Dictionary Definition
footage
Noun
1 the amount of film that has been shot
2 a rate of charging by the linear foot of work
done
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
(US) IPA: /ˈfʊtədʒ/Noun
Translations
amount of film that has been used
- Finnish: kuvamateriaali, filmiaineisto, filmausmateriaali
- French: pellicule enregistrée
- German: Filmmaterial
Extensive Definition
In film
and video, footage is the
raw, unedited material as it had been originally recorded by video
camera, which usually
must be edited to
create a motion picture, video clip,
television
show or similar completed work. More loosely, footage can also
refer to all sequences used in film and video
editing, such as special effects and archive material (for special
cases of this, see stock
footage and B roll). Since the
term originates in film, footage is only used for recorded images,
such as film stock,
videotapes or digitized clips –
on live
television, the signals from the cameras are called sources
instead.
The origin of the term "footage" is that 35mm film has
traditionally been measured in feet
and frames; the
fact that film was measured by length in cutting rooms, and that
there are exactly 16 4-perf frames in a
foot of 35mm film which roughly represented 1 second of silent
film, made footage a natural unit of measure for film. The term
then became used figuratively to describe moving image material of
any kind.
Television
footage, especially news footage, is often traded between broadcasting organizations,
but good footage usually commands a high price. The actual sum
depends on duration, age, size of intended audience, duration of
licensing and other factors. Amateur video
footage of current events can also often fetch a high price on the
market – scenes shot inside the World
Trade Center during the
September 11, 2001 attacks were reportedly sold for US$45,000.
Sometimes film projects will also sell or trade footage, usually
second
unit material not used in the final cut. For example, the end
of the non-director's
cut version of Blade Runner
used landscape views that were originally shot for The
Shining before the script was modified after shooting had
finished.
See also
References
- IMDb's Trivia page for Blade Runner – Retrieved April 6, 2005
- Newsday.com - Amateur video playing greater role – Retrieved April 6, 2005
footage in German: Footage
footage in Japanese: 映像
footage in Russian: Футаж