2. Throughout the evolution of ffiillmm mmaakkiinngg,, ssttuuddiioo
eexxeeccuuttiivveess,, ddiirreeccttoorrss aanndd iinnvveennttoorrss hhaavvee wwoorrkkeedd
ttoo kkeeeepp tthhee mmeeddiiuumm rreelleevvaanntt wwiitthh ccoonnttiinnuuaall
aaddaappttaattiioonn
3.
4. EEaaddwweeaarrdd MMuuyybbrriiddggee
(1830-1904)
British photographer, known
for early use of multiple
cameras to capture motion
and his Zoopraxiscope, a
device for projecting motion
pictures that pre-dated
celluloid film strip.
5. Muybridge invented the Zoopraxiscope, a machine that projected images to
show realistic motion.
Considered to be a precursor to the development of the motion picture
5
7. EEaaddwweeaarrdd MMuuyybbrriiddggee,,
7
11887722 -- 11887788
Hired by Leland Stanford to prove
whether during horse's gallop, all 4
hooves were off the ground at the
same time.
Findings:
Hooves all leave the ground but not
at the point of full extension forward
and back, as illustrators imagined,
but when all the hooves are tucked
under the horse, as it switches from
"pulling" from the front legs to
"pushing" from the back legs
Photos show each hoof hits the
ground just as another is leaving it.
At full gallop it gets traction from one
hoof at a time.
Series of photos, taken for Stanford University
“The Horse in Motion”
8. 8
GGeeoorrggee EEaassttmmaann (1854-1932)
Roll Film, 1888
Developed dry plates, film with flexible
backing, roll holders for the flexible
film
Kodak camera: camera for novice, and
an amateur motion-picture camera.
Kodak: “You press the button, we do the rest.”
9. 9
TThhoommaass EEddiissoonn
Inspired by Muybridge’s work, Edison
decided to develop a motion picture
camera. He bought 90 Muybridge
Motion Study Images.
1889 he filed a patent for his
Kinetoscope to view moving pictures
Although Edison conceived of the idea,
most agree that it was his assistant
William Dickson who did most of the
experimentation and work for the
device.
Edison had idea to etch pictures on
photographic cylinders.
Dickson switched to celluloid film to
demonstrate synchronized motion
with sound.
Eastman and Edison
10. The Kinetoscope: A single-vviieewweerr ppeeeepp--sshhooww ddeevviiccee..
FFiillmm wwaass mmoovveedd ppaasstt aa lliigghhtt
11. TThhoommaass EEddiissoonn//WWiilllliiaamm DDiicckkssoonn
11
KKiinneettooggrraapphh
Edison's Kinetograph was a motion picture
camera developed by William Dickson,
1892
Kinetograph uses rapid intermittent film
movement to record the movement of
images by taking pictures in quick
succession. Played back it creates illusion
of motion.
To record it uses a motor to run gelatin film
over a photographic lens.
Thomas Edison
William Dickson
12. 12
TThhoommaass EEddiissoonn --
KKiinneettooggrraapphh
Developed by Edison and
William Dickson, 1892
Together they produced the
first preserved motion
picture Ott's Sneeze.
Their early movies showed
dancers, clowns or other
entertainers.
Fred Ott’s Sneeze
One of the earliest films
13. EEddiissoonn//DDiicckkssoonn EEaarrllyy FFiillmmss
Edison’s early movies showed dancers, clowns or other entertainers.
13
Edison’s patent did not cover Europe.
Robert Paul fitted the camera with a hand crank that allowed portable set-so filming could
be done outside studio
14.
15. LLuummiieerree BBrrootthheerrss
15
Auguste and Louis Lumiere,
1895
1894 brothers invented camera
that could make films, process
and project movies- 35mm film
at 16 frames per second
Named it Cinematographie
shortened to cinema
1896 they opened theatres in
London, Brussels, Belgium and
New York to show films.
16. Lumiere Brothers 1895
One of the first films was
Workers Leaving the factory.
