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Q:
In the 2000s
a. both box-office revenue and film attendance rose dramatically.
b. box-office receipts rose due to higher ticket prices even though attendance dropped.
c. there was a theater building boom to accommodate a growing audience.
d. both box-office revenues and theater attendance dropped dramatically.
e. both a and c.
f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following strategies did producers NOT use to increase sales in foreign markets?
a. Foreign sets, such as Rome, Paris, and Amsterdam, were used.
b. More action-adventure films were produced.
c. Producers paid foreign actors large sums to star in their films.
d. Popular young adult book series were adapted for the screen.
e. Producers cast their films with globally recognized stars.
f. none of the above
Q:
The two extremes in terms of commerce and culture in the movie business are the Hollywood studios and
a. international producers. d. independent auteurs.
b. low-budget exploitation producers. e. television.
c. grass roots, third-world filmmakers. f. none of the above
Q:
Between 2004 and 2013, the total number of tickets sold in the United States
a. rose slightly showing a gradual growth in the industry.
b. leveled off showing a stability in the industry and audience.
c. rose nearly 20 percent after several decades of steady decline.
d. declined slightly but was still above its lowest points in the 1980s and 90s.
e. declined by more than 10 percent indicating a shrinking domestic market.
f. none of the above
Q:
The number of films released by the Hollywood majors over the past decade
a. has declined by 50 percent. d. has increased slightly.
b. has increased by 50 percent. e. has stayed about the same.
c. has declined slightly. f. none of the above
Q:
The leading region outside of the United States in terms of global box office is
a. Europe. d. Africa.
b. Latin America. e. Asia Pacific.
c. the Middle East. f. none of the above
Q:
Nollywood refers to the film industry of
a. India. d. Thailand.
b. Nigeria. e. Norway.
c. Turkey. f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following is NOT true of Nigerian film?
a. They are generally shot on 16mm or super-8 film.
b. The industry produced sixteen hundred films in 2006 alone.
c. They depend on a genre-based star system.
d. They are shot on schedules ranging from three to ten days.
e. They are often shot in English.
f. All of the above are true.
Q:
The Nigerian comedy Osuofia in London
a. was the first African film to win the Grand Prix at Cannes.
b. focuses on corruption in the oil business in the Niger delta.
c. was never released theatrically but sold over four hundred thousand VHS tapes and DVDs.
d. earned more on its first day of release than the simultaneously released The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King.
e. was banned in Nigeria but became an international hit.
f. none of the above
Q:
The greatest influence on filmmaking in the developing world is
a. Hollywood investment in local industries.
b. the waning influence of Hollywood that allows local industries to grow.
c. cable television.
d. government policies that encourage more localized production while putting limits on Hollywood imports.
e. digital video.
f. none of the above
Q:
Nuri Bilge Ceylan is the leading director in
a. Nigeria. d. Turkey.
b. Thailand. e. Kenya.
c. Sri Lanka. f. none of the above
Q:
The films of Nuri Bilge Ceylan are notable for
a. their relatively large budgets and crews.
b. their popularity at home while being virtually unseen abroad.
c. being shot on 35mm film while virtually all other filmmakers are shooting digital video.
d. their action and special effects sequences, which are unusual in the developing world.
e. both c and d
f. none of the above
Q:
During the 2000s, Hollywood
a. set up production units in international markets.
b. funded local-language projects in countries like Mexico, Spain, and China.
c. employed a country manager system that had a head of international production in its Hollywood headquarters.
d. allowed local managers to run individual territories and operate as stand-alone producers.
e. none of the above
f. all of the above
Q:
Cha, Cha, Cha Productions is a partnership of Guillermo del Toro, Alejandro Irritu, and Alfonso Cuarn that is financed by a five-picture deal with
a. Universal. d. Warner Brothers.
b. Sony. e. 20th Century-Fox.
c. Disney. f. none of the above
Q:
The period during which Hollywood makes over 40 percent of its box-office revenue is
a. the Christmas season between Thanksgiving and New Years Day.
b. the summer season between May and Labor Day.
c. the fall season between back to school and Thanksgiving.
d. the winter season between January and March.
e. the spring season from March through May.
f. No single season dominates Hollywoods box office.
Q:
The cost to make and physically distribute a celluloid film print is
a. $20.
b. $200.
c. $2,000.
d. $20,000.
e. cheaper than the distribution of a digital print.
f. about the same as the distribution of a digital print.
