Animation - basic terms
Across
- 1. The musical component of a movie's soundtrack, usually written specifically for movies by composers.
- 5. A general term for a written work detailing story, setting, and dialogue. Maybe for a television show or any stage performance.
- 7. An environment used for filming.
- 8. The art of recreating incidental sound effects (such as footsteps) in synchronization with the visual component of a movie.
- 11. A hand drawn sheet representing a single animation frame, usually made of a clear material like cellulose to allow several layers of composition.
- 16. The use of computer graphics to create or enhance special effects.
- 17. (3 WORDS) The re-recording of dialogue by actors in a sound studio during post-production, usually performed to playback of edited picture in order to match lip movements on screen.
- 18. The process of creating the illusion of motion by creating individual frames, as opposed to filming naturally-occuring action at a regular frame rate.
- 19. A continuous block of storytelling either set in a single location or following a particular character.
Down
- 1. An effect used to create an illusion in a movie.
- 2. The process of speeding the frame rate of a camera up, so that when the captured pictures are played at the normal frame rate the action appears to be in slow motion.
- 3. (2 WORDS) Alterations to a film's images during post-production.
- 4. (2 WORDS) A form of animation in which objects are filmed frame-by-frame and altered slightly in between each frame.
- 6. (2 WORDS) A shot in which time appears to move more slowly than normal.
- 9. A script written to be produced as a movie.
- 10. (2 WORDS) the number of frames captured or projected per second.
- 12. (2 WORDS) A shot in which time appears to move more quickly than normal. The process is commonly achieved by either deleting select frames (called "skip frames") or by undercranking.
- 13. (2 WORDS) A measure of the relative sizes of the horizontal and vertical components of an image.
- 14. An individual picture image which eventually appears on a print.
- 15. A change in either camera angle or placement, location, or time.