and emotional
goals and motivations, and what part they play in telling the story. But it is
better if they have more of an understanding than simply just that which concerns
their characters.
Often during table work for a production
the group as a whole works on script analysis.
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SCRIPT SUPERVISOR
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The person who follows the script as each shot, scene and sequence is underway
and tracks how closely the script is being adhered to, then advises the director
of any deviations. Script supervisors are also in charge of tracking continuity
as well as what has and has not yet been shot.
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SECOND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or SECOND AD
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See ASSISTANT DIRECTOR or AD
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SECOND TEAM
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The stand-ins for principal actors on a set or on location.
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SECOND UNIT
|
A secondary film crew in a movie production, usually small, with the task to shoot
sequences or shots of lesser importants, such as
establishing shots, or such as
cutaways in an action sequence.
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SECOND UNIT DIRECTOR
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A subordinate director in a movie or television production who is responsible for
the footage shot by the second unit.
She or he may be an AD or a
producer, especially on a smaller
independent film, but more often is
hired specifically as the second unit director. Often, of course, these are newer
directors, earning their wings, so to speak.
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SEGMENT PRODUCER
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A segment producer writes and/or produces one segment of a movie or a TV program.
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SELF-TAPE, SELF-TAPED, SELF-TAPED AUDITION
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See DIY SCREENTEST
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SERIES OF SHOTS
(SOMETIMES: MONTAGE)
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A random series of short clips, of still photos, or a combination
of the two, in a movie, program (TV, streaming, or web), or video,
used to establish or introduce something, or to illustrate a point.
A prime example is the opening sequence of a series (TV, streaming,
or web), which often consists of short clips, each featuring a specific
cast member, with the clips usually being extracted from episodes
of the series.
Though sometimes referred to as a "montage," that term is
more appropriate for a sequence that tells a story, or advances the
larger story, in a condensed fashion.
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SET
|
The area where a scene of a movie, TV, or other sort of video is
shot. A set may be a fabrication of a location built on a sound stage,
or it may be a real location. in other words it might be a facsimile
of, say, the living room of a house, which was built inside movie
studio building, or it could be an actual living room of an actual
house, which would be know as shooting
on location.
An outdoor location (a yard, a park, the forest) may also be
considered a set.
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SET DRESSING
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1) as a noun: items, which the actors/characters do not use or interact with, on
the set of a movie, TV, video, or theatre production, that represent or enhance one
or more of the sense of location, time (usually as in era), personality of a
character or characters, or events in the universe of the script.
Though set dressing items are set pieces
they can usually be considered more as garnishes: both a sofa and the knitted throw
that covers its back are set pieces, but the knitted throw is also set dressing, while
the sofa generally is not considered such.
Other set pieces that are also set dressing include, but are not exclusive to, such
things as tchotchkes, refrigerator magnets, items on shelves, pictures or paintings
on walls, so long as these things are not used by or interacted with by the
actors/characters (which would make them props)
or are not somehow a focal point of plot for the scene or overall story line. A
painting that hangs on the wall of a set and is not attended to by the characters,
is set dressing; one that is a topic of conversation or is somehow a relevant item
in the story is a prop, even if not physically used by the actors/characters.
2) as a verb: the act of placing items, which the actors/characters do not use or
interact with, on the set of a movie, TV, video, or theatre production, that
represent or enhance one or more of the sense of location, time (usually as in era),
personality of a character or characters, or events in the universe of the script.
Can include the design decisions of such set dressing.
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SET PIECE
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Any piece of stage scenery that stands by itself: furniture items, photos or
paintings that hang on the walls, rugs, hanging chandeliers, etc., so long as these
things are not used by or interacted with by the actors/characters, which would make
them props.
Some set pieces may also be considered set dressing,
usually smaller items such as tchotchkes, househild items, decorations, etc.,
again, so long as these things are not used by or interacted with by the
actors/characters, making them props.
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SFX
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See SOUND EFFECTS
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SHORT-SUBJECT FILM
(AKA: SHORT, SHORT FILM or SHORT-SUBJECT)
|
A movie that is under forty minutes in length.
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SHOT LIST
|
The document detailing the scenes, and each shot within, that are scheduled for
the production day. It includes the specifics of all sets, locations, actors,
crew members, and departments on the agenda.
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SHOWCASE
|
A special sort of theatrical performance produced especially to highlight the
abilities of performers ‐‐ usually actors. Industry professionals, such as
agents, managers, producers, directors and casting directors are invited, rarely
without a free ticket, to attend the showcase; they often do attend on the
search for new talent. A showcase may feature only one performing artist or it
may be a program to feature several. Often showcases highlight the work of
actors from a recent graduating class in acting or musical theatre from a
university. Talent agents and managers will also set up showcases for a member
or members of their talent pools; some industrious actors will themselves
produce showcases, often in collaboration with peers. Short-term professional
acting classes often close with a showcase. Though in the practical sense
showcases best feature an actor's stage performance chops, screen actors may do
showcases, especially in smaller venues where they can bring down their
performances closer to the subtler acting that is required for the camera.
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SHOW RUNNER
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See EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
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SHOOT
|
1) as a noun: the portion of the production of a movie, television
(broadcast, cable, or streaming), or video production that involves photographing
in moving pictures via film or video (usually digital video). The recording of the
audio in the action is typically, but not always, involved. "A shoot"
may refer to the overall process for the production, or some smaller segment, such
as a day or a scene.
2) as a verb: the act of photographing moving pictures for a movie, television
(broadcast, cable, or streaming), or video production via film or video (usually
digital video). The recording of the audio in the action is typically, but not
always, involved.
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SHOT SET-UP
|
The positions and lighting for each shot in a movie, television, streaming, or
video production. The set-up will take into account and movement or zooms in or
out by the camera, and may have as part of the set up a
dolly truck or other device for moving
the camera. The lenses chosen for use are often considered part of the shot
set-up, as well.
