1 / 46

SPJ TONIGHT! 7 p.m.

SPJ TONIGHT! 7 p.m. Shoup Hall 207 Tom Henderson, speaker. Movies: Part II. From Flickering Images to Hollywood Studios & Stars. Technology. Motion pictures combine: 1. Still photography 2. Persistence of vision 3. Projection of images. Early technologies. Celluloid film stock

Download Presentation

SPJ TONIGHT! 7 p.m.

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. SPJ TONIGHT! 7 p.m. Shoup Hall 207 Tom Henderson, speaker JAMM 100

  2. Movies: Part II From Flickering Images to Hollywood Studios & Stars JAMM 100

  3. Technology Motion pictures combine: 1. Still photography 2. Persistence of vision 3. Projection of images JAMM 100

  4. Early technologies • Celluloid film stock • Goodwin, 1889, who sold patents to Eastman • Kinetograph and kinetoscope • Dickson and Edison, 1890s • Projection system • Lumiere Brothers, 1895 • Vitascope • Edison, 1896 • Nickelodeons boomed 1907- 10 JAMM 100

  5. Photography 1727: Chemists discover silver nitrate reacts to light 1839: Louis Daguerre used pewter, later copper for prints (daguerreotypes) JAMM 100

  6. Photography George Eastman • 1884: invents flexible film (cellulose) • Calls his portable camera “Kodak” • 100 exposures JAMM 100

  7. Persistence of Vision Peter Roget 1824 • Images stay in memory for 1/10 second • Pictures on spinning wheel JAMM 100

  8. Persistence of Vision Eadward Muybridge • Won bet with California Gov. Leland Stanford (1877) • Did all 4 feet of a galloping horse leave ground at once? JAMM 100

  9. Persistence of Vision JAMM 100

  10. Motion Pictures Thomas Edison • Envisioned image device similar to phonograph • 1887: 1st patent for motion picture camera • 1891-95: Camera tested by assistant, William Dickson JAMM 100

  11. Projection Systems Auguste, Louis Lumiere (France) • Projected movies onto large screen • Made possible multiple viewing • 35mm standard JAMM 100

  12. Projection systems JAMM 100

  13. Early film styles • Lumiere Brothers in Paris shot documentary scenes of everyday life. • French magician Georges Melies: fairy tales and science fiction stories • American cameraman Edwin S. Porter created early narrative structures. JAMM 100

  14. Early Films • No story, just motion • Viewers fascinated by simple scenes • Fred Ott’s sneeze JAMM 100

  15. 1902: A Trip to the Moon George Melies (France) • Storytelling • 10-minute shorts • Slow motion, animation JAMM 100

  16. 1903: The Great Train Robbery Edwin S. Porter • 1st U.S. movie to tell a story • 12 minutes long • 1st Western • Editing to create suspense JAMM 100

  17. 1915: Birth of a Nation D.W. Griffith • 3 hours long • Shot without a script • Civil War, Reconstruction • Criticized for racial stereotypes • Praised for technical innovations JAMM 100

  18. Three basic economic divisions of the movie industry • PRODUCTION: camera and projector technology, scripting, filming • DISTRIBUTION: marketing and delivering films into theaters • EXHIBITION: the theater industry that delivers movies to the public JAMM 100

  19. Thomas Alva Edison, Inventor and Entrepreneur • Desired control over all three facets of the motion picture industry--production, distribution, exhibition • His strategy: to gain control over PATENTS to movie technology • How? Accused other inventors of violating his patents to tie them up in lawsuits. JAMM 100

  20. THE MOTION PICTURE PATENTS COMPANY (MPPC) • Thomas Edison formed MPPC (the “Trust”) in 1908 as a Patents Pool. • Cooperative of leading U.S. and French film companies • Dominated the film industry from 1908-1915 JAMM 100

  21. How MPPC controlled the industry • Controlled (but did not own) means of production, distribution, and exhibition. • The MPPC was a monopoly (also called a trust), and excluded other film studios from the available technology. • Eastman sold film only to members JAMM 100

  22. WHY did the MPPC fail? • Could not meet product demand • Independent producers bought film stock from overseas. • Independent producers attracted viewers with longer feature films and recognizable stars. • Independent distributors set up a non-MPPC distribution network. • 1912 Antitrust case in Supreme Court (Fox) JAMM 100

  23. In 1915, by Supreme Court order, the MPPC disbanded. However, by that time, it had already fallen apart due to challenges of “independents.” JAMM 100

  24. Who were these “independents”? Ironically, the very same people who would institute a far more effective and long-lived oligopoly to control the industry--the Hollywood Studio System JAMM 100