Appeal of people "caught in the
16
act of living,”
Edison's movies were staged
productions of fiction, the
Lumiere's were everyday people
What people really wanted was
a combination of both
fictionalized films in the real
world
Lumiere brothers
Everyday scenes
17. 17
GGeeoorrggee MMeelliieess
Special Effects, 1902
Made a movie A Game of Cards
in 1896
His movies were surreal films
inspired by his experiences as
a magician
Considered the founder of
special effects.
Most famous is 10 minute
A Trip to the Moon
18. 18
AAccttiioonn--AAddvveennttuurreess
EEddwwiinn PPoorrtteerr
Great Train Robbery, 1903
Edwin S. Porter worked for
Edison and showed films under
name Thomas Edison Jr.
Early Action/Adventure: Adding the
“story”
The Life of an American
Fireman
The Great Train Robbery 1903
Action and Drama
19. 19
Action-Adventures
D.W. Griffith
The Birth of a Nation, 1915
First Full-Length Feature
Tremendous Cost
Ku Klux Klan Revitalized
National Protests
Creation of United Artists,
1919
20. 20
DD..WW.. GGrriiffffiitthh''ss
TThhee BBiirrtthh ooff aa NNaattiioonn,, 11991155
First Full-Length Feature
Cost $83,000- very costly
Shows Griffith’s film techniques but is
a racist story of struggling US attacked
by African Americans (Played by
whites in blackface) saved by the Klu
Klux Klan
Many leading politicians condemned
the movie; in Boston a race riot
followed, but the film made $20
million; it was the first film shown in
the White House
With others Griffith founded United
Artists , 1919
21. 21
Documentary
Robert Flaherty
Nanook of the North 1913
A Canadian Inuit's struggle
example of early documentary work.
First great nonfiction film.
Nanook and his friends and family &
Flaherty re-created an Eskimo culture
that no longer existed in a series of
staged scenes.
Controversy over staging
Conflict between the explorer-scientist
Flaherty began a tradition of
participatory filmmaking which
continues today.
Robert Flaherty
22. 22
FFRRIITTZZ LLAANNGG
Metropolis
Fritz Lang's futuristic Metropolis
in 1926 was noted for its visual
effects.
Lang invited by Hitler to make
propaganda films, but he fled
Germany to Hollywood
Fritz Lang
23. LENI RIEFENSTAHL
Leni Riefenstahl influenced by Lang
created Triumph of Will and many
propaganda films for Hitler
23
24. 24
SERGEI
EISENSTEIN
Battleship Potemkin
Famous "steps" scene Odessa Steps--Quick editing to produces tension
25. 25
The Silent Era
Movies Became a Business
Directors Learned the Craft
Mack Sennett & Hal Roach
Cecil B. DeMille & Sergei
Eisenstein Charlie Chaplin &
Buster Keaton
Star System Established in
California
Mary Pickford: $1 Million a
Picture or $10 Million in
Today's Dollars
Numerous Scandals
Pickford/Fairbanks & Roscoe
Arbuckle
Academy Awards Established,
1929 as a public relations move
to dignify the industry
26. SSyynncchhrroonniizziinngg
26
SSoouunndd
Vitaphone vs
Phonofilm
1920s two competing types
of sound were being used
Vitaphone was sound on disc
Phonofilm was sound on film
27. 27
Synchronized Sound
Late 1920s
The Vitaphone process was sound
on disc played along with a movie
to give the illusion of talking
pictures.
1926 Vitaphone publicly
introduced with premiere of Don
Juan, the first feature-length
movie to have a synchronized
sound system of any type
throughout.
The soundtrack had a musical
score and sound effects were
added but there was no dialogue.
Vitaphone= Sound on Disc
28. 28
First Dialogue:
Vitaphone (Disc): Warner Bros.
The Jazz Singer, 1927
Only 4 sequences have sound and only a
few moments of dialogue)
About the Jewish experience-the conflict
between aged cantor and his young,
assimilated son who wants to enter show
business.