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SHOOTING SCRIPT
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A production script tailored specifically for the principal photography,
(and other photography) for a movie, TV, or video production. There are a variety
of different formats for shooting scripts, but all of them focus on what content to
shoot and/or how to shoot such.
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SHUTTER SPEED
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The length of time a frame of film is exposed or digital camera sensor is open. The
length of this exposure dictates the amount of light that reaches the film or image
sensor, and thus regulates the sharpness or blurriness of each image frame.
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SIDES
(AKA: ASIDES)
|
A portion of a script, usually one or two pages at the most, used in auditions.
Sides usually are pulled to focus on one character (for whom the actor is
auditioning), and is usually only a portion of one scene, a section that gives
the casting person a good idea if the actor is a good fit for the role. For
movie, TV, and video auditions, whether live or as screentests, the other
character or characters will be read, usually by a production assistant, who
will be off to the side; only the auditioning actor will be on screen or up
infront of the casting people.
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SINGLE-CAMERA PRODUCTION
(AKA: SINGLE-CAMERA or
"ONE"-CAMERA....)
|
A production that is shot using only one camera rather than
multiple-cameras.
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SINGLE-CAMERA TELEVISION PRODUCTION
(AKA: SINGLE-CAMERA PROGRAM, SINGLE-CAMERA PRODUCTION, SINGLE-CAMERA or
"ONE"-CAMERA....)
|
A television production that is shot in the same manner as a movie production,
employing many or all of the aspects and methods, including shooting much of the
episode or TV movie on location
and shooting scenes out of sequence, to better budget production time and expenses,
by minimizing shot set-ups and any location renting. As the term spells out, the
program or TV movie is shot completely or primarily with one camera. Single-camera
productions tend to be drama series or TV movies, though more and more
SITCOMS are adopting the production
format.
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SITCOM
(I.E.: SITUATION COMEDY)
|
A comedic television series about a fixed set of characters, often set in one
location, such as a home, a bar, or office, that typically runs thirty minutes in
length with the commercial breaks included. Sitcoms originated on radio where they
were often fifteen minutes in length.
Though more and more sitcoms are being shot
single-camera,
the norm over the history of television has been
multi-cam productions,
shot in front of a studio audience with the scenes generally shot in sequence as
they appear in the script, just as a live theatrical play is performed.
Examples of single-camera sitcoms are:
Arrested Development,
The Office,
Parks and Recreation,
and 30 Rock.
Examples of multi-camera sitcoms:
Cheers,
Everybody Loves Raymond,
Friends, and
I Love Lucy.
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SLATE, SLATING, CLAPBOARD, or CLAPPER
|
"Slate" or "Slatting" as verbs
1) For a screentest ‐‐ at the top
of the audition performance actors give their names, usually the roles being
auditioned for, and in many cases, the agency that represents them, also in many
cases the actors must state SAG/AFTRA union
affiliation, or lack of such. Sometimes they have a number on a sheet of paper or
board that they hold on their chest during the slate, which identifies their spot
on an audition list.
If the actor is doing a live audition, they usually still at least verbally slate.
2) For movie, TV, or video productions ‐‐ the act of snapping a clapboard in front
of the rolling camera at the start of a shot, to identify the shot, scene,
production, etc., so the editor can identify and keep track of all footage that is
good to use in the final cut, and to
help ensure that the audio and visual information is in synch, by matching the sound
of the snap with the image of the snap.
"SLATE," "SLATING," "CLAPBOARD," or
"CLAPPER" as nouns
For movie, TV, or video productions ‐‐ the board with information on it that
identifies the title of the production, the names of the director, the director
of photography, the scene and take numbers, the date, and the time. It is filmed
or video recorded at the top of each take, with the latest take number, date and
time. The clapboard has a hinged stick on the top that an AD or PA snaps at the
top of the scene to facilitate the synchronization of the sound and visual of
the clap snap to ensure the audio and visual information is in sync in the clip
of the scene. "Slating" is act of shooting the clapboard and snapping the
top at the start of each shot of the scene, as mentioned above.
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SLUG or SLUG LINE
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A header appearing at the top of a scene or shot in a script for a movie, TV
show, or video production, that indicates the scene/shot location, time of day,
and often the relative passage of time from the previous scene. A slug may include
specific dates or eras, especially for the first scene of a script.
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SMALL FILM
(AKA: SMALL MOVIE)
|
A movie production that does not have a large budget. It may be a studio-made film,
but more often is an independent film
production. Small films can be either union or non-union productions. Non-union
small films are often low-budget
or no-budget productions.
"Small film" usually refers to a
feature-length, but
short-subject film certainly
can qualify as small films, and usually do.
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SMASH CUT
(AKA: COMBINATION CUT, GILLIGAN CUT, or QUICK CUT)
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An abrupt cut from one scene to another that is contrasting, surprising,
discordant, and/or builds tension or suspense. It can also be used
to emphasize an important change in location or time. Usually a
smash cut occurs at a highpoint in the first scene without allowing
for a sense of resolution, and often disturbing the sense of rhythm
that first scene has set.
In comedy it is often used to show a comedic contradiction or irony.
Dad announces emphatically to the family, "That mangy dog is
not coming to Florida with us!" then there is a quick
cut to the dog licking Dad's unhappy face as he drives the car, packed
with the family, and with a mountain of luggage strapped to the roof
of the car.
In drama it is frequently employed to heighten tension. For example,
our heroine spy is in the villain's study, photographing the damning
documents with her spy-camera pen, meanwhile Doctor Villain is coming
down the hall toward his study, and the two actions are quickly cut
back and forth between each other as the bad guy get's closer to the
his study and our spy seems to be taking her time!
But it is used for a variety of other purposes to cause immediate
attention to some sort of change. A smash cut rarely, if ever, employs
fade-out/fade-in, cross-dissolves or other soft transitions.
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SNAZZUM
|
Studio recorded dialoge gibberish, similar to
walla, but rather than a group of voices,
an isolated recordings of a single voice speaking walla gibberish that is used to
synchronized with the lip movements of an extra who can be prominently seen in the
scene to give a better sense of verisimilitude.
