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Y200 Politics and Film. September 6, 2011. The Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC). Founded in 1908 Peace treaty between Edison and Biograph. Also called “The Trust” Involved: production of raw film manufacture of motion pictures manufacture of projectors
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Y200 Politics and Film September 6, 2011
The Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC) • Founded in 1908 • Peace treaty between Edison and Biograph. • Also called “The Trust” • Involved: • production of raw film • manufacture of motion pictures • manufacture of projectors • film distribution and exhibition
The Members of the MPPC • Edison Manufacturing • American Mutograph and Biograph • Eastman Kodak • Essanay (a Chicago film producer) • Kalem • Pathé Freres • Kleine, Lubin, Melies, Selig, and Vitagraph
Some Benefits of the MPPC Formation of the General Film Company: • modernized film distribution • eliminated distributor favoritism • allowed exhibitors to show films by different production companies (no block booking) • classified theaters by size and location and priced accordingly • established a system of runs and clearances
Why MPPC Failed • WW I sharply reduced demand for films in Europe. • The demand for films was so strong in the US that independent distributors found other sources of films besides the Trust. • Kodak (led by George Eastman) made its raw film stock available to other companies in 1911. • 1915 U.S. court ruling that MPPC violated the Sherman Anti-Trust law in a suit brought by William Fox. George Eastman and Thomas Edison
Technological Changes Affecting the Film Industry • 1893 Kinetoscope invented • 1895 Movie Projector invented • 1906 First Nickelodeon • 1913 Kinetophone invented (did not work) • 1927 Talking Pictures “The Jazz Singer” • 1927 invention of television • 1948 beginning of TV broadcasting
The Major Beneficiaries of Sound • Warner Brothers -- in alliance with Western Electric (the manufacturing arm of AT&T • RKO Pictures -- formed by RCA because RCA had a competing technology for adding sound to pictures All the other studios lost ground relative to these two upstarts.
Emergence of Movie Stars • Very popular actors were capable of bringing higher attendance to any movie they appeared in. • The first major female star was Mary Pickford. • Pickford joined with Charles Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks, D.W. Griffith and William S. Hart to found United Artists in 1919.
The Founders of United Artists (from left to right) Douglas Fair- banks, Mary Pickford, and Charlie Chaplin
The Economics of the Star System • Having stars greatly reduces the risk of making a picture. • Wall Street financiers more inclined to finance a picture with stars in it. • Stars can command very high salaries because of their economic impact on revenues and profits.
Adolph Zukor Tries to Rein In the Stars • Zukor formed First National in 1917 (later to become Paramount Pictures). • Merger between First National and Famous Players - Lasky discussed in 1918. • Zukor attempts to buy a theater chain in 1919. • The Federal Trade Commission rules against Zukor’s attempt to merge with Famous Players in 1927 but Zukor buys the theater chain as planned. • UA had to match this by buying theaters also.
Zukor and His Friends in 1920 (left to right): Jesse L. Lasky, Adolph Zukor, Samuel Goldfish (later Goldwyn), Cecil B. DeMille and Albert Kaufman.
The Big Five • Paramount • Loew’s MGM • 20th Century Fox • Warner Brothers • RKO Source: adapted from Mae Huettig in Tino Balio (ed.), The American Film Industry.
The Little Three • Universal • Columbia Pictures • United Artists Every other studio is called an “independent” and has to sell or rent its pictures to one of the major studios because of their ownership of first-run theaters.
History of the Disney Studio • Founded in 1923 in a small office • Purchased Hyperion Avenue lot in 1925 • 1928: Birth of Mickey Mouse • 1937: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs • 1940: special animation building built • 1949: Sound Stage 2 was built • 1954: Built Disneyland