  25. THE RISE OF THE HOLLYWOOD STUDIO SYSTEM (1925-1948) From Monopoly (the MPCC) to Oligopoly (the Studio System) JAMM 100

  26. Silent Pictures Harold Lloyd • Comedy: ‘Safety First’ • Did his own stunts JAMM 100

  27. The Talkies Sound on film (SOF) • Microphones • Sound recording • Amplifiers • Synchronization JAMM 100

  28. 1927 The Jazz Singer • Al Jolson • 2 songs • 354 words of dialogue JAMM 100

  29. 1920s: Studio system • Producers moved from New York to southern California • Attempt to avoid patent lawsuits by MPPC • Popular actors became stars JAMM 100

  30. The “Big Five” or the Majors: Warner Brothers Paramount 20th Century Fox Loew's (MGM) RKO(owned by RCA) The “Little Three” or the Minors: United Artists Columbia Universal The “Big Five” and the “Little Three” JAMM 100

  31. Control over Production • Produced 60 percent of all U.S. feature films. • Produced 75 percent of "A" films (blockbusters). • Each of these studios produced about fifty movies a year. JAMM 100

  32. Applied Factory Principles • Centralized production and lots of employees • Division and specializing of labor • Standardizing and specializing of product • Grading films JAMM 100

  33. Control Over Distribution • Eight studios collected 95 percent of all national film rental fees. • Trade practices effectively closed the market to films made outside the studio system. • Block booking • Marketing U.S. films in Europe JAMM 100

  34. Control over exhibition • Studio ownership of theaters created a need for studios to produce films for them. • Much money was invested in the building of theaters themselves, especially movie palaces. JAMM 100

  35. How’d studios control exhibition? • Studio-owned theaters(first-run): the studios owned only 15 percent of U.S. theaters, but 90 percent of nation's box office receipts • Movie palaces • Mid-city theatres JAMM 100

  36. What went wrong? • No one reason : four large factors came together in late 1940s • The Red Scare (The Hollywood Ten) • The Paramount Decision of 1948 • Postwar Changes in Society • The Rise of Television JAMM 100

  37. Red Scare and HUAC Hearings • Cold War paranoia about Communist messages in mass entertainment • Congress formed House UnAmerican Activities Committee (HUAC) • 1941 and 1947 HUAC hearings were "witch hunts" to remove so-called subversives from the industry (led by Senator Joseph McCarthy). JAMM 100

  38. EFFECT OF HUAC HEARINGS • Blacklisting of talented members of Hollywood community • Tarnished the Hollywood “Dream Machine” image • Created a climate of fear and dampened creativity within the industry • Wounds continue even today JAMM 100

  39. THE PARAMOUNT DECISION • In 1948, Supreme Court ruled studio violation of Sherman Anti-trust Act, restricting fair trade. • Court ordered the Big Five studios to divest their theater chains. • EFFECTS: studios cut their film production by half; opened the way for independent producers.* JAMM 100

  40. Returning soldiers Baby boom Suburbanization and new lifestyle Nuclear families with young children Changing patterns of consumption Less disposable income Decreased attendance at downtown movie palaces Postwar changes in society JAMM 100

  41. THE RISE OF TELEVISION • Decline in motion picture attendance • Film industry’s technological gimmicksto emphasize the spectacle of the big screen • Film industry cooperation with TV • Movies on TV became a continuous competitor with theatre for film customers JAMM 100

  42. HOLLYWOOD TODAY • Marriage of TV and movies: watching movies now takes place on the home VCR and DVD player as well as at the box office. • New Hollywood studios produce TV shows as well as feature films. • Most new movies flop at the box office, but losses are recouped through video and DVD market. JAMM 100

  43. Sources of studio income today • Box office revenues • Video/DVD sales and rentals • Distribution of films globally • Studio distribution of independent films • Product placement in movies JAMM 100

  44. The Modern Movie Oligopoly • Warner Brothers • Paramount • Twentieth Century Fox • Universal • Columbia • Walt Disney JAMM 100

  45. Concept of SYNERGY • Synergy = the promotion and sale of a media product through the various subsidiaries of a media conglomerate. • Movies, books, soundtrack CDs, magazine reviews, toy action figures, T-shirts, posters, web sites, newspapers, TV interviews, cartoons, etc.* JAMM 100

  46. For next class Television & the Power of Visual Culture • Read Chapters 5 & 6 • Complete Chapter 5 Review Questions 12 - 15, Questioning the Media 1, 3 & 5 • Complete Chapter 6 all Review Questions • Take online quizzes • Complete The Ratings Game exercise JAMM 100

More Related