Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - The sixth TV program of the Central Committee

The sixth TV program of the Central Committee

The sixth TV program of the Central Committee is the movie channel.

As the sixth program of CCTV, the movie channel transmits programs to the whole country through satellite compression and scrambling. 1995165438+1the trial broadcast was successful on October 30th, and/kloc-0 was officially launched on October 30th. Movie Channel is the only professional movie channel in China so far. In 2002, the national acceptable population reached 7150,000.

The history of Chinese film channel in Hong Kong began in August 2005, and it spread to paying users through 134 channel of NOW Broadband TV. As an overseas version of CCTV-6, this channel is a full-time paid channel with movies as the main body and supplemented by the latest entertainment information, variety shows, interviews and cultural programs. It is divided into two versions: Hong Kong version and North America version. This channel broadcasts 12 China movies or TV movies every day, with at least 30 premieres every month.

film

Movies, also known as moving pictures or dynamic pictures, that is, "reflection pictures", are works in the form of visual arts, which use moving images to express ideas, stories, cognition, emotions, values, or various atmospheric simulation experiences. 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, as well as 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.

Traditionally, movies are recorded on celluloid film through photochemical process, and then projected on a big screen through a movie projector. Contemporary movies are usually completely digital in the whole process of production, distribution and screening, while movies recorded in photochemical form traditionally include similar optical sound tracks (graphic records of spoken language, music and other sounds, which are reserved for a part of the movie together with images, but not screened).