Actor who plays his role in blackface.
Story of assimilation and
Americanization, but it contains a highly
offensive racial image.
Racism combined with the expropriation
of African American identity.
Al Jolson speaks: The Jazz Singer
29. 29
Sound on Disc : 1926-1931
Vitaphone
Weakness: cumbersome equipment, vulnerable to severe
synchronization problems, inability to edit
Sound on Film: 1923-
Phonofilm
Versions of Phonofilm followed: Movietone and later Photophone
were eventually adopted
Synchronization revived the slumping industry
30. 30
Colour
First full length colour film was The
World, the Flesh and the Devil,
1914
First three colour process was 1926
Disney used it early
Technicolour in 1937 with A Star is
Born and in 1939 Gone with the
Wind
Snow White & Seven Dwarfs 1937
31. 31
Colour
Tinted: Great Train Robbery,
1903
Kinemacolor: The World, the
Flesh and the Devil, 1914
Technicolor: The Black Pirate,
1926
Cartoons: Flowers and Trees,
1933
Public's Acceptance:
The Wizard of Oz, 1939
32. 32
FORMATS:
Wide Screen Formats
Aspect Ratio Changed with Sound
Cinerama, 1952
CinemaScope (Panavision), 1953:
The Robe
Imax and Omnimax
Letterbox (Movies on Television)
3D
Cinerama from 3 projectors
33. 33
Concerns about Content
The House Committee on Un-American
Activities (HUAC) an investigative committee
originally created in 1938 to uncover citizens
with Nazi ties within the U.S.
Hollywood Blacklisting: HUAC, 1951 (300
blacklisted)
Senator Joseph McCarthy and his communist
witch hunts
Joseph McCarthy
34. Cold War fears of Communism, led
to Sci-Fi, Atom Bomb, and
Teenage Angst Movies
3D and "B" Movies for Drive-Ins
34
Fall of Single Theaters
Hollywood Adapts
Rise in Television Production
Effects of Online and multimedia
Notes de l'éditeur
Conducted research to improve the chemistry of his development methods to better capture motion in his photography. Muybridge invented Zoopraxiscope, a machine similar to the Zoetrope, but that projected the images so the public could see realistic motion.System was, in many ways, a precursor to the development of the motion picture
Conducted research to improve the chemistry of his development methods to better capture motion in his photography. Muybridge invented Zoopraxiscope, a machine similar to the Zoetrope, but that projected the images so the public could see realistic motion.System was, in many ways, a precursor to the development of the motion picture
Muybridge Movie
Thomas Edison in 1880s had the idea of etching pictures on his phonograph cylinders- assistant Dickson switched to celluloid film to demonstrate synchronized motion with sound - together they produced the first preserved motion picture Ott's Sneeze
Ott's Sneeze clip
Early Edison Films Edison’s patent did not cover Europe.
The brothers opened theatres to show their films (cinemas).
In the first 4 months of 1896 they had opened Cinématographe theatres in London, Brussels, Belgium and New York.
The inventions of moviemaking is fraught with smoke and mirrors. Someone was constantly taking credit for advances and processes. The Lumiere's were good at being entrepreneurs and they succeeded in getting to the patent office first.
Lumiere1895 clip
GreatTrainRobbery..storytelling- action adventure
Birthofnation
Conflict between the explorer-scientist disciplined into giving facts and figures and the story-teller-turned-film-director who left out certain facts and emphasized others.
Nanook movie
metropolis
Battleshippotemkin clip stairs
Vitaphone was sound on disc played along with movie to give illusion of talking pictures
Most in industry believed talkies couldn’t be profitable
Jolson Jazz Singer clip
Vitaphone was sound on disc played along with movie to give illusion of talking pictures
Most in industry believed talkies couldn’t be profitable
Jolson Jazz Singer clip
Vitaphone was sound on disc played along with movie to give illusion of talking pictures
Most in industry believed talkies couldn’t be profitable
Jolson Jazz Singer clip