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Theatre : It is specially designed for the purpose presenting dramatic performance before an audience.
Celluloid :The world’s first plastic materials used as the basis for a flexible film that was perfected in 1884.
Aswang : The first talking picture in Tagalog.
Director : His function is to interpret the play as it was conceived by the playwright.
Acting : The fundamental art of the theatre.
Cinema : Is the art of motion picture photography.
Empathy : The principal force working for the actor in creating the illusion of reality.
Set : It is the most obvious visual element, and perhaps the largest, in a theatrical production.
MakeUp : It helps beautify or disguise the actor and add to the mood, theme, and visual impact of the production.
Lighting : It provides necessary visibility and can heighten realism.
Scale : t refers to the size of objects on the screen and its relation to the surrounding area.
Sounds : Are recorded in their optical equivalent on the strip of negative parallel to the images.
Message : It is conceived with values and ideas intended to be absorbed by the movie going public.
Kinetoscope : Pictures were shown where one person at a time can look through.
Properties : Commonly abbreviated as props constitute a highly important area of backstage responsibility.
HandProps : Are any objects picked up and used by the actor, whether already placed on the set or carried on during a scene.
SetProps : Are objects standing about the floor of the set but not large enough to be considered as part of the set.
Costume : It allows the actor to feely move without danger of splitting open at an inopportune moment.
Play : Is born in manuscript and buried in a printed text, it knows life, like a human being, only in the bright world of actions.
Script : It can be analyzed in items of the basic elements of plot, character theme, and language in this actual order of their importance.
Cutting : It consists of joining one shot to a shot of another but both made to be logically connected.
Camera Movement : It helps us experience the gradual growth of ideas or emotion.
Dissolve : It involves the superimposition of the last portions of the previous shot ever the adjacent portions of the next shot to show two events happening at the same time.
Fade : Show the old images gradually fading our and a brief period of darkness comes to the screen before the new scene gradually becomes visible.
Framing : It brings about the balance and unity that one sees in a film for it is used as the basis of the design.
Across:4. | It is specially designed for the purpose presenting dramatic performance before an audience. | 6. | Commonly abbreviated as props constitute a highly important area of backstage responsibility. | 8. | It can be analyzed in items of the basic elements of plot, character theme, and language in this actual order of their importance. | 11. | It helps us experience the gradual growth of ideas or emotion. | 12. | It is conceived with values and ideas intended to be absorbed by the movie going public. | 15. | The world’s first plastic materials used as the basis for a flexible film that was perfected in 1884. | 17. | Are any objects picked up and used by the actor, whether already placed on the set or carried on during a scene. | 19. | The first talking picture in Tagalog. | 20. | It allows the actor to feely move without danger of splitting open at an inopportune moment. | 21. | Pictures were shown where one person at a time can look through. | 23. | Is the art of motion picture photography. |
| | Down:1. | The fundamental art of the theatre. | 2. | It brings about the balance and unity that one sees in a film for it is used as the basis of the design. | 3. | His function is to interpret the play as it was conceived by the playwright. | 5. | Are objects standing about the floor of the set but not large enough to be considered as part of the set. | 7. | The principal force working for the actor in creating the illusion of reality. | 9. | It consists of joining one shot to a shot of another but both made to be logically connected. | 10. | It is the most obvious visual element, and perhaps the largest, in a theatrical production. | 12. | It helps beautify or disguise the actor and add to the mood, theme, and visual impact of the production. | 13. | It involves the superimposition of the last portions of the previous shot ever the adjacent portions of the next shot to show two events happening at the same time. | 14. | Is born in manuscript and buried in a printed text, it knows life, like a human being, only in the bright world of actions. | 16. | Show the old images gradually fading our and a brief period of darkness comes to the screen before the new scene gradually becomes visible. | 18. | t refers to the size of objects on the screen and its relation to the surrounding area. | 22. | Are recorded in their optical equivalent on the strip of negative parallel to the images. |
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© 2013
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Across:4. | It is specially designed for the purpose presenting dramatic performance before an audience. | 6. | Commonly abbreviated as props constitute a highly important area of backstage responsibility. | 8. | It can be analyzed in items of the basic elements of plot, character theme, and language in this actual order of their importance. | 11. | It helps us experience the gradual growth of ideas or emotion. | 12. | It is conceived with values and ideas intended to be absorbed by the movie going public. | 15. | The world’s first plastic materials used as the basis for a flexible film that was perfected in 1884. | 17. | Are any objects picked up and used by the actor, whether already placed on the set or carried on during a scene. | 19. | The first talking picture in Tagalog. | 20. | It allows the actor to feely move without danger of splitting open at an inopportune moment. | 21. | Pictures were shown where one person at a time can look through. | 23. | Is the art of motion picture photography. |
| | Down:1. | The fundamental art of the theatre. | 2. | It brings about the balance and unity that one sees in a film for it is used as the basis of the design. | 3. | His function is to interpret the play as it was conceived by the playwright. | 5. | Are objects standing about the floor of the set but not large enough to be considered as part of the set. | 7. | The principal force working for the actor in creating the illusion of reality. | 9. | It consists of joining one shot to a shot of another but both made to be logically connected. | 10. | It is the most obvious visual element, and perhaps the largest, in a theatrical production. | 12. | It helps beautify or disguise the actor and add to the mood, theme, and visual impact of the production. | 13. | It involves the superimposition of the last portions of the previous shot ever the adjacent portions of the next shot to show two events happening at the same time. | 14. | Is born in manuscript and buried in a printed text, it knows life, like a human being, only in the bright world of actions. | 16. | Show the old images gradually fading our and a brief period of darkness comes to the screen before the new scene gradually becomes visible. | 18. | t refers to the size of objects on the screen and its relation to the surrounding area. | 22. | Are recorded in their optical equivalent on the strip of negative parallel to the images. |
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© 2013
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only