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词汇 newsreel
释义

Definition of newsreel in English:

newsreel

noun ˈnjuːzriːlˈn(j)uzˌril
  • A short film of news and current affairs, formerly made for showing as part of the programme in a cinema.

    新闻(短)片

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Way back when, theaters used to show cartoons, newsreels, and short films before you'd see the main attraction.
    • Examples were found in documentaries, industrial and propaganda films, newsreels, and features.
    • He utilized ‘found footage’ from feature films, newsreels, and advertisements and edited them together under a unified film score soundtrack.
    • I also remember seeing the newsreel of the promo for the film on a video at Cliff's house.
    • Vega narrates his personal story over footage culled from newsreels and other films (in particular, the documentary, The Battle of Chile), as if he was in the process of writing his letter.
    • Putting his money where his mouth was, the publisher eventually became involved in every type of cinema: feature films, animation and newsreels.
    • There are photographs, footage from newsreels, clips from news and current affairs shows, interviews with soldiers and contemporary images at the Washington Monument.
    • Being fake, The News on the March newsreel near the beginning draws precise attention to cinema's ability to concoct the truth.
    • There was a particular audience for non-fiction films and there were newsreels, but it just wasn't a big market.
    • The series pairs films by the same director and features other material relative to the era of the films, such as newsreels and cartoons.
    • Going even further, there are two 1930s movie newsreels that were filmed with the actual Grey Owl, a text biography, and a screen of web links to Grey Owl sites.
    • The war suffused cinemas, from government promotional films, to newsreels (which, before television, were the public's primary visual source of news), and features.
    • Think about why newsreels or short documentaries were popular in movie houses throughout Australia prior to the 1950s and 1960s.
    • There's a newsreel on the film's premiere, which was, up to that point, one of the biggest in Hollywood history.
    • The first cinema newsreels ever were filmed at the front during the Anglo-Boer War.
    • The collective was set up in 1933 to exhibit Soviet films and workers' newsreels, which it began making in 1934.
    • There's also a Movietone newsreel highlighting the film and a restoration comparison.
    • He was an accomplished flutist and pianist who became a staff composer at Universal Studios, scoring everything from feature films to newsreels to Abbott and Costello comedies.
    • Rounding out the disc is a brief newsreel of the film's Canadian premiere and the original theatrical trailer.
    • Extras include two fluffy featurettes and four badly-worn newsreels.

Definition of newsreel in US English:

newsreel

nounˈn(y)o͞ozˌrēlˈn(j)uzˌril
  • A short film of news and current affairs, formerly made for showing as part of the program in a movie theater.

    新闻(短)片

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The first cinema newsreels ever were filmed at the front during the Anglo-Boer War.
    • The series pairs films by the same director and features other material relative to the era of the films, such as newsreels and cartoons.
    • Putting his money where his mouth was, the publisher eventually became involved in every type of cinema: feature films, animation and newsreels.
    • Examples were found in documentaries, industrial and propaganda films, newsreels, and features.
    • There was a particular audience for non-fiction films and there were newsreels, but it just wasn't a big market.
    • Extras include two fluffy featurettes and four badly-worn newsreels.
    • He was an accomplished flutist and pianist who became a staff composer at Universal Studios, scoring everything from feature films to newsreels to Abbott and Costello comedies.
    • Rounding out the disc is a brief newsreel of the film's Canadian premiere and the original theatrical trailer.
    • He utilized ‘found footage’ from feature films, newsreels, and advertisements and edited them together under a unified film score soundtrack.
    • Going even further, there are two 1930s movie newsreels that were filmed with the actual Grey Owl, a text biography, and a screen of web links to Grey Owl sites.
    • Think about why newsreels or short documentaries were popular in movie houses throughout Australia prior to the 1950s and 1960s.
    • Way back when, theaters used to show cartoons, newsreels, and short films before you'd see the main attraction.
    • There's a newsreel on the film's premiere, which was, up to that point, one of the biggest in Hollywood history.
    • There's also a Movietone newsreel highlighting the film and a restoration comparison.
    • The war suffused cinemas, from government promotional films, to newsreels (which, before television, were the public's primary visual source of news), and features.
    • Vega narrates his personal story over footage culled from newsreels and other films (in particular, the documentary, The Battle of Chile), as if he was in the process of writing his letter.
    • There are photographs, footage from newsreels, clips from news and current affairs shows, interviews with soldiers and contemporary images at the Washington Monument.
    • Being fake, The News on the March newsreel near the beginning draws precise attention to cinema's ability to concoct the truth.
    • I also remember seeing the newsreel of the promo for the film on a video at Cliff's house.
    • The collective was set up in 1933 to exhibit Soviet films and workers' newsreels, which it began making in 1934.
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