Practical Effect

A practical special effect is one in which a prop object appears to work in a situation where it obviously could not (such as a ringing telephone on stage) or works in a manner that is physically impossible (such as a bottle breaking over an actor's head.) No trick photography or post-production editing is involved. This type of effect is normally found in live theatre.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
geiger
anna massey
wollaton hall
rail transport by country
uniform time act
mudkip
kalos kagathos
mary geaney
jeff ament
cbc radio orchestra
duryodhana
geneseo
sharon temple
thomas brassey, 1st earl brassey
julia wolfe
absolution (album)
movement paradox
curve of constant width
reuleaux triangle
liberty, new york
frank snepp
barbier's theorem
rob thomas (musician)
charles forte
wood fuel
izmir
wales national football team
student broad left
sultanate of rm
diplomatic bag
wilber
pumpherston, west lothian
brights grove, ontario
funkturm berlin
twinbee
fernsehturm stuttgart
fernmeldeturm frauenkopf
the funk brothers
funkturm stuttgart
blosenbergturm
chlamydomonas reinhardtii
technoturm
maha ati
fallturm bremen