Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Film Terminology. Aerial Shot. An aerial shot is a shot filmed from far overhead. The shot is typically obtained from a plane, blimp, drone, or other aerial device. When an aerial shot opens a film, it is referred to as an establishing shot. FURTHER RESEARCH. Aerial Shot. Overhead Shots →. Epic Drone Shots Mashup →. What is an Establishing Shot →.

  3. Describe a movie. Use your own words, or search with titles, actors, directors, genres etc. We find movies for you to watch.

  4. What is an Epilogue in Film — a screenwriter’s guide on how to end a movie, including the various types of epilogues in film and how the best movie endings use them.

    • 12 min
    • 91.7K
    • StudioBinder
  5. Mar 30, 2015 · noun (in a film or television programme) a final revelation of information that has previously been kept from the characters or viewers. Alternatively, you could use unveil verb show or announce publicly for the first time.

  6. the words that appear on the film screen and convey information; categories of titles include: credit titles, main titles, end titles, insert titles, and subtitles; a creeper title, also known as a roll-up title, refers to a film title that appears to move solwly across the screen - vertically or horizontally; in silent film, "titles" (called title cards or intertitles) included the written commentary and full screens of textual dialogue spliced within the action; title design refers to the ...

  7. Is there a name for text - mostly at a film's conclusion - that gives a summary of events that follow? For example, at the end of Savage Messiah (2002) there appears writing on the screen that outlines what happened to characters after the film's conclusion. Is there a specific term for these summaries at film's end? Here is an example. And picture

  8. a film characterized by scenes of great tension, danger, adventure, suspense, or high drama, often climaxing at the end of a film, or at the end of a multi-part serial episode, where the plot ending and the fate of the protagonist(s) are left unresolved; the name was derived from the movie serials of the 1930's where each week the hero (or ...