outtake


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Words related to outtake

a scene that is filmed but is not used in the final editing of the film

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Welcome to our inaugural edition of Outtakes. Last fall we put out a call to researchers to share unusual situations, surprises, and unexpected challenges that they have encountered in conducting research but which may be out of place in a standard research report.
They're the shots that didn't make the mag, but newly released outtake photos from Upton's sizzling shoot are still smoking hot.
Screw the intake and outtake lines into the 90[degrees] fitting.
Finally, in August 1995, Food Lion attorneys screened the outtakes(13) for the first time, after which Food Lion claimed that the footage did not support the broadcast segment.(14) ABC's lawyers insisted that the program was fair.(15) Furthermore, they argued that ABC News should be able to keep the footage confidential because it was similar to notes taken by print reporters, and therefore protected by the First Amendment.(16) Nevertheless, the jurors were allowed to view some of the outtakes.(17)
Unused tape shot by a freelance journalist or amateur photographer might be called an outtake if part of that tape were sold to a news organization.
Their songs are usually compact bits of stabbing organ and heavy riffs, but sometimes they get spacey or approach quiet melancholy, like on Morning Man's standout "Don't You Know." The song comes midway through the EP, and it sounds like an outtake from Neil Young's Zuma.
Called Hospital Fragment, the short black-and-white film looks like a missing outtake from Tales From the Gimli Hospital with newly filmed scenes with Gimli stars Angela Heck and Mike Gottli....
The track was recorded in 1968 and is believed to be an outtake from the Abbey Road sessions for the animated fantasy film.
(In one great roll-over-Sam Beckett moment, however, Kitano throws in a comic fast-motion sequence that could pass for an outtake from Help!.) The flimsy plot is deliberately banal: Tokyo mob lieutenant Murakawa (Kitano) and some feckless yakuza troops are dispatched to Okinawa to restore peace in a budding gang war.
It is telling that the best (and funniest) section of the book, "The Blackman's Guide to Seducing White Women With the Amazing Power of Voodoo," reads like an outtake from Negropbobia and interrupts the flow of fanzine fluff in the surrounding pages.
The ensuing TV series and outtake albums have triggered an unprecedented media frenzy: 1995's major music story comes from a partnership that hasn't worked together in 25 years.