1 / 23

Birth of Cinema: 1890s Edison and the Kinetoscope Biograph and filmmaking in…New Jersey?

Birth of Cinema: 1890s Edison and the Kinetoscope Biograph and filmmaking in…New Jersey? Edwin Porter. Lumiere Brothers popularize public screenings French film industry most successful pre-World War I. Where are films seen? Vaudeville Store-front theaters: Nickelodeon

phuc
Download Presentation

Birth of Cinema: 1890s Edison and the Kinetoscope Biograph and filmmaking in…New Jersey?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Birth of Cinema: 1890s • Edison and the Kinetoscope • Biograph and filmmaking in…New Jersey? • Edwin Porter • Lumiere Brothers popularize public screenings • French film industry most successful pre-World War I

  2. Where are films seen? • Vaudeville • Store-front theaters: Nickelodeon • Carnival sideshow Movies considered working class entertainment.

  3. Early Cinema and the 1900s to 1920s • Industry moves to Hollywood • Dominates movie production after World War I • “Silent” cinema? • “movie palaces” and “an evening’s entertainment”

  4. D.W. Griffith and The Birth of a Nation • Industrial, artistic, cultural significance • Cinema as ideology Ideology: those ideas, images, stories, and other systems through which we make sense of the world and our relation to it

  5. Genre films: categories of movies with reliable formulas for telling stories • Silent era oriented toward action and lavish sets: • Westerns, war movies, horror, romances, physical comedies, costume dramas, documentaries, action, melodramas Star system: discovered certain actors/actresses could attract viewers no matter film

  6. Sound Film and Studio System • Early sound: • Jazz Singer (1927) • Restrictions • New genres include: screwball comedies, musicals, character studies, crime dramas

  7. How the studio system works •  everything done (until late 1940s) "in-house" • Vertical integration: when companies with same owner handle different aspects of the film business • Three Keys Stages • 1. Production • Distribution • Exhibition

  8. 5 Major Studios by 1930 • Paramount • MGM • Warner Bros. • Fox • RKO • An evening's entertainment now includes: •  Newsreels •  Cartoons •  B movie •  Feature

  9. Movie attendance peaks in 1946 • 90 million Americans go to movies every week • U.S. vs. Paramount (1948): Divestiture agreement • Breaks up studio hold on film production, distribution, exhibition

  10. Film adjusts to the Changing Culture • TV and Movies: Enemies and partners • Movies on TV • New technologies for film

  11. Studios start producing TV shows • Disneyland and “Disneyland” • Westerns • Why? • $$$ • Fin/Syn: networks can’t own content

  12. More film industry responses: • Exhibition: theaters move out of city centers • Independent production: partnerships between producers and studios

  13. Late 60s and 1970s, Hollywood attempts to reconnect • More independent production • Younger directors • Ratings • Hays Office/Production Code was earlier response • Motion Picture Association of America • May encourage more explicit content

  14. The New Hollywood • More corporate mergers • Business reasserts control • Blockbusters: Jaws, Star Wars • Broad appeal • Foreign appeal • Cross promotion • Merchandising • Evolution or Devolution?

  15. Current structure: • Studios partner with independent producers • Agree to distribute • Tent-pole strategy: Blockbusters paired with smaller niche films for particular audiences • Blockbusters can assure solvency for a while, but often flop.

  16. Distribution and Exhibition today: • More screens, less movies. • Windows: different “arenas” for exhibition

  17. How will digital technologies shape the future of the movie industry? • Production • Distribution • Exhibition • Straight to DVD?

  18. Film Criticism: Ways of Thinking About Movies • How do you talk about film without focusing on “what happens”? • Or “thumbs up or down”?

  19. Auteur theory: director as unifying artistic voice • similarities across films

  20. Genre: films with formulas •  Set rules, expectations • Both for filmmakers and audiences Genre theory • Identify genres, subgenres (scifi, comedy) • Examine how change

  21. Symptomatic Culture • film as “symptom” • how film text connected to cultural context • looking to “subtext”

  22. Structuralism • language organizes and constructs our access to reality • film and genres as language systems • Saussure: way we make sense of the world is dependent on the language we speak and, therefore, the culture we inhabit.

  23. Langue: • language system (rules and conventions which organize it) • Parole: • utterance (individual use of language) • Task of structuralism is to make explicit the rules and conventions (langue) which govern production of meaning (parole).

More Related