It is used rather than the actual voice and words from the extra because, 1) as with
group walla, there is an issue of controlling the audio levels and not competing with
the dialogue of the principals on the scene, and 2) if this extra was to have a
distinct dialogue perceptible in the final mix she or he would be elevated to actor
(day player) and thus would be
required to be paid a higher wage.
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SOAP OPERA
(AKA: SOAP)
|
A soap opera is a serialized television drama that has many interwoven story lines
about a large cast of characters most of which conform at least to some extent to
archetypes.
Though, in modern productions, soaps are not fully melodramatic, the writing and
acting still often lean in that direction. Most modern soap operas are thirty-minute
or one-hour daytime productions, produced by
Broadcast Television networks, and
airing Monday through Friday. Though they once made up the predominant portion of
afternoon programming on TV networks, there are now only a few daytime soaps left
in production.
Soap operas began as 15-minute serials in the early days of radio and the term
"soap opera" derives from the fact that they were sponsored by soap
companies. Guiding Light
is the one radio soap that made the transition to television, debuting on the screen
in 1952, and actually overlapping the last several years of the end of its radio run.
It had a run from its start on radio until the end of its TV run of 72 years, with
a 57-year run on television, alone. Several other soaps have had substantial TV runs.
Most of the more popular daytime soaps are or have been:
There have also been network Primetime soaps throughout the history of Broadcast
TV, with one-hour weekly episodes, some of the most popular being:
Though "The Soaps," specifically the daytime ones, are frequently derided
and ridiculed in the TV & movie industry, many of those who have worked in the
genre, especially actors and writers, credit it as a great training ground for their
work later in their careers. There have been some notable actors who cut their teeth
on daytime soaps and went on to have most successful careers afterward, including
Michelle Forbes (Guiding Light),
James Franco (General Hospital),
Sarah Michelle Gellar (All My Children),
Audra Lindley (Another World),
Shemar Moore (The Young and the Restless),
Meg Ryan (As the World Turns),
Susan Sullivan (Another World), and
JoBeth Williams (Guiding Light),
to name a few.
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SOLILOQUY
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See MONOLOGUE
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SOUND BITE
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See SOUNDBYTE
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SOUND DESIGN
(AKA: SOUNDWORK)
|
The act of identifying and/or conceiving, then securing, manipulating, and/or
producing the audio elements (soundtrack)
of a movie, television, or video production, those elements being all of
Foley sound, other
sound effects, music, and the
general sound engineering. All this based on the dictates and needs of the script
as well as in consultation or collaboration with the
director or
producer(s). The chief
sound designer may oversee most
of this, but frequently delegates to others, especially to
Foley artists. As well, producers
often will be mildly to heavily involved in what music is used, both score and as
incidental music (both commissioned original and pre-recorded). Sometimes producers
will be completely in charge of the pre-recorded music used. The original scores by
commissioned composers are also a factor that fall outside of the direct oversight
of the sound designer.
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SOUND DESIGNER
|
The chief designer who designs and oversees the soundtrack
of a movie or television production. She or he is responsible for the design and
creation of the audio element of the movie or program. Though the chief designer,
he or she may delegate out many particular duties such as to
Foley artists,
production sound engineers,
and sound editors, all who report
to the sound designer.
The sound designer designs the sound plot for the production, noting all the sounds
called for in the script, whether it be a sound that is a direct part of the action
(a car honking "outside" because the wife is impatient) or ambient sound
(birds "in the trees" to help set place and mood), and may determine that
sounds not specifically mentioned in the script may also be appropriate ‐‐ especially
ambient sounds such as office backgrounds or traffic.
The sound designer also will likely work to greater or lesser extent with the
composer who is writing the music score for the soundtrack, perhaps, or perhaps not,
giving input on the dynamics of the score, but always coordinating the lengths of
pieces of music to synchronize with moments and scenes in the
final cut.
The sound designer may also be invloved to a greater or lesser extent in the
curating of music from outside sources, i.e.: music by recording artists. Such
task often is done by producers, but the sound designer may have input. In all
cases the sound designer will coordinate the length of the recordings to
synchronize with moments and scenes in the final cut.
The sound designers will usually have a large library of sound effects and may
create sounds specifically for a production through new recordings or through
mixing two or more sound from their libraries together, or otherwise altering a
pre-existing sound file to make it work (slow it down, add reverb, change the
treble-bass equalization, etc.) As alluded to above, some sound designers will
delegate Foley work to Foley artists while others are Foley artists, themselves,
and will do all or some of the Foley work for the project.
Sound designers work in close collaboration with directors, who have final approval
over all sound design.
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SOUND EDITOR
(AKA: DIALOG EDITOR)
|
Responsible for editing a movie or television program soundtrack.
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SOUND EFFECTS
(AKA: SFX)
|
Any sound added to a production, or any dramatic enhancement/alteration of
sound in a production. Any such sound especially created as new for the specific
production is also known as Foley sound; and any sound pulled from a library of
sound files is simply a sound effect.
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SOUND EFEECTS EDITOR
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Responsible for specialized editing of sound effects for a movie or television
program soundtrack.
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SOUND ENGINEER
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See PRODUCTION SOUND MIXER
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SOUND MIXER
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See PRODUCTION SOUND MIXER
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SOUND LIBRARY
(AKA: SFX LIBRARY or SOUND EFFECTS LIBRARY)
|
A sound designer's collection of pre-recorded sound effects made up of what she or
he has acquired or has created via Foley
work.
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SOUND PRODUCTION
|
The manifestation and actions of bringing together the elements for the
soundtrack of a movie, TV program,
or video, and the process of applying these elements to the
final cut.