Q:
Digital Cinema allows for all of the following EXCEPT
a. filmmakers can shoot thousands of hours of footage with very little cost.
b. directors can check a shot on the spot before moving on to the next one.
c. it can capture the deepest blacks and brightest highlights.
d. projection has no loss of quality over time, regardless of the number of times the film is screened.
e. there is easier integration of special effects.
f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following is NOT one of Lev Manovichs ideas about digital cinema?
a. The computer has displaced photography as the only means by which to generate a photo-realistic image.
b. Once live-action footage is digitized, it loses its direct relationship to reality.
c. Digitization makes film as malleable a medium as painting or sculpture.
d. The distinction between editing and special effects collapses in the digital realm.
e. The digital realm breaks down the distinction between creation and modification.
f. All of the above are Manovichs ideas on the digital cinema.
Q:
The impact of digital technology on feature films
a. has been almost exclusively in the realm of special effects.
b. has been less profound in terms of editing and post-production.
c. has not changed image-capture technology significantly.
d. has been inconsequential in the field of exhibition.
e. will not be seen until films are distributed via the Internet.
f. none of the above
Q:
Between 1990 and 1995, all of the following were true of the Hollywood studios EXCEPT
a. their marketing costs rose by over 90 percent.
b. star salaries doubled.
c. box-office revenue decreased slightly.
d. the profit margin for feature films declined by 15 percent.
e. production costs experienced double-digit growth.
f. All of the above are true.
Q:
Between 1990 and 1995, the number of films produced by the major studios
a. stayed relatively stable. d. increased by 25 percent.
b. decreased slightly. e. decreased by 25 percent.
c. increased slightly. f. none of the above
Q:
The percentage of earnings that came from the theatrical release of American motion pictures in the mid-1990s was
a. 90 percent. d. 20 percent.
b. 50 percent. e. 5 percent.
c. 35 percent. f. none of the above
Q:
By the late 1990s, major studios
a. needed to gross $500 million in theatrical releases to stay solvent.
b. were releasing films first in major cities, then in the suburbs.
c. were producing less elaborate, indie films to keep the cost of productions down.
d. gained more from foreign theatrical releases than domestic.
e. were forced to renegotiate many directors contracts, to their loss.
f. none of the above
Q:
All of the following are true of saturation booking EXCEPT
a. it was necessitated by rising production costs.
b. it meant opening on two to three thousand screens simultaneously.
c. it put heavy emphasis on the first three days of a films release, which determined its value in all other markets.
d. it led to increased emphasis on franchises.
e. it only applied to a small number of big budget films, whereas others followed the model of platform booking.
f. all of the above
Q:
An entertainment brand can be described as
a. a lump of content that can be exploited through film, broadcast and cable television, publishing, theme parks, music, and merchandising.
b. the spokes of a wheel radiating from a product so that exploitation both produces income and strengthens the brand.
c. repurposing material from feature film production into other media or repurposing material from other media into feature films.
d. the financing of production based on its potential reproducibility and synergy.
e. none of the above
f. all of the above
Q:
Which of the following is NOT true of the film industry in the United States in the mid-2010s?
a. It has the largest home market for motion picture screens in the world.
b. The American market accounts for over 40 percent of the global box office.
c. There are more than one hundred thousand movie screens in the United States.
d. Studios could amortize the production cost of their films in the U.S. market alone.
e. Neither b nor d are true.
f. None of the above are true.
Q:
The American studios
a. have been gradually losing global market share for over a decade.
b. are facing tougher competition from international filmmakers for their respective domestic markets but not the global market.
c. are still focused almost entirely on the domestic market because of its predictability and profitability.
d. enjoy a global market power that has never been stronger or totalizing in nature.
e. both a and b
f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following is NOT an aspect of the Hollywood studios international strategy?
a. recognition that the American market is completely saturated
b. making films with international settings in order to attract a global audience
c. 40 percent of total film rentals come from foreign sources
d. the production of action-adventure franchises as global blockbusters
e. the abandonment of the Hollywood star system
f. All of the above are aspects of Hollywoods global strategy.
