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Film as . . . . A Brief History and Overview. Film as . . . 1. Science. A scientific/medical experiment (and extension of still photography; DaVinci’s camera obscura, c. 1500; Louis Daguerre/daguerrotypes, c. 1840). Film as . . . 1. Science.
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Film as . . . A Brief History and Overview
Film as . . . 1. Science • A scientific/medical experiment (and extension of still photography; DaVinci’s camera obscura, c. 1500; Louis Daguerre/daguerrotypes, c. 1840)
Film as . . . 1. Science How a camera obscuraworks (Leonardo DaVinci and beyond)
Daguerreotype of Edgar Allan Poe 1848
Film as . . . 1. Science • Persistence of vision (Roget, etc., 1820s) • Exercises: • Look at the light, and then close your eyes. . . • Try to “pan” across the room. . .
Peter Mark Roget’s essay on persistence of vision (1824, England)
Film as . . . 1. Science • Persistence of Vision devices: Thaumatrope, Zoetrope, Magic Lantern shows (1830s)
Thaumatrope (from the Greek “wonder turning”) –Dr. John Paris (1825) –spinning disk with complementary drawings on the two sides (e.g., horse + rider = horse with rider; bird + cage = bird in cage)
Thaumatrope in action found at (http://youtube.com/watch?v=dol1xOW_Qzk)
Zoetrope (from the Greek “wheel of life”)-William George Horner(1834, England)—a revolving drum with hand-drawn stills viewed through slits
Magic Lantern-Appeared in early forms as early as late 1600’s-Popular in mid-1800’s, with moving pictures via “dissolving views”
Film as . . . 1. Science • Eadweard Muybridge, Cal. Gov. Stanford, $25,000 & a running horse (1877)
Film as . . . 2. Information vs. 3. Art 2. Information • Documentation • News VS. 3. Art • Self-expression • Creativity • Filmmaker as auteur • “European”
Film as . . . 2. Information vs. 3. Art • From the very beginning, filmmakers differentiated themselves: • Information/Documentation vs. Art/Self-expression • Lumiere Bros. vs. Georges Melies <------------------------------------------------------> [realism] [formalism/expressionism]
Louis & Auguste Lumiere • Below: Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat (1895)
Georges Melies • Below: A Trip to the Moon (1902)
Let’s watch a portion of Georges Melies’ A Trip to the Moon (1902); oddly, it is taken from the introduction to the extravaganza film, Around the World in Eighty Days (1956, D: Michael Anderson, P: Michael Todd)
Definitions of Realism vs. Formalist/Expressionism (Dennis Giles) • Realism: • Broad def. - - the reality outside the camera should be shown with as little distortion as possible; a neutral style that doesn't draw attention to itself • Narrow def. - - in doing the above, you use certain film techniques that minimize interference; deep focus shots, long takes (plan sequence) are used . . . as little decoupage as possible • Formalism/Expressionism: • Broad def. - - you don't try to reproduce the reality of the world, but construct a new reality on film • Narrow def. – you do the above by distorting the image itself, so that the film image is unlike anything one would see in the real world; use of special lenses, filters, lighting, angles, etc. (Digital effects?)
Film as . . . 4. Commerce • A very American concept--America entertains the world! • Thomas Edison, William Dickson & the Kinetoscope, the Black Maria (1890s), Nickelodeons
Thomas Alva Edison • Below: William K. L. Dickson
Film as . . . 4. Commerce • The U.S. Studio System: Movie moguls • A homogenous group
MGM--The major studio 1920-50's; had "More Stars Than There Are in Heaven" (many star vehicles produced); Prestige at any cost!
Film as . . . 4. Commerce • The U.S. Studio System: Production/Distribution/Exhibition (Vertical integration)
Film as . . . 4. Commerce • The U.S. Studio System: Production/Distribution/Exhibition (Vertical integration) • PRODUCTION • DISTRIBUTION • EXHIBITION
Film as . . . 4. Commerce • Competition with other media, other forms of entertainment—e.g., • Sound • AC • Drive-ins • 3D • Widescreen technologies • William Castle gimmicks • Color • Special effects • 3D revival • 4D
Film as . . . 5. A Social Force • National cinemas (e.g., Soviet Montage; Francophone African cinema) • Assumption that national control or support is necessary due to power of the moving image • Propaganda (e.g., Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will) • Direct assumption that films can change minds
Film as . . . 5. A Social Force • A moral influence. . . Examples of evidence: • Payne Fund studies—set of 1930s studies that examined content and effects of movies on national morals (possible impact on the young) • Censorship/self-censorship—Hays Office & Production Code (1922-45), MPAA ratings (since 1966) • Blacklisting--an assumption that off-screen activities have an influence on on-screen material (e.g., Fatty Arbuckle, Robert Downey, Jr., “Hollywood Ten” during McCarthy era, Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave)
Fatty Arbuckle 1921—the Virginia Rappe case 1922—establishment of the Hay Office