Film Terms
Soundtrack
Everything audiences hear when they watch a sound film. Composed of dialogue, music, and sound effects
Mixing
the process of combining three elements of film sound into one soundtrack, which is added to the image track in post-production.
Aural Object
the term French film theorist Christian Metz used to describe film sound, which he argued, is often wrongly treated as an attribute of the image rather than as an entity in itself.
Accent
powerful indicator of background and social status
Foley Artists
produce many of a films sound effects by creatively manipulating various materials.
Pitch
refers to the frequency, or its position on a musical scale.
Volume
reflects the level and type of a person engagement with her surroundings. Generally, the louder a person speaks, the greater the emotional intensity of her words.
Lightning Mix
sound doesn't overlap from one scene to the next
Automatic Dialogue Replacement (ADR)
A technique for recording synchronized dialogue in post-production, using a machine that runs forward and backward. Also called looping.
The Voice Over
A third person voice that speaks to the audience. It can allow the audience to access the characters immediate thoughts, function as a characters meditation, and help the audience to understand events that they may not otherwise understand
On- the nose dialogue
Clunky dialogue that states the obvious
On-and off-screen space
Off-Screen space is created when you hear a sound off screen but do not see it. The details are unseen, but are important factors that shape the storyline. On-screen is simply when you see and hear the noise on screen.
Direct Sound
Sound recorded on a set, location, or for documentary film, at an actual real world event.
Line Reading
The way an actor says the line, including pauses, intonation, and emotion
Scores
a musical complement written specifically for a film
Looping
achieved by cutting several identical lengths of developed film and having actors record the dialogue repeatedly
Vocal Tics
certain aspects of a voice that help us characterize specific individuals.
Subtext
the unstated meaning that underlies spoken words
Text
the words a character says
Acousmetre
what French film scholar, Michel Chion defines as the disembodied voice whose source is withheld from spectator completely or until late in the film
Sound Bridge
where the sound at the end of one scene carries over into the next scene
Functions of Film Music
• It can establish the historical context for a scene • It can help depict a scene's geographical space • It can help define characters • It can help shape the emotional tenor of space • It can provide a distanced or ironic commentary on a scene's visual information
Five Characteristics of Music
• Patterns of Development • Lyrical Content • Tempo and Volume • Instrumentation • Cultural Significance