Sound in a film opening can determine the genre, set an atmosphere and a tone.
It can give the audience a clue about the plot and it can also, help create 'suspend disbelief' to create realism for the audience and heighten their experience of the rest of the film.
A soundscape is all the sounds heard combined, a range of different sounds.
A sound design is a type of sound, a deliberate choice of sound used for effect.
A suspending disbelief is when you believe what you see in a film is real, even though it isnt.
There are different types of sounds you could hear in a film (opening)
Ambient sound: Background sounds that represent a scene or location
Diegetic: Sound whose source is visible on screen
Non-diegetic: Sound whose source is not visible on screen
Score: noise
Song: music
Voiceover: Someone talking in the back
Dialogue: Someone talking in the scene
Foley: Background noises (reality)
Synchronous: Sound matched to certain movements occurring in scene
Asynchronous: Sound not matched to certain movements occurring in scene
Sound bridge: Linking one scene to another through a sound
Sound motif: Combination of sound effects that are associated with a particular character
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