A | B |
Character | a person in a novel, play, or movie. |
Audience | the assembled spectators or listeners at a public event, such as a play, movie, concert, or meeting. "the orchestra was given an enthusiastic ovation from the audience" |
Cast | the group of actors who make up a film or stage play |
Crew | A film crew is a group of people, hired by a production company, for the purpose of producing a film or motion picture. |
Director | a person who supervises the actors, camera crew, and other staff for a movie, play, television program, or similar production. |
Narrator | a person who delivers a commentary accompanying a movie, broadcast, piece of music, etc. |
Producer | a person responsible for the financial and managerial aspects of making of a movie or broadcast or for staging a play, opera, etc. |
Role | an actor's part in a play, movie, etc. |
Cinematography | the art of making motion pictures. |
Screenplay | the script of a movie, including acting instructions and scene directions. |
Storyline | the plot of a novel, play, movie, or other narrative form. |
Genre | a category of artistic composition, as in music or literature, characterized by similarities in form, style, or subject matter. |
Plot | the main events of a play, novel, movie, or similar work, devised and presented by the writer as an interrelated sequence. |
Script | the written text of a play, movie, or broadcast. |
Theme | an idea that recurs in or pervades a work of art or literature. |
Close Up | very near. |
Cut | shorten (a text, movie, or performance) by removing material. |
Edit | prepare (written material) for publication by correcting, condensing, or otherwise modifying it. |
Lighting | the arrangement or effect of lights. |
Credits | public acknowledgment or praise, typically that given or received when a person's responsibility for an action or idea becomes or is made apparent. |