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How Hollywood Does It - Film History & Techniques of Sound

Title
How Hollywood Does It - Film History & Techniques of Sound [electronic resource] / TMW Media Group
Publication
[Place of publication not identified] : TMW Media Group, [2013]
Distribution
New York, N.Y. : distributed by Infobase, 2015.
Copyright Notice Date
©2013
Physical Description
1 streaming video file (1 video file (26 min., 34 sec.)) : sd., col.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Streaming video file encoded with permission for digital streaming by Infobase on July 03, 2015.
Closed-captioned.
Title from distributor's description (Infobase, November 04, 2015).
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
How Hollywood Does It is a look at the history, techniques, movements and people who create the magic of motion pictures. Sound investigates the various types of sound, how they are recorded, and how they are incorporated in a film. Besides the visuals in moving pictures, sound also contributes to part of those magical effects. This program will focus on sound design and how life can be breathed into a project through the use of carefully selected and carefully placed sounds. When we think about or talk about them, we can categorize all sounds into one of three categories: dialogue or voice, music, and sound effects. Sound effects can be sounds that occur naturally within the film itself or sounds that add to the overall impact that the film presents. Music is quite often not part of the film itself, but a musical track that adds to the mood of the film. Both music and sound effects are usually classified as either diegetic or non-diegetic sounds. Simply put, non-diegetic sounds are those which do not occur within the film, while diegetic sounds occur inside of the film's action. This program features diegetic and non-diegetic music in the 1950 film D-O-A Atmospheric sound known as foleying in Meet John Doe and manufactured sound elements (suspenseful mood music, a ray gun emission, the whirling of flying spaceships) in the 1953 Killers From Outer Space. Hosted by Jeffrey Hill and Mark A. Graves - Jeffrey Hill is an associate professor at Morehead State University, Department of Communication, Media and Leadership Studies. Dr. Mark Graves is an associate professor of English.
Variant and related titles
Films on demand.
Other formats
digital transfer of (manifestation): TMW Media Group, 2013.
Format
Images / Online / Video & Film
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 20, 2019
System details note
System requirements: FOD playback platform.
Contents
Diegetic and Non-Diegetic Sound (3:45)
Recording Dialogue (2:04)
Foleying (3:42)
Sound Effects (2:10)
Sound Bridging (1:50)
Music in Film (4:15)
Movie Music Function (2:06)
Film Sound Experiment (5:47)
Credits: How Hollywood Does It - Film History & Techniques of Sound (0:15)
Videorecording number
93760 Infobase
Genre/Form
Educational films.
Internet videos.
Citation

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