Media terminology
-Sound BRIDGE
-SONIC FLASHBACK
-Diegetic sound
-Non diegetic sound
-Direct sound
-nonsimultaneous sound
-offscreen
-VOICE OVER
-SYNCHRONOUS SOUND
-POSTSYNCHRONIZATION DUBBING
Definition
- Sound bridge is the bridge that either leads a scene into another scene to create a different sort of atmosphere or it could be a scene finishing.
-This is a technique used to create a sort of flashback using sound that was once diegetic at a period of time in the film but now is non diegetic over pictures to create a flash back.
-Diegtic sound is used in the scene where you can see where the sound is coming from.
-A sound that isnt visable in the scene e.g film music.
-The sound that we hear in the scene.
-Diegetic sound that comes from a source in time either earlier or later than the
images it accompanies
-Simultaneous sound from a source assumed to be in the space of the scene but
outside what is visible onscreen
-When a voice, often that of a character in the film, is heard while we see an
image of a space and time in which that character is not actually speaking.
-Sound that is matched temporally with the movements occuring in the images, as
when dialogue corresponds to lip movements
- The process of adding sound to images after they have been shot and assembled
effect
-This helps create a different sort of mood within the audience to fit the purpose of the scene
-This creates a sort of climax or intense atmosphere amongst the audience to get them thinking about the situation the characters are in.
-This gives more detail as to whats happening with in the scene, if we couldnt hear the piano playing we'de think the director was trying to put us in the shoes of a death person.
-This creates a specific mood according to the sort of music.
-Lets us know whats going on in the film
-creates suspense
The
voice over is often used to give a sense of a character's subjectivity or to
narrate an event told in flashback.
-It is the opposite of direct sound. It is
not, however, the opposite of synchronous sound,
since sound and image are also matched here, even if at a later stage in the
editing process. Compare the French
example
-Yi Yi (Taiwan, 2000).
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