Q:
Contemporary filmmakers
a. view CGI as a fundamental narrative building block that is integral throughout the production process.
b. use CGI as a particularly spectacular form of special effect.
c. think of CGI primarily as a postproduction tool that allows for the fixing of mistakes and correcting of framing and color.
d. think of postproduction as much less important now that CGI has been integrated into production itself.
e. still have not begun to consider CGI during the scripting and preproduction phases.
f. none of the above
Q:
The difference between the CGI-created storms in the 1996 film Twister and those in A Perfect Storm from 2000 is
a. Twister was done by ILM while A Perfect Storm was created by Digital Domain.
b. Twisters storm was composited into live action while the live action in A Perfect Storm was integrated into the computer-generated storm.
c. only A Perfect Storm used procedural description.
d. A Perfect Storm was the first use of the Massive software system.
e. the level of visual detail is higher in Twister as a result of more time spent on particle animation.
f. none of the above
Q:
The cost of CGI in the late 1990s
a. was still so high that only the biggest-budget films could afford it.
b. was getting more expensive, further limiting the number of films that could use it.
c. had dropped so low that even exploitation producers could afford CGI.
d. was leveling off so that CGI-based effects could be utilized by most studio films with a reasonably large budget.
e. both a and b
f. none of the above
Q:
The problem with the CGI werewolves in An American Werewolf in Paris is
a. they were so expensive to create.
b. they lacked realistic-looking fur.
c. their movements seemed artificial because of the low-budget CGI.
d. they appeared to lack volume.
e. they looked fine in long shot but unconvincing in close-up.
f. none of the above
Q:
Persistence of Vision is a company that specializes in
a. creating digital mouth movements. d. procedural animation.
b. compositing. e. pre-visualization.
c. particle animation. f. none of the above
Q:
CGI is used by low- and mid-budget producers, such as Sense and Sensibility and The Ninth Gate, for all of the following EXCEPT
a. to remove unwanted elements from the frame.
b. for color correction.
c. to simulate day for night.
d. to simulate backgrounds.
e. to change the look of the sky.
f. CGI is used by low- and mid-budget producers for all of the above.
Q:
The Bone Collector
a. used still photographs of Beijing to provide a background for scenes that would have been too expensive to shoot in China.
b. used CGI bullets so that no actual firearms had to be used on set.
c. used CGI to create a basket full of leeches that the ASPCA would have objected to.
d. was shot against a blue screen on a soundstage and then had its Manhattan setting composited in later.
e. was shot with very few extras who were then all composited in after editing was complete.
f. none of the above
Q:
The procedural animation program called Massive was developed for
a. Moulin Rouge.
b. Pearl Harbor.
c. Gladiator.
d. Twister.
e. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.
f. none of the above
Q:
Avatar
a. was shot in traditional 3-D and then converted to digital 3-D for exhibition.
b. has been called The Jazz Singer of 3-D movies.
c. required just a single camera and lens.
d. works off of a completely different principle than the anaglyphic 3-D of Bwana Devil and Kiss Me Kate.
e. was initially not filmed in 3-D at all but converted through a CGI process.
f. none of the above
Q:
The Cameron Pace Fusion Camera is used for shooting
a. IMAX films.
b. any film that might require extensive CGI.
c. digital 3-D.
d. extreme slow-motion.
e. underwater.
f. none of the above
Q:
The Polar Express
a. was the first film to shoot in IMAX 3-D.
b. was the first feature film to be shot in the simplified RealD process.
c. was first animated traditionally then turned into 3-D animation through CGI.
d. was the first feature film to be shot live action on normal 35mm celluloid and then transformed digitally into 3-D animation.
e. was the first film shot in the 4K digital format.
f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following directors did NOT announce that they were preparing to make films in 3-D?
a. Martin Scorsese
b. Steven Speilberg
c. Ridley Scott
d. Francis Ford Coppola
e. All of the above announced their decision to work in 3-D.
f. Only a and c expressed interest in 3-D.
Q:
The Thirteenth Floor
a. used no CGI but only optical effects.
b. used both color and black-and-white interpositives to create a retro color palette.
c. was the first film to use extensive tiling.
d. used a digital intermediate process to create its unique color effects.
e. used both bleach-bypass and CGI color correction.
f. none of the above
Q:
Tiling is used to
a. perform sensitive color correction.
b. remove unwanted elements from the frame.
c. add the quality of randomness to computer-animated images.
d. multiply extras.
e. create photo-realistic backgrounds.
f. none of the above
Q:
Rome, in the film Gladiator, was created using
a. digital matte painting. d. computer-graphic models.
b. digitized photographs. e. only a and d
c. actual buildings. f. all of the above
Q:
Without CGI, the budget of a film like Gladiator
a. would be significantly lower.
b. would be about the same, but it would not look as convincing.
c. would be prohibitive.
d. might be slightly higher, but it would not be as spectacular.
e. would be as much as three times higher.
f. none of the above
Q:
The process of creating moving storyboards with CGI stick figures to create a guide for matching live action with digitally created material is called
a. animatics. d. Cari.