This will include some or all of recording of some or all of the dialogue and other
production sound, any
ADR, Foley,
and music. It also entails any building of new SFX
from a SFX library and/or with Foley
sound, applying any other SFX from the sound library, and applying any prerecorded
commercial music from the repertoire of recording artists or for which said artists
have written and recorded specifically for the project. Sound production further
entails modifications of audio elements (for one or more of volume level,
monophonic-thru-surround sound mix,
equalization, speed, pitch, addition of reverb, echo or other effects). All these
elements are then brought together and incorporated into the final cut as the
soundtrack.
"Sound production" can also be a synonym for
sound design.
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SOUND STAGE
|
The inside studio stage for movie or television production designed for good
audio acoustics and buffering as well as having overhead grids for easy hanging of
lights, where sets can be built to accomodate the needs of the production. For
narrative productions the sets will represent rooms, or whatever other places the
characters are supposed to be, including outdoor locations. For news shows, talk
shows, and game shows, the sets will be configured appropriately and is where the
action of such programs occurs.
Most of the sets on the sound stages for television series will, once built, not
be struck until the series ends
production.
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SOUNDBYTE
(AKA: SOUND BITE)
|
A short recorded statement, audio-video, or, audio-only, such as a statement by a
politician, celebrity, or other public figure, typically used as a quote for
broadcast or cable news programs. In non-journalistic contexts a soundbyte is a short
clip of dialogue, action, or music taken from a full production of movie, TV
program, ballet, musical, music album, or other project, with the soundbyte or
collection of soundbytes used to promote or otherwise sample the full length work.
In both context it typically is a moment that has some sort of appeal, either
positive or negative, such as a damning statement from the subject of news story,
a clever statement by another, an exciting moment of action from a movie, or any
sort of moment that will draw attention.
Soundbytes and their use are often controversial as their brevity often is deceptive
in term of the context of the broader material the soundbyte is taken from,
frequently leading to inaccuracies in perception of the whole picture. Especially
in the context of journalism, the ethics of proper use of soundbytes is a strong,
on-going debate.
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SOUNDTRACK
|
1) The audio portion of a movie or television program. The term is routed in the
physical attribute of film stock, where the audio tracks run down one side of the
film strip. It now means all aspects of the audio portion of the movie or TV
program, including all dialog, sound effects and music.
2) A collection of music heard in a movie or TV program, often marketed as an
album of such.
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SOUNDWORK
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See SOUND DESIGN
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SP
|
See SUPERVISING PRODUCER
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SPEC SCRIPT
(AKA; SPECULATION SCRIPT or SPECULATIVE SCREENPLAY)
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A spec script ‐‐ aka: a speculation script, or speculative
screenplay ‐‐ is a
screenplay
or teleplay
that is usually unsolicited and non-commissioned, written in the
hopes of option,
purchase, and/or production by a producer, production company, or
studio.
In the movie industry it will be an original screenplay authored
without previously being attached to a production or studio, but
will be shopped to a producer, production company, or studio with
hopes of being optioned and ultimately made into a film. It will be
written without payment, then the screenwriter or their agent (or
manager) will approach the powers-that-be about selling the screenplay.
It may also be the case that the first shopped script is like an
introduction to the industry that may show potential that piques
interest in the screenwriter though the specific script is not
purchased nor even optioned.
In the television industry, which usually will mean streaming
services as well, a spec script is a different animal that serves the
"introduction" purpose as well as a sort of writer's
audition. It will be an original episode of a current series, which
will be in the genre and basic style of the show being submitted to,
but will be a different series. It will consist of the basic
premise and characters of the chosen sample series and will further
fit the style and tone of that series, which should also come close
to at least the tone of the targeted show the writer hopes to be
hired for. With only incredibly rare exceptions, the producers will
not want a teleplay featuring an original episode of the show
they are running
(see "Ten Spec Writing Rules" for TV).
see also the following articles:
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SPECIAL EFFECTS
(AKA: SPFX)
|
The artificial practical visual effects that create illusions in a movie or TV
production that are executed in real time on the set or on location by use of
physical engineering rather than those created in post-production, such as those
created by computer, as with CGI work.
A car rigged to flip then actually explode via engineered pyrotechnics is a special
effect; a computer graphic enhancement that make it appear that the car has exploded
is not called a "special effect," but rather CGI. In today's movie and
television production worlds many visual illusions are the product of a blend of
special effects and CGI.
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SPFX
|
See SPECIAL EFFECTS
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SPIN A MESSAGE
|
Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for sending a message out on multiple
walkie-taklie channels to get some important message to all the production staff.
As an example, the first AD might
tell a second AD, "Please spin that," and then the 2nd AD will repeat
the message on all necessary walkie channels.
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SQUIB
|
A tiny explosive devise. Most commonly, one or more squibs are attached under an
actor's costume and when exploded on queue (and in sequence when more than one),
it gives the effect of the character being hit with bullets. Squibs are also used
in other manners such as in sequences with miniature models to create
special-effect explosions.
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STEADY-CAM
|
A shoulder-mounted cinema camera designed to absorb shocks so the
camera operator can move and travel without shaking resulting in
the footage being shot.
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STAND BY
|
1) Directive to pause before the next action and wait for the go-ahead. Often the
need to be silent is involved.
2) Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo essentially for "I can't reply
right now because I am busy with a task."
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STANDING BY
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for "I'm ready for my next
assignment."
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STAND-IN
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The person who takes the place of (stands in) a principal actor on a set or on
location during camera and lighting set up. The stand-in will be the same height and
size as the principle she or he represents, and will be dressed in costuming that
is, or virtually is, exact to the costuming of the principal for that shot.
Stand-ins often bear some resemblance to their principals as well.
See, also, SECOND TEAM.
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STEALING THE SCENE
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1) In a postitive light, to give such a memorable performance or have such a strong
presence on screen in a scene that it is hard for the viewer to not focus on that
particular actor, yet it does not necessarily mean the work of the other actors is
diminished.
2) In a negative light, it is to give an undesirable performance that draws undue
attention to oneself by exaggerated movement or other
over-acting, thus taking the focus
away from where it belongs at that moment in the scene.
The second definition may also be known as "upstaging," which is more
commonly used in theatre.
