prelap
Appearance
See also: pre-lap
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From pre- + lap. Compare overlap.
Noun
[edit]prelap (countable and uncountable, plural prelaps)
- (film) A film editing technique in which the dialogue from the next scene precedes the cut, and the beginning of the dialogue is heard in the outgoing scene.
- Coordinate term: postlap
- 2022 October 29, Gavin Edwards, “Overlooked No More: Dorothy Spencer, Film Editor Sought Out by Big Directors”, in The New York Times[1]:
- Some aspects of the editing were groundbreaking: In his book “Film Editing: History, Theory and Practice” (2001), Don Fairservice pointed out that “Stagecoach” contained one of the earliest uses — maybe even the first — of the now-commonplace technique called a prelap, in which as one scene ends, dialogue from the next is already beginning on the soundtrack.