Cinematography is the technique of making films for the cinema. an admirer of Arthur Jafa's breathtaking cinematography. the skill or study of making films (cinematograph; CINEMA). Art and technology of motion-picture photography. It involves the composition of a scene, lighting of the set and actors, choice of cameras, camera angle, and integration of special effects to achieve the photographic images desired by the director. Cinematography focuses on relations between the individual shots and groups of shots that make up a scene to produce a film's effect. Well-known cinematographers include Nestor Almendros, Gregg Toland, and Sven Nykvist
pretty pictures that move; typically preceded by an adjective ("stunning," "dreamlike," "flat")
Visual effects in general In particular, the panoramic countryside shots if outside the Village; the colorful buildings and costumes if within the Village; and fancy ``high-tech'' props, high-tech especially for the 1960s
The discipline of making lighting and camera choices when recording photographic images for the cinema
A general term for all the manipulations of the film strip by the camera in the shooting phase and by the laboratory in the developing phase
In this course, we're using the term cinematography to cover all those things that the Director of Photography for a film would be responsible for: in other words, all those technical decisions and practices associated with the camera itself This includes choosing the film stock, lenses, angles, distances, and camera movements as well as (sometimes) deciding how the lighting will be set up Filmmakers who favor a mise-en-scene approach over a montage approach will often do the things that editing normally does with carefully choreographed camerawork (for example, the first long take in Orson Welles's Touch of Evil)
التركية - التركية
تعريف sinematografi في التركية التركية القاموس.
Sinema filmi için görüntü kaydederken ışıklandırma ve kamera tercihleri yapma disiplini