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STEADICAM
|
A harness mounting camera apparatus that enables the operator to move about while
keeping the camera stabilized, allowing for a smooth shot regardless of the roughness
of terrain and of the amount of wobbly or rickety movements of the operator and his
or her body. It achieves this by mechanically isolating the operator's movements as
separate from the movement of the camera, which remains stable.
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STILL FRAME
(AKA: STILL)
|
One picture frame from the multiple-image-frames per second from a
motion picture, DV movie, or analog video
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STILLS PHOTOGRAPHER
|
The photographer assigned to take on-set and on-location photos during production,
for promotional and archival use.
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STOCK FOOTAGE
(AKA: ARCHIVE FOOTAGE, FILE FOOTAGE, LIBRARY FOOTAGE)
|
Film or video footage that already exists that can be used in a movie, TV, or video
project. Common examples are shots of trafic or other activities in a city, often
a particular city, a park, footage of wildlife, planes in flight, historical
or other sorts of land marks. Stock footage is often used for
establishing shots.
Stock footage comes from a variety of sources including footage that is excerpted
from a previous production, or outtakes not used from a previous production. It
may also be footage that has been shot and produced specifically to be stock footage.
There are stock footage services who provide such to producers and directors, often
for a flat fee (i.e: royalty free). Many on-line services offer direct download
of stock shots.
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STOCK PHOTO
(AKA: ARCHIVE IMAGE, ARCHIVE PICTURE, ARCHIVE PHOTO, ARCHIVE PHOTOGRAPH, FILE
IMAGE, FILE PICTURE, FILE PHOTO, FILE PHOTOGRAPH, LIBRARY IMAGE, LIBRARY PICTURE,
LIBRARY PHOTO, LIBRARY PHOTOGRAPH, STOCK IMAGE, STOCK PICTURE, STOCK PHOTOGRAPH)
|
A photograph that already exists that can be used in a movie, TV, or video
project. Common examples are photos of buildings or other structures in a city,
scenic photos, or photos a person or group of people. Stock photos are often used
for establishing shots.
Stock photos come from a variety of sources including previous productions. It
may also be a photo that has been shot and produced specifically to be a stock photo.
There are stock photo services who provide such to producers and directors, often
for a flat fee (i.e: royalty free). Many on-line services offer direct download
of stock photos.
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STOCK SHOT
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A film or video shot that is stock footage.
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STORY BIBLE
(AKA: BIBLE)
|
Written documentation of any or all of: characters, events, historical facts, or
any other facts and details pertaining to the universe of a particular script
(screen or stage), TV series, web series, movie series, particular novel, or novel
series, comic book, or any cross-over between these media.
The bible's purpose is to maintain consistency in the lives of the characters and
the events in their lives. A story bible becomes especially helpful when applied to
any of the serial story-telling mentioned above, especially when different
individual scripts, books, or comic books are written by different authors. Often
there are additional guidelines about where stories can and cannot go and what can
or cannot happen to characters.
Producers, head writers, and editors often demand strict adherence to the applicable
story bible and any guidelines, whether all the different stories remain in one
medium or cross over into others.
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STORYBOARD
|
A series of images, usually drawings on cardboard panels that illustrated
shot set-ups for a movie, TV,
streaming, or video production. There is usually sequence of panels for each scene,
and there are often some directions and dialogue. The drawing may be a simple as
stick drawings or as elaborate as something akin to a
Norman Rockwell illustration.
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STREAMING
|
The presentation of content on the world wide web for consumption by viewers on
their computers, computer tablets, smart phones, smart TVs, streaming devices
attached to a TV (such as Apple TV, Ruko, or Amazon Fire), or on other devices
that have access to the internet.
See also ON-LINE PRODUCTION
or ON-LINE TELEVISION
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STREAMING PRODUCTION
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See ON-LINE PRODUCTION
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STREAMING TELEVISION
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See ON-LINE TELEVISION
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STRIKE
(AKA: 86 or EIGHTY-SIX)
|
To tear down a set, or to remove a prop, set piece, piece of equipment, or any
other item from the set or from the production area.
Sometimes "86" means, similarly, to throw away, though the term is
not commonly used in reference to tearing down a set.
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SUBTITLES
(AKA: CAPTIONS)
|
Subtitles (or captions) are text that appears, usually at the bottom
of a screen, for a movie or television production, which translate
the dialogue into another language or simply transcribe the dialogue
or narrative for those who are deaf or hard of hearing. Often subtitles
also indicate and or describe sounds or music appearing in the scenes.
Many hearing abled people now take advantage of subtitles to attend
to dialogue in a movie or TV show while in noisy environments or
because they find that the audio mix of the program makes it difficult
to hear the actors' dialogue.
In the days of silent films subtitles were panles of text placed on
screen in between shots or scenes which would transcribe dialogue or
indicate changes of place or time.
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SUPERVISING PRODUCER
(AKA: SP)
|
In movie productions the supervising producer supervises the creative process
of screenplay development and may be involved in re-writes. Frequently supervising
producers work closely with less experienced story editors and writers, if there is
a writing team. If the head writer
is also co-executive producer
the supervising producer will work in collaboration with him or her, with the
co-exec having more rank.
In television productions they play a role in supervising the creative process
in the writers room, and, as in
movie productions, may be involved in re-writes. In TV news they do much of the
oversight of the development of new news and feature stories. Sometimes the
supervising producer may be the head writer,
though usually the head writer is a co-exec
or an executive producer. They may
mentor or guide newer writers, though if they are head writer they will delegate
that to a senior writer on the team. They likely also work closely with less
experienced story editors. In TV news and other non-narrative TV they usually report
directly to the EP (executive producer) and thus are usually second in the producer
chain of command.
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SUPPORTING ACTOR
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An actor who is in a supporting role.