b. maquette. e. procedural description.
c. inverse kinematics. f. none of the above
Q:
Cari software permits
a. the pre-visualization of composited scenes.
b. precise control of the movements of an individual object within a dynamic group.
c. the integration of multiple software programs into a single composited image.
d. the simulation of natural randomness in CGI effects like weather and mass movement.
e. particle animation.
f. none of the above
Q:
Films like Sphere, Godzilla, and Alien: Resurrection showed that by 1998
a. audiences were beginning to tire of films based entirely around digital effects.
b. public taste for digital-effects films was intensifying to the point where even poor films could be very profitable.
c. digital effects had reached a level of sophistication that made them completely invisible to even the most expert eye.
d. the creativity of digital-effects artists was virtually limitless.
e. CGI-based films could be made on low budgets.
f. none of the above
Q:
Pleasantville is significant because
a. it used digital color-correction technology to make the colors in the film brighter.
b. it used CGI color correction to change color film into black-and-white.
c. it used the most sophisticated form of particle animation seen until that time.
d. it was shot with digital cameras and not on celluloid.
e. it depended on Cari software for all its primary effects.
f. none of the above
Q:
The first film to conclusively demonstrate that the future of motion pictures was digital was
a. Starship Troopers.
b. Titanic.
c. The Mummy.
d. Mission to Mars.
e. Star Wars: Episode IThe Phantom Menace.
f. none of the above
Q:
Flow-Mo or bullet time photography requires
a. wireframes. d. image digitization.
b. motion capture. e. compositing.
c. still cameras. f. all of the above
Q:
The film that became known for its introduction of Flow-Mo photography is
a. The Matrix.
b. Mission to Mars.
c. Star Wars: Episode IThe Phantom Menace.
d. Starship Troopers.
e. Stuart Little.
f. none of the above
Q:
The digital intermediate process allows for
a. more extensive compositing. d. fluid dynamic simulation.
b. procedural animation. e. pre-visualization.
c. computerized color correction. f. none of the above
Q:
Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?
a. was the first film to be shot entirely digitally.
b. was the first film to use bleach-bypass and silver-retention.
c. used the digital intermediate process for color correction.
d. shot both color and black-and-white film stocks eventually printing them together for a desaturated look.
e. used the Flow-Mo technique in its chase scenes.
f. none of the above
Q:
Silver-retention and bleach-bypass processes
a. are both digital intermediate processes.
b. are both CGI methods for creating visual effects.
c. produce crisper, cleaner images for compositing.
d. increase contrast and grain while desaturating color.
e. intensify color while at the same time reducing grain.
f. none of the above
Q:
The genre that had disappeared from American cinema but was brought back because of the effects made possible by CGI was
a. science-fiction. d. the musical.
b. the historical epic. e. the horror film.
c. the western. f. none of the above
Q:
The purpose of particle-animation systems is to
a. composite together moving elements from a wide variety of sources.
b. allow for the animation of fully rendered figures rather than just wireframes.
c. pre-visualize the mixing of live action with CGI effects.
d. add elements of randomness into the CGI environment.
e. create digital sets.
f. none of the above
Q:
Dynamation is
a. a motion-compositing software. d. a particle-animation system.
b. 3-D stop-motion animation. e. both b and d
c. an animatics system. f. none of the above
Q:
All of the following special effects houses contributed to Starship Troopers EXCEPT
a. Boss Film Studio.
b. Sony Pictures Imageworks.
c. BFTRE.
d. Tippett Studio.
e. Persistence of Vision.
f. All of the above worked on Starship Troopers.
Q:
The Lost World is important to the development of CGI because of its advances in
a. procedural animation. d. the Cari software tool.
b. pre-visualization. e. inverse kinematics.
c. virtual camera movement. f. none of the above
Q:
Twister and Starship Troopers are considered landmarks in the history of CGI because they were the first films to
a. use particle animation.
b. combine live action with digital characters.
c. feature effects that would have been impossible to create without CGI.
d. have their actors, director, and effects artists working simultaneously in different locations.
e. use multiple effects houses to work on the same film.
f. none of the above
Q:
Death Becomes Her is a significant film in the history of motion picture technology because
a. it blended CGI with make-up effects and animatronics.
b. it developed a digital rotoscoping program called Colorburst.
c. it developed a digital bluescreen program called C-Bal.
d. it perfected a pin-blocking system.
e. it developed a technique to shoot digital-effect sequences in slow-motion.
f. all of the above
Q:
Pin-blocking
a. aligns and registers the elements of a composited shot.
