Foley
• The manual creation of
sound effects performed
in synchronization with
picture.
• 60% of secondary sound
[non-dialogue]
• Named after Jack Foley
The 3 Types of Foley:
Footsteps: Every
footstep in the film is
covered.

• Props: Any object with
which the actor
interfaces.

Hire a custom writer who has experience.
It's time for you to submit amazing papers!


order now

• Cloth: Recreates the
clothes rustling and adds
texture to a scene.
Critically important for
Foreign Dubs.

Reasons for ADR
• Corrupted Dialogue
• Weak Performance
• Script Changes
• Breath, Moans and
Vocalizations
• TV and Airline Versions
Loop Group
Group ADR

Six or more voice actors
who cover a range of
voices in the film.
• This adds background
texture and fills in
dialogue for the nonfeatured
actors who are
MOS during production.

Walla
Location
recordings of large
crowds usually supplied
by the SFX department.
Added Value:
Expressive
and/or informative value
with which a sound
enriches a given image.
[An]Empathetic Sound:
Music or sound effects
whose mood [expresses
indifference] or matches
the mood of the action.
Synchresis
The forging
between something one
sees and one hears – the
mental fusion of visual
and sonic elements that
occur at the same time.
Extension
Expanding
the perceptual space
beyond the confines of
the screen.
Diagetic
Sound
presented as a part of
the films world.
Non-Diagetic
Any sound
not part of the films
world.
Characteristic Sound
A
sound created for a
specific element in the
film.