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SUPPORTING ROLE
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A role on stage or on screen that is below the lead roles, but above any bit
parts. Supporting roles run the spectrum from minor roles to major characters
who are often pivotal or vital to the story. In television, the term "Day
Player" is used to refer to most performers with supporting speaking roles
hired on a daily basis without long-term contracts. Also in episodic television,
there may be several levels of "Supporting" roles and different
productions may make different distinctions between "Guest Star,"
"Featured," "Recurring," simply "Supporting," or
"Day Player" ‐‐ though the latter is fairly universally defined,
regardless of the production. The only thing that will always be true is that
Supporting Roles will be considered "Principal Roles," in that they
have at least one line, or otherwise action that is vital to the story line or
perform some special skill, if they don't speak.
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SURROUND SOUND
(AKA: 7.1, 7.1 SURROUND, OR 7.1 SURROUND SOUND)
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7.1 Surround Sound is an eight-channel audio system most commonly found in home
entertainment cinema setups, but sometimes applied in movie theaters. There are five
full bandwidth channels and one low-frequency effects channel. The system
speaker/channel configuration is front left and right, center channel, two surround
channels (back left and right) and a low-frequency/subwoofer effects channel.
7.1 surround replaced the earlier 5.1 surround sound system.
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SUSPENSION OF DISBELIEF
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The willingness and ability of audience members to ignore that they are consuming
fiction, whether they be reading a piece of literature or observing a performance,
be it a stage play, movie, TV program, opera, ballet, etc. The audience members
play along with the fiction they are consuming and are prone to emotionally and
intellectually react to the events and characters as if such were a part of the
real world.
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SWEETEN
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To edit or otherwise enhance some element of a production. Most frequently the term
is used for somehow altering some portion or all of a soundtrack by altering
one or more of the volume levels, equalization, stereo mix, or applying filters.
It's also a term used for additions, alterations, or rewriting some portion, or other
editing, of a script ‐‐ though the term
"punch up" is a little more common.
But any aspect, visual or otherwise, that is somehow altered or enhanced might be
considered "sweetened."
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TABLE WORK
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One or more further table reads of a script after the initial table read, where
now the focus is on development of the characters and deeper understandings of
the script and its story as a whole. Reads for table work usually go at a much
slower pace with many stops and restarts of various moments in the script as
the director and the actors work together to discuss and hone the development
of character and script understanding. Some directors control all stops for
discussion during table work, some invite the actors to also stop the read
through at any time.
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TABLE READ
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See READ-THROUGH
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TAFT/HARTLEY or TAFT/HARTLY ACT
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The Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 (29 U.S.C. ยง 401-531) which restricts
the activities and power of labor unions. For American actors the import is that
non-union actor can work a limited amount of time on a movie, TV or video set
without being required to join the SAG/AFTRA
union.
See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_Management_Relations_Act_of_1947.
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TAGLINE
(AKA TAG LINE)
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A brief synopsis of a movie, broadcast TV or streaming series,
play, or book, that gives an overview of the main premise and conflicts
of the story. If it is a tagline for the series it gives the main
premise and overview of the characters and their overarching conflicts.
A tagline is targeted toward the audiences being marketed to as
consumers.
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TAKE
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Each single occurrence of filming or video recording a segment, be it a whole
scene or some portion of a scene.
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TALK SHOW
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A television show with a host who interviews or otherwise talks with guests. The
guests usually have some sort of prominence; they may be actors, other performers,
politicians, authors, artists, or have some other prominence in the public eye.
Some guests are people who have had some sort of extraordinary event occur in their
lives that draws appeal to their appearances ‐‐ an example would be
"Sully" Sullenberger
who heroically landed US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River off Manhattan after
both engines were disabled by a bird strike.
Most talk shows have five episodes per week, Monday through Friday, either during
the day or late night after the local news. With few exceptions, talk shows are
one hour in length.
Most will also have musical guests who appear, usually to perform their latest hit,
or would-be hit, and to promote a new album.
Talk shows usually have a house band that performs the show's opening and closing
theme music, as well as playing into and out of commercial breaks.
Some also have comedy segments consisting any or all of sketches, some sort of funny
list (such as David Letterman's
"Top Ten List"),
regular bits, funny game competitions that often recruit audience members, and any
variety of other comedic features.
There are some talk shows that only feature interviews with guests, either several
over the course of one episode, or only one guest for the whole episode. Some
prime examples are Charlie Rose
or Larry King Now.
It can be argued that Jerry Seinfeld's
Netflix streamed program,
Comedian's in Cars Getting Coffee
is a talk show, though it would be a new twist on the genre, where the talk takes
place on location in a car and in
some sort of restaurant or café.
Here's just a small sampling of other examples of talk shows:
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TECH REHEARSAL
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For a film or video, a rehearsal on set, whether the set is on a sound stage
or is on location (inside or out doors) where all production elements (lighting,
sound, costuming, and special effects) are in play and practiced during the
rehearsal. Almost always, a film or video tech rehearsal will happen on the day
of the actual principal photography, most often just before.
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TEASER SEQUENCE
(sometimes "teaser")
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See COLD OPEN
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TELEPLAY
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The script for an episode of a television series or for a made-for-TV movie, and
that which meets the proper formating as required by the television industry, with
specific idiosyncratic requirements generally added on by particular series
productions.
Though not entirely the same, in general terms there are not a multitude of
differences between the formatting of teleplays as that for
screenplays.
see "The Screenwriter's Simple Guide to Formatting Television Scripts."
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TELEVISION PRODUCTION
(AKA: TV PRODUCTION)
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In general terms, it is the manifestation and actions of bringing together
the elements for, and the execution to, the final cut
of a series, movie, or documentary, for broadcast on the airwaves,
through cablecasting, or streaming on-line.
The most common usage of the term is for the portion of the process of making
a broadcast, cable, or on-line series, movie, or documentary that consists of any rehearsal and all
major or minor filming or video recording, or the shooting of live broadcast,
live cablecast, or live streaming, and of all action or performances
involving all actors and other performers, or all
subjects of a documentary. As well, the filming, video recording, shooting of live
broadcast of all footage that does not include performers or other active
subjects (people, animals, or animations) is part of the production phase. Thusly,
"in production" means being in this period.
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THEME MUSIC
(AKA: THEME SCORE or THEME SONG)
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The music that is played over the opening title sequence of a television show,
movie, or video.
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TILT SHOT
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Moving the camera up or down while maintaining its horizontal axis; usually
done from a tripod or jib, but can also be done as a handheld shot.
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TRAILER
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1) Mobile-home-like trailers of various sizes, used as dressing
rooms, green rooms,
or office spaces. Always found on location shoots,
often there will be trailers for performers and production staff near
sound stage shoots,
either just outside the studio warehouse, or sometime inside the
building. *See, also,
FOUR BANGER.
2) A short promotion clip ‐‐ *see
MOVIE TRAILER
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TRANSCODING
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In terms of digital video movies, transcoding is the direct digital-to-digital
conversion of a movie file from one encoding (movie computer file format)
to another.
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TREATMENT
(AKA: FILM TREATMENT, MOVIE TREATMENT, or EPISODE TREATMENT)
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A synopsis of the story for a movie or a TV episode, written in prose form that is
usually very detailed in terms of plot and action and may even describe particular
special effects and/or
CGI when it's clear such will be necessary.
For more information on treatments see:
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TRUCK SHOT
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To truck a shot means to travel with the camera sideways, left or right,
past the subject of the shot. This is not a "pan"
where the camera is in a stationary position, such as on a tripod
or a jib. In a truck shot the camera may or may not be mounted on
a dolly truck, which may be mounted on tracks or have wheels. Now
the term means any shot where the camera operator moves the camera
left or right ("trucks" left or right) or away from but
with the same lens zoom for the whole shot, and regardless of the
means of transport (walking, dolly truck,etc.)
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TYPE
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The kind of character or characters an actor can be easily cast as due to age,
appearance, particular mannerism or traits, race/ethnicity, or a kind of character
that the actor has a reputation for performing with great success.
*See also, against type
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TYPECASTING
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To cast an actor in a role due to his or her physical appearance, which fits the
vision of who the character is, or because that actor has a reputation for
successfully playing such roles. It may also be because the actor shares traits
with the characters, or can appear to come from the same or similar social or
economic background, or shares the same or similar race or ethnicity.
Typecasting can both work to an actor's advantage or be problematic for her or his
career. In the first instance especially with the majority of screen actors who book
mostly or exclusively guest spots
and supporting roles, and, most
especially, commercials*, such actor may get a lot of work because he or she is
strongly identified as his or her type. However, when a particular actor is
identified with a particularly iconic role, she or he may become harder to cast
because they have become so synonymous with that character there is a concern that
audiences will not accept the actor as another character. Also, some actors may be
identified with such a specific type (usually because of some sort of physical
attribute) that it becomes hard to imagine them in other types of roles.
*Typecasting is the strong normal practice in commercial advertising.
It should be noted that typecasting is to some extent less of an issue for stage
actors than screen actors, the latter who have a much smaller chance of being cast
against type.
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UNDERSCORE
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A music score that plays
during a scene or a moment in a scene. Such is often at a lower volume, if there
is dialogue, thus it is said to be playing under the dialogue or is
"underscoring" the scene.
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UNIT PUBLICIST
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Manages press visits to a film or TV set and deals with all press-related matters
during production. For bigger productions, with star performers, the unit publicist
will attempt to control ‐‐ and, if possible, kill ‐‐ rumors and stories of
conflicts, romances, etc., on set and surrounding the production. The unit publicists
job is to see that the production receives the best possible publicity.
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UNSEEN CHARACTER
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See OFF-SCREEN CHARACTER
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UPFRONTS
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The meeting between television executives (broadcast, or cable) advertisers, and
entertainment news media, at the start of key sales periods where the TV execs
showcase their forthcoming programing promoting it for ad buys and for publicity.
The term "Upfronts"comes from the TV executives goals to entice
advertisers to buy comercial ad space before the new programing is released
to the public for viewing.
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UPSTAGING
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See STEALING THE SCENE
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VARIETY SHOW
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A regularly schedule prime-time television program, usually an hour-long, that
features, as the name suggests, a variety of different types of entertainment acts,
from singers and musicians, to stand-up comics, magicians, dancers, and other
entertainers. Many shows featured comedy sketches, some of those with recurring
themes, settings and/or characters. Most variety shows are hosted by a personality
who is the front person for the show. variety shows were a staple of television from
its dawn in the late 1940s, well into the 1970s.
Some examples of very popular very successful variety shows are:
A distinction is made here between these types of shows which aired in the
evening between the evening and nightly news, and late-night talk shows, such as
The Tonight Show, or
late-night sketch comedy shows like
Saturday Night Live, both
which it can be argued offer variety but have a slightly different format and feel
than the variety shows listed above.
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VIDEO EDITOR
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See EDITOR
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VIEWPOINTS
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A technique of movement exercises and games (often wholly or partially improvisational)
that provides a physical vocabulary for actors, involving movement and gesture. The
basic precept is to engage an ensemble, or even a dou, of actors in becoming in tune
to their surroundings (the space) on the stage or set and their connectivity to each
other in that space. It's a method of helping the actors use their bodies in time
and space to create, reach, and communicate more meaning in the universe of the
story they are telling on the stage or screen.
See
"A Brief History of Viewpoints."
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VOICE ACTING
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See VOICE-OVER ‐‐ *especially deffinition
number 3
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VOICE-OVER
(AKA: VO, VOICE ACTING, VOICE WORK)
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1) In a movie, TV, or video production: In general terms. a voice-over is any
voice heard where the actor or spokesman is not on screen. Usually it means
that the person is not intended to be considered physically present in the
action being seen on screen. It is a voice from a TV, radio, phone, or an
answering machine. It may also be a voice in an on-screen character's mind,
such as the voice of the person who has written the letter we see the character
reading, or it's a poignant remembrance. Lastly, it is narration or informational
speaking by someone not on camera and not suggested as in the scene but out of
frame.
2) In a theatre production: any recorded voice that is played during a live
performance.
3) Especially concerning "voice acting" and "voice work," to
perform as an announcer for a TV production, an announcer or character for a radio
or audio-only production or to perform the voice of an animated character in an
animated production or animated sequence.
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VOICE WORK
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See VOICE-OVER ‐‐ *especially deffinition
number 3
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WALKIE CHECK
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Movie & TV production walkie-talkie lingo for when crew members first turn their
walkie talkies on, they call for a walkie check over the system to be sure their
unit is working. Someone will reply with "Good check," to affirm the
walkie-talkie is working.
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WALLA
(AKA: RHUBARB)
*(in some cases: SNAZZUM)
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The name for the indistinguishable dialogue (or chatter) of background characters
in a scene from a movie or TV program. "Walla" is the American term, and
"rhubarb" is the term used in Great Britain. Typically the background
extras on set are actually pantomiming dialogue so as to not cause a sound-balance
problem with the dialogue of the principle actors. The background walla heard in
the final cut is either archived sound from
a sound effects library, or a group of actors brought into a sound studio in
postproduction ‐‐ then whichever
is added to the soundtrack for the scene in question.
The words ("walla" or "rhubarb") come from the idea that the
particular word is being said, but, in reality those who speak the faux dialogue
for the walla recording may be murmuring other things. Most are likely saying
coherent sentences. Some of the other words that might be said are: "peas and
carrots," "watermelon cantaloupe," "natter natter"
"grommish grommish" or some other gibberish a particular speaker is
improvising. Again, often these people are constructing coherent sentences, but the
conglomeration of all the voices renders it all indistinguishable murmuring.
Beyond audio level control on set, the other reason to add recorded walla for the
background extras is that if any of those extras where to have a distinct dialogue
perceptible in the final mix they they would be elevated to principal actors
(day players) and thus would be
required to be paid a higher wage.
*See also, snazzum.
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WEB PRODUCTION
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See ON-LINE PRODUCTION
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WEB SERIES
(AKA: ON-LINE SERIES)
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An on-line television production,
in which the episodes are available to view on the World Wide Web at a website or
through a podcast server.
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WEB TELEVISION
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See ON-LINE TELEVISION
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WIDE SHOT
(AKA: LONG SHOT or FULL SHOT)
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A shot taken from a distance usually more than several feet to several hundred
feet which shows a whole setting, or person or other subject in that setting.
The purpose is to establish the subject of the shot in relationship to the
surroundings. Often, but not always, the wide shot is the actual
"establishing shot";
sometimes it's a reveal, at the end of a scene or a gag in a scene.
To "go long" or to "go wide" means to shoot this sort of
shot.
Master shots are virtually
always wide shots.
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WILD SOUND
(AKA: WILD AUDIO, WILD TRACK, WILD LINES, or WILD DIALOGUE)
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Audio, usually recorded during shooting, but not on camera, intended to be
synchronized with film or video footage which has been shot separately. In most
cases wild sound is recorded on location. Wild sound may be sound effects or
extra takes of lines that are recorded when the cameras are not rolling or not
focused on the action. Room tone is also wild sound. Wild sound should not be
confused with Foley sound or ADR, the latter two being recorded in sound studios
and thus under much more controlled circumstances.
Sometimes an excerpt of audio from an unused take is used in the take chosen for
the final cut, to add in, or to replace something, and sometimes such is referred
to as "wild sound."
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WRAP
(I.E.: WRAPPED, TO BE WRAPPED, "THAT'S A WRAP")
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1) as a noun: a point when some element of a production is finished, whether it
be a shot, a scene, the days production, the production as a whole, the work of
a specific actor, or any other particular element or portion of the production.
As in: "Annnd, that's a wrap!"
2) as a verb: the act of finishing any element or portion of a production, or the
act of sending an actor or crew member home for the day, for some period of
production time, or from the production from that point forward. For instance the
first AD might instruct a
PA to tell an actor he or
she is wrapped for the day. Also, it's not uncommon, on a movie set, when an actor
has finished her or his last scene in the production, for the
director or the first AD to announce
to the rest of the cast and the crew, "Ladies and gentleman, John/Jane is
wrapped from [the name of the movie]!" Then everyone else claps and
cheers for them.
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WRITER
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To state the obvious, a writer writes some or all of the content of the film or TV
production. There are however many different categories and classifications of
"writer," especially in television. A writer might write only the story,
as a prose narrative or a treatment,
or the writer might write a portion of, or all of, a
screenplay or
teleplay.
In the television industry, far more than film, there are multiple designations of
those who write for the medium with various levels of duties and responsibility. Most
designations are as some sort of producer and are generally dictated by the
Writers Guild of America. Basically, besides
the actual term "writer," which is for those who are staff writers in the
writers room, these are the other
designations of writers (producers) (click on each for more detail):
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WRITER/DIRECTOR
(Sometimes: "AUTEUR")
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A film, video or television maker who, as the title suggests, both writes and
directs the project. Frequently such is also a producer. The writer/director can
also be called an auteur.
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WRITERS ROOM
(AKA: WRITING ROOM)
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The office area, almost always set up conference style, where the writing team for
a television series or other type of TV program meet to collaboratively work on
writing episodes or TV movies, though a few of the writers may have their own
offices to write in, as well. The writing room is where the writers will pitch ideas
to the head writer and where the
head writer will mete out writing assignments.
Movie productions may also have a writing room if there is a writing team of
screenwriters on the project.
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ZOOM SHOT
(AKA: ZOOM)
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A change in the focal length of the lens to alter the magnification of the
subject to increase ("zoom in") or decrease ("zoom out")
the subject's size on screen. In other words to make the shot move into or away
from the subject while keeping the camera stationary. This is different from a
dolly shot, where the camera itself physically moves toward or away from the
subject. Zooms keep the relative positions and sizes of objects around the
subject constant; in dolly shots such relationships change as the perspective
changes by the movement of the camera in or out.
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