b. captures the movement of actors on a set so they can be digitized.
c. traces an object frame-by-frame in real time so that it can create a digital image.
d. allows CGI-generated objects to move in real time.
e. allows analog celluloid images to be digitized more easily.
f. none of the above
Q:
The Go-Motion system
a. is the best morphing system available today.
b. uses computer-controlled rods to move objects in real time and space.
c. is a CGI motion-capture system.
d. uses animatronics as an element in a CGI-composited image.
e. allows for the erasure of unwanted elements in the frame.
f. none of the above
Q:
Which of the following is NOT an ILM development from the film Jurassic Park?
a. texture mapping
b. inverse kinematics
c. digital rotoscoping
d. match moving
e. enveloping
f. All of the above are techniques ILM pioneered for Jurassic Park.
Q:
The digital software technique used in Jurassic Park to give dinosaur flesh the appearance of actually moving against muscle and bone is
a. ViewPaint. d. Digital Rotoscoping.
b. Enveloping. e. Softimage.
c. Matchmoving. f. none of the above
Q:
Inverse kinematics
a. is a texture-mapping software that allows artists to paint onto the surface of a model.
b. links one movement to another for more realistic body motion.
c. precisely matches computer-generated camera movements with those actually made on the set.
d. adds motion blur to every shot to make it look like the product of real-time cinematography.
e. both c and d
f. none of the above
Q:
The CGI process that links the dynamics of a virtual camera to a live-action camera is called
a. match moving. d. previs.
b. animatics. e. particle animation.
c. inverse kinematics. f. none of the above
Q:
The film for which Digital Domain first created computer generated stuntmen was
a. The Abyss. d. Pearl Harbor.
b. Titanic. e. Dragonheart.
c. Jurassic Park. f. none of the above
Q:
Particle-animation software uses a form of modeling called
a. morphing. d. flocking.
b. ray-tracing. e. animatics.
c. procedural animation. f. none of the above
Q:
The first feature film made completely with CGI was
a. Toy Story. d. The Abyss.
b. Willow. e. The Last Starfighter.
c. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within. f. none of the above
Q:
All of the following are true of The Abyss EXCEPT
a. the effects were done by ILM.
b. it was composited digitally on a CCD scanner.
c. it introduced the digital set to feature films.
d. it demonstrated the narrative possibilities of photo-realistic effects.
e. it won an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.
f. All of the above are true.
Q:
Which of the following is NOT a controllable variable in the construction of digital sets?
a. lighting
b. camera positioning
c. shot scale
d. camera movement
e. object movement
f. All of the above are controllable variables in digital sets.
Q:
The film that used motion capture to create the first computer-generated character modeled on the human form was
a. Terminator 2: Judgment Day. d. Toy Story.
b. The Last Starfighter. e. The Abyss.
c. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. f. none of the above
Q:
The immediate product of any motion-capture system is
a. a shaded, colored, textured image. d. a wireframe.
b. a composite. e. a digital set.
c. a morph. f. none of the above
Q:
The CCD input scanner was revolutionary because
a. it replaced primitive motion-control systems.
b. it made the need for celluloid film stock a thing of the past.
c. it was the best compositing system available.
d. it printed from digital images onto film stock.
e. it allowed filmmakers to more easily convert celluloid images to digital files.
f. none of the above
Q:
The first company to use the High Resolution CCD Digital Input Scanner to create visual effects was
a. Go-Motion. d. ILM.
b. Digital Domain. e. IMAX.
c. Pixar. f. none of the above
Q:
What was the significance of Disneys 1982 film Tron?
a. It was the first film to use 3-D computer animation.
b. It was the first film to use digital matte painting.
c. It was the first film to produce all its special effects in CGI.
d. It was the first film to be produced entirely in a digital format.
e. It was the first film completely constructed by Industrial Light and Magic.
f. none of the above
Q:
The first feature film to produce all of its effects digitally was
a. The Last Starfighter. d. Star Wars.
b. Tron. e. 2001: A Space Odyssey.
c. The Black Hole. f. none of the above
Q:
In digital Hollywood, special-effects houses
a. all perform the full range of special effects from compositing to animation.
b. tend to specialize in some specific aspect of effects creation.
c. do not work in collaboration on the same films.
d. never begin their work until after the film is finished with principle photography.
e. both a and c
f. none of the above
Q:
The first computer to be designed exclusively for the production of digital special effects was called the
a. HAL. d. Sabre system.
b. Pixar. e. Go-motion system.
c. Cray X-MP. f. none of the above