English Dictionary

FILM PRODUCER

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IPA (US): 

 Dictionary entry overview: What does film producer mean? 

FILM PRODUCER (noun)
  The noun FILM PRODUCER has 1 sense:

1. a producer of motion picturesplay

  Familiarity information: FILM PRODUCER used as a noun is very rare.


 Dictionary entry details 


FILM PRODUCER (noun)


Sense 1

Meaning:

A producer of motion pictures

Classified under:

Nouns denoting people

Synonyms:

film maker; film producer; filmmaker; movie maker

Hypernyms ("film producer" 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 "film producer"):

director; film director (the person who directs the making of a film)

New Waver (a film maker who follows New Wave ideas)

auteur (a filmmaker who has a personal style and keeps creative control over his or her works)

Instance hyponyms:

George Lucas; Lucas (United States screenwriter and filmmaker (born in 1944))

Fred Zinnemann; Zinnemann (United States filmmaker (born in Austria) (1907-1997))

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))

Ford; John Ford (United States film maker (1896-1973))

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))

Ernst Lubitsch; Lubitsch (German filmmaker of sophisticated comedies (1892-1947))

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))


 Learn English with... Proverbs 
"Winners never cheat and cheaters never win." (English proverb)

"To make a poor man poorer is not easy" (Breton proverb)

"Dogs bark, but the caravan moves on." (Arabic proverb)

"Misery enjoys company." (Dutch proverb)



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