Library / English Dictionary |
MOVIE MAKER
Pronunciation (US): | (GB): |
I. (noun)
Sense 1
Meaning:
Synonyms:
film maker; film producer; filmmaker; movie maker
Classified under:
Hypernyms ("movie maker" is a kind of...):
producer (someone who finds financing for and supervises the making and presentation of a show (play or film or program or similar work))
Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "movie maker"):
auteur (a filmmaker who has a personal style and keeps creative control over his or her works)
director; film director (the person who directs the making of a film)
New Waver (a film maker who follows New Wave ideas)
Instance hyponyms:
George Lucas; Lucas (United States screenwriter and filmmaker (born in 1944))
Louis B. Mayer; Louis Burt Mayer; Mayer (United States filmmaker (born in Russia) who founded his own film company and later merged with Samuel Goldwyn (1885-1957))
Pollack; Sydney Pollack (United States filmmaker (born in 1934))
Charles Robert Redford; Redford; Robert Redford (United States actor and filmmaker who starred with Paul Newman in several films (born in 1936))
Henry Kenneth Alfred Russell; Ken Russell; Russell (English film director (born in 1927))
Martin Scorsese; Scorsese (United States filmmaker (born in 1942))
David O. Selznick; David Oliver Selznick; Selznick (United States filmmaker noted for his film adaptations of popular novels (1902-1965))
Mack Sennett; Sennett (United States filmmaker (born in Canada) noted for slapstick movies (1880-1960))
Spielberg; Steven Spielberg (United States filmmaker (born in 1947))
George Stevens; Stevens (United States filmmaker (1905-1975))
Oliver Stone; Stone (United States filmmaker (born in 1946))
Quentin Jerome Tarantino; Quentin Tarantino; Tarantino (United States filmmaker (born in 1963))
Andrei Arsenevich Tarkovsky; Andrei Tarkovsky; Tarkovsky (Russian filmmaker (1932-1986))
Jacques Tati; Jacques Tatischeff; Tati (French filmmaker (1908-1982))
Francois Truffaut; Truffaut (French filmmaker (1932-1984))
Don Luchino Visconti Conte di Modrone; Luchino Visconti; Visconti (Italian filmmaker (1906-1976))
Josef von Sternberg; von Sternberg (United States film maker (born in Austria) whose films made Marlene Dietrich an international star (1894-1969))
Andrzej Wajda; Wajda (Polish filmmaker (born in 1929))
Charles Dudley Warner; Warner (United States filmmaker who with his brothers founded the movie studio that produced the first talking picture (1881-1958))
George Orson Welles; Orson Welles; Welles (United States actor and filmmaker (1915-1985))
Billy Wilder; Samuel Wilder; Wilder (United States filmmaker (born in Austria) whose dark humor infused many of the films he made (1906-2002))
William Wyler; Wyler (United States filmmaker (1902-1981))
Darryl Francis Zanuck; Darryl Zanuck; Zanuck (United States filmmaker whose works include the first full-length feature film with sound sequences (1902-1979))
Fred Zinnemann; Zinnemann (United States filmmaker (born in Austria) (1907-1997))
Allen; Allen Stewart Konigsberg; Woody Allen (United States filmmaker and comic actor (1935-))
Bernardo Bertolucci; Bertolucci (Italian filmmaker (born in 1940))
Capra; Frank Capra (United States film maker (1897-1991))
Chaplin; Charlie Chaplin; Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin (English comedian and film maker; portrayed a downtrodden little man in baggy pants and bowler hat (1889-1977))
Cocteau; Jean Cocteau (French writer and film maker who worked in many artistic media (1889-1963))
Coppola; Francis Ford Coppola (United States filmmaker (born in 1939))
Cecil B. DeMille; Cecil Blount DeMille; DeMille (United States film maker remembered for his extravagant and spectacular epic productions (1881-1959))
De Sica; Vittorio De Sica (Italian film maker (1901-1974))
Disney; Walt Disney; Walter Elias Disney (United States film maker who pioneered animated cartoons and created such characters as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck; founded Disneyland (1901-1966))
Eisenstein; Sergei Eisenstein; Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (Russian film maker who pioneered the use of montage and is considered among the most influential film makers in the history of motion pictures (1898-1948))
Federico Fellini; Fellini (Italian filmmaker (1920-1993))
Ford; John Ford (United States film maker (1896-1973))
Godard; Jean Luc Godard (French film maker influenced by surrealism; early work explored the documentary use of film; noted for innovative techniques (born in 1930))
Goldwyn; Sam Goldwyn; Samuel Goldwyn (United States film maker (born in Poland) who founded his own film company and later merged with Louis B. Mayer (1882-1974))
D. W. Griffith; David Lewelyn Wark Griffith; Griffith (United States film maker who was the first to use flashbacks and fade-outs (1875-1948))
Howard Hughes; Howard Robard Hughes; Hughes (United States industrialist who was an aviator and a film producer; during the last years of his life he was a total recluse (1905-1976))
Huston; John Huston (United States film maker born in the United States but an Irish citizen after 1964 (1906-1987))
Jewison; Norman Jewison (Canadian filmmaker (born in 1926))
Kieslowski; Krzysztof Kieslowski (Polish filmmaker who made ten films based on the Ten Commandments (1941-1996))
Korda; Sandor Kellner; Sir Alexander Korda (British filmmaker (born in Hungary) (1893-1956))
Kubrick; Stanley Kubrick (United States filmmaker (born in 1928))
Akira Kurosawa; Kurosawa (Japanese filmmaker noted for blending Japanese folklore with western styles of acting (1910-1998))
Lee; Shelton Jackson Lee; Spike Lee (United States filmmaker whose works explore the richness of black culture in America (born in 1957))
Ernst Lubitsch; Lubitsch (German filmmaker of sophisticated comedies (1892-1947))