Below are links to useful online resources, institutions, and information related to the subjects of film and television. Show Organizations Informational Websites Streaming Video Scripts & Screenplays Stock Footage Still Images & Posters Television Commercials Educational and Certification Programs National Archives and Records Administration Human Studies Film Archive, National Museum of Natural History Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum UCLA Film and Television Archive Harvard Film Archive Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive George Eastman House Museum of Modern Art: Celeste Bartos International Film Study Center Academy Film Archives, Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts, and Sciences National Film Board of Canada New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Cinematic Arts Library, University of Southern California Moving Image Research Collections, University of South Carolina Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research The Black Film Center, Indiana University, Bloomington Walter J. Brown Media Archives & Peabody Awards Collection The Paley Center for Media Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts, and Sciences The Writers Guild Foundation: Shavelson-Webb Library and Archive European Film Gateway National Film Preservation Board National Film Preservation Foundation American Film Institute Association of Moving Image Archivists International Federation of Film Archives International Federation of Television Archives Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts, and Sciences Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Writers Guild of America West (WGA) Writers Guild of America, East (WGAE) Directors Guild of America (DGA) National Film Registry American Silent Feature Film Database Media History Digital Library Moving Image Source, Museum of the Moving Image Silent Era Epguides.com American Widescreen Museum Internet Movie Database Big Cartoon Database National Film Preservation Foundation--Online Field Guide to Sponsored Films American Archive of Public Broadcasting Vanderbilt Television News Archive Internet Archive Netflix Hulu Amazon Video Margaret Herrick Library: Motion Picture Script Database Motion Picture Scripts Collection, 1921-1965, New York State Archives UCLA Collection of Motion Picture Scripts African American Film Script Collection, Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington The Daily Script Simply Scripts Getty Images Footage.net Internet Archive Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archive Footage Sales Global Image Works Producers Library CriticalPast MPTV Images Photofest Everett Collection Internet Archive: Classic TV Commercials AdViews: Digital Archive of Vintage Television Commercials—Duke University Political Communication Center & Julian P. Kanter Political Commercial Archive--University Of Oklaholma UCLA Film and Television Archive: Television Commercials Museum of the Moving Image: The Living Room Candidate AdCouncil: PSA Central Clio Awards London International Advertising Awards AdLand Clipland.com Retro Junk TVParty.com USA TV Ads AMIA Online Learning Series New York University, The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation Program, Cinema Studies Department L. Jeffrey Selznick School of Film and Video Preservation, George Eastman House M.A. in Film Archiving, East Anglia (United Kingdom) Archive Futures, BFI Professional Development University of Amsterdam, MA Heritage Studies: Preservation and Presentation of the Moving Image (Netherlands) Graduate Certificate in Audiovisual Archiving, Charles Sturt University (Australia) M.A. in Conservation of New Media and Digital Information, Stuttgart Academy of Art and Design (Germany) What are the stages of filming?The 7 stages of film making (development, pre-production, production, photography, wrap, post-production, distribution)
What are the 5 phases of a film production and what goes on in each phase?Film Production is created in 5 phases: development, pre-production, production, post-production, and distribution. Each phase has a different purpose, with the overarching goal to get to the next one, and ultimately on to distribution. Each stage varies in length, and different roles suit different stages.
What is the last step in the preRehearsal: At the end of the preproduction phase and before your film shoot begins, you'll likely want to rehearse with the cast, figuring out the emotional and physical logistics of each scene.
What is the most common violation of order in continuity editing?Continuity editing typically presents the story events in a 1-2-3 order. The most common violation of 1-2-3 order is a flashback, signaled by a cut or dissolve.
|