Title: The History of Film
 1The History of Film 
 2- Rooted in still photography - early to mid 1800s 
-  
- Considered 1st actual photograph,1826 
- by French inventor Nicéphore Niépce 
3Origins of Motion Pictures
- Early 1890s 
- Simultaneous development 
- U.S. - Thomas Edison 
- France - Lumiere Brothers 
-  (Auguste  Louis) 
4America
- 1891 Edison and W. K. L. Dickson invent 
-  THE KINETOSCOPE 
Individual viewing booths With film projected at 
48 fps 
- 1894, First Kinetoscope parlors 
-  NYC 
-  5 cents  20  60 seconds
5America
- 1893  Edison builds the Black Maria in West 
 Orange, NJ
- Attracted famous vaudeville acts / performances 
- Shoots over 200 short films in its first 8 years. 
6France
- Louis and Auguste Lumieres photo factory 
- Cinematographe 
- Lightweight and mobile doubled as a projector 
 and developed film.
- Creates global presence of film 
7France
- Cinema begins! 
- Lumieres have 1st public screening on 
 December 28, 1895 in Paris
- 10 Actualities shown 
Meant to portray actual life  
 8America
- Cinema begins! 
- Edison has first public screening  April, 1896 
- New York City Koster and Bials Music Hall 
- Several single shot films as part of variety 
 program (singing, dancing, performance)
9The earliest filmsup to 1902-03
- Primitive techniques 
- Usually just showed a view 
- 1 angle 
- Stationary 
- generally less than 1 minute 
10Films after 1902-03
- Multiple shot productions 
- Fiction films and theatrical films begin 
- Types 
- Trick films  film increased the power of 
 illusion
- Comedies  mostly nonsensical 
- Chases  mini-stories 
Trick film  The Golden Beetle, 1907  
 11Exhibition of new multiple shot films-- 
Nickelodeons --
- Small (under 200 seat), family owned movie house. 
 
- They tended to have continuous daily showings of 
 a few (three or four) short "feature" films.
- These theatres attracted a wide clientele which 
 included women and children.
12Exhibition of new multiple shot films-- 
Nickelodeons --
- 1st Nickelodeon opened in Pittsburgh 
-  June 1905. 
Entrance to the Harris nickelodeon Smithfield 
Street in Pittsburgh, 1919 
-  8,000 American Nickelodeons by 1908. 
-  The film industry evolved from the demands of 
 these
-  small store front theatres. 
13Narrative story filmsearly 1900s
-  Classical or scenic moments from famous stories 
 (the Bible, history, etc.)
-  2 pioneers of new multiple shot films 
- Georges Melies (France) 
- Edwin Porter (USA)  hired by Edison 
14Georges MeliesThe Cinemagician
- Films characterized by 
- Special effects 
- Fantasy 
- highly artificial sets 
- many shots, most scenes only one shot 
- dissolves 
15Georges Melies--- most famous film ---
A Trip to the Moon (Le voyage dans la Lune) - 1902 
 16Edwin Porter
- Thomas Edison hired him to make films 
- Porter is credited with establishing an editing 
 language (with Life of an American Fireman,
 1903)
- Use of cross-cutting - to dramatize the action 
 inside and outside of the house
- Various angles and shots 
- Continuity of action introduced
17Edwin Porter-- his most famous film --
- The Great Train Robbery, 1903 
- Considered the first real movie with a plot, it 
 used
- Multiple scenes, locations 
- Frequent cross-cutting, parallel stories 
- Pans and tilts 
- Other directors had presented multiple scenes 
 sequentially before, but their films played like
 condensed versions of stage plays, The Great
 Train Robbery played like a movie
18Major developments after 1907
- Shots were closer (within 9 ft.) 
- POV shots used 
- More cross-cutting 
- Use of intertitles
Screens with written dialogue Between shots 
 19Major developments after 1907Narrative 
(storytelling) techniques improved
- David Wark (D. W.) Griffith 
- Was the narrative pioneer 
- Made first feature length films 
- Made more serious films 
- Used moving shots dollies, tracking shots, etc.
20D. W. Griffiths Most famous (and controversial) 
film
- The Birth of a Nation (1915) 
- The three hour ten minute film, 
- based on The Clansman by 
- Thomas Dixon, deals with 
- The American Civil War and the 
- rise of the Ku Klux Klan during the 
- Reconstruction. 
21Birth of a Nationtrailer, 1915
- Considered to be technically sophisticated and 
 ahead of its
- time but extremely backward in ideas 
-  
Despite its controversial story, the film 
continues to get praise from film critics such as 
Roger Ebert, who said "'The Birth of a Nation' 
is not a bad film because it argues for evil. 
Like Riefenstahls 'The Triumph of the Will,' it 
is a great film that argues for evil. To 
understand how it does so is to learn a great 
deal about film, and even something about evil. "   
 22Narrative feature length films, along with the 
popularity of movie theaters, brought about the 
Rise of Hollywoodand the first talkie (film 
with sound) The Jazz Singer, 1927 
 23The Golden Age of Hollywood
- 1927 and 1928  beginning of Hollywood's Golden 
 Age and the final steps in the establishment of
 studio system control of the American film
 business.
- The success of 1927's The Jazz Singer gave a big 
 boost to the then midsized Warner Bros. studio.
 The following year saw the general introduction
 of sound throughout the industry.
24The Golden Age of Hollywood
- Studio System  the practice of large motion 
 picture studios
- producing movies on their own filmmaking lots 
- pursuing vertical integration -- ownership or 
 control of distributors and movie theaters,
 guaranteeing additional sales of films through
 manipulative booking techniques.
25The Golden Age of Hollywood
- During the Golden Age, only eight companies 
 comprised the major studios in the Hollywood
 studio system. Of these eight, five were fully
 integrated, combining ownership of a production
 studio, distribution division, and theater chain
 
- Fox (later 20th Century-Fox), 
- Loews Incorporated (owner of America's largest 
 theater chain and parent company to MGM),
- Paramount Pictures 
- RKO, and 
- Warner Bros. 
26The Golden Age of Hollywood
- Film historians list a few reasons why many great 
 movies emerged during this period
- Quantity! With so many movies being made, not 
 every one had to be a big hit. A studio could
 gamble on a medium-budget film with a good script
 and relatively unknown actors.
- In other cases, strong-willed directors battled 
 the studios in order to achieve their artistic
 visions this is less common nowadays, but helped
 produce many unique and interesting films for the
 time period.
Famous Movies The Wizard of Oz, Gone with the 
Wind, Casablanca, It's a Wonderful Life, the 
original King Kong, and Snow White and the Seven 
Dwarves many others!  
 27The Paramount Case
-  This1948 Supreme Court case ruled against these 
 unfair distribution and exhibition practices
 (vertical integration) and ended the studio
 system, which gave those Big 5 studios control
 of basically the entire film market this brought
 about the end of the Golden Age.
28The Rise of TV-- 1950s --
- Movie attendance peaked in 1946. There 
- several reasons why it has never reached 
- the same levels of attendance 
- The invention and widespread ownership of 
 televisions
- The post-World War II era led to 
- Suburbanizationsuburbs sprouted up, making 
 people less interested in traveling to the cities
 to see movies
- The Baby Boommore babies made many people more 
 family-oriented
29The Rise of TV -- 1950s 
New ways to attract audiences
3-D
A bigger, wrap-around Screen in theaters 
 (similar to IMAX).
Cinerama
3 screens combined to project a much 
bigger Image  more expensive
Smellovision!!
a system that released odors during the 
projection of a film so that the viewer could 
"smell" what was happening in the movie. The 
process injected 30 different smells into a movie 
theater's seats when triggered by the film's 
soundtrack. Hilarious! 
 30New Hollywood
- Generally dated to the release of Jaws in 1975
- New Hollywood characterized by the Blockbuster 
 Syndrome The Film industry is dominated by high
 cost, high stakes productions studios generally
 fund movies that are sure to be successful. This
 leads to
- Sequels 
- High action / less dialogue movies 
- Movies easily translated into other languages 
 (for overseas success)
1975 
 31