Film
Initially, moving pictures meant only the movement that is perceived when a string of celluloid-recorded images are projected at a rate of about 16 or more frames per second (see persistence of vision). Today, motion pictures (or "movies") are an art form, as well as one of the most popular forms of entertainment.
A feature film is usually defined as being more than 60 minutes in length.
Opportunities to see a feature film include:
- going to a movie theater
- watching it on television
- renting or buying a video tape or DVD
- downloading one from the internet and watching it on the computer display
History of Cinema
Originally moving picture film was shot at various speeds using hand-cranked cameras; then the speed for mechanized cameras and projectors was standardized at 16 frames per second, which was faster than much existing hand-cranked footage. A new standard speed, 24 frames per second, came with the introduction of sound. Improvements since the late 1800s include the mechanization of cameras, allowing them to record at a consistent speed, the invention of more sophisticated filmstocks and lenses, allowing directors to film in increasingly dim conditions, and the development of synch sound, allowing sound to be recorded at exactly the same speed as its corresponding video. Since the advent of many other media technologies, film may include a broad range of media--both linear and non-linear, dramatic and informational, motion and still (though progressive).
Topics of interest
- Academy Awards
- Common terms
- Animation
- Digital cinema
- Film colorization
- Film criticism
- Film festivals
- Film gauges
- Film genres
- Film history
- Film institutes
- Film preservation
- Film production
- Film rating systems
- Film restoration
- Film styles
- Film technique
- Film theory
- IMAX
- List of gay movies
- Special effects
- Top grossing movies
- Airlines at the movies
- Athletes in movies
- Movie theater
- Photographic film
- Entertainment law
- An incomplete list of films covered in Wikipedia
- Cinema pre-history: chronophotography, etc.
- 3-D
Film people
- Actors
- Film crew
- film criticism
- Film directors
- Screenwriter
- Movie studio
- Experimental filmmaker
- Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince
- Etienne-Jules Marey
Classification by chronology
Classification by geographical location of production
- Cinema of Argentina
- Cinema of Australia
- Cinema of Brazil
- Cinema of Chile
- Cinema of China
- Cinema of Egypt
- Cinema of France
- Cinema of Germany
- Cinema of India (Bollywood, Kollywood, Malayalam cinema)
- Cinema of Indonesia
- Cinema of Iran
- Cinema of Italy
- Cinema of Japan
- Cinema of Malaysia
- Cinema of Mexico
- Cinema of New Zealand
- Cinema of Russia
- Cinema of South Africa
- Cinema of South Korea
- Cinema of Sweden
- Cinema of Turkey
- Cinema of the United States (Hollywood)
External links, references, and resources
- The IMDb (Internet Movie Database) for information on specific motion pictures.
- About Gay Movies: information about gay themed movies
- Rotten Tomatoes for an overview of reviews of a film
- Ain't It Cool News
- The OMDB (Open Movie Database)