Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What Is Cinema?

What Is Cinema?

Movies, also known as moving pictures or moving pictures, are works in the form of visual arts, which use moving images to express ideas, stories, cognition, emotions, values, or simulated experiences of various atmospheres. These images are usually accompanied by sound, and there are few other sensory stimuli. The word film is the abbreviation of cinematography, which is usually used to refer to film production and film industry, and the resulting art forms.

Movable images of movies are used to create cameras that take moving pictures with actual scenes, using traditional drawing or micro-animation technology, with the help of CGI and computer animation, or through some or all of these technologies, and other visual effects.

Theoretical summary

Film is an art, and human beings know the exact time of its birth and its growth process. It is a rapidly developing and influential media since the 20th century, and it is a creative industry of politics, economy and culture. Since the end of 19, film inventors in France, the United States and other regions have successively invented technologies and machines that can imitate the photoacoustic recording and restoration of human eyes and ears.

Since its birth, this film technology has been developed into a film career by entrepreneurs, an ideology by politicians, a film art by artists and a film theory by researchers. A film history is also a history in which filmmakers explore the laws of films.