Key Vocabulary for TV Drama
Camera Shots, Angle, Movement and Composition
• Shots: Establishing shot, Master shot, Close-up; a certain feature or the subject that takes up the hole frame. Mid-shot; showing some of the subject in detail, but giving an impression of the whole subject Long shot; shows the entire object or human figure and is usually intended to place it in some relation to it's surrounding. Wide shot; the subject takes up the full frame, or as much as possible. Two-shot; shot of two characters engaged in conversation, establishing a relationship. Aerial shot; taken from an overhead position. Point of view shot; showing something from the subject's perspective. Over the shoulder shot; looking from behind a person looking at the subject. and variations of these.
• Angle: high angle, low angle, canted angle.
• Movement: pan, tilt, track, dolly, crane, steadicam, hand-held, zoom, reverse zoom.
• Composition: framing, rule of thirds, depth of field – deep and shallow focus, focus pulls.
Editing
Includes transition of image and sound – continuity and non-continuity systems.
• Cutting: shot/reverse shot, eyeline match, graphic match, action match, jump cut, crosscutting, parallel editing, cutaway; insert.
• Other transitions: dissolve, fade-in, fade-out, wipe, superimposition, long take, short take, slow motion, ellipsis and expansion of time, post-production, visual effects.
Sound
• Diegetic and non-diegetic sound; synchronous/asynchronous sound; sound effects; added to the clip during post-production. sound motif, sound bridge, dialogue, voiceover, mode of address/direct address, sound mixing, sound perspective.
• Soundtrack: score, incidental music, themes and stings, ambient sound.
Mise-en-Scène
• Production design: location, studio, set design, costume and make-up, properties.
• Lighting; colour design.
Areas of representation
• Gender
• Age
• Ethnicity
• Sexuality
• Class and status
• Physical ability/disability
• Regional identity
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