over and the cinema industry died. "Living in Bondage" was filmed in the Igbo language of Eastern Nigeria.
Nearly 75% of deaths are expected, but few are prepared to confront the inevitable. Society tends to see death as an unnatural event that can be put off. Doctors find it difficult to say, "You're dying."
Sound can tell a story without a visual. A shipwreck can be portrayed with sounds of sea, crashing waves, elements of storm and the ship breaking up.
Editors literally tell a story by piecing together film footage. They use establishing shots, free shots and close-ups to construct a sequence.
Background can be digitally graded to brighten colors. It can enhance the grit and heat of a location. Colors can portray warm or cold, night or day.
Music can be more powerful than image. It can provoke beauty and emotion. Music can shift a mood from lyrical to dark and ominous.
Sound as "poetic realism." Sound designers create a texture that creates an image.
Patti Obrow White acknowledges two Oklahomans who played significant roles in making the film. White hopes the film will be a catalyst for changing
Hollywood realizes that it can put its feature films on television to reach the mass audiences that once flocked to theaters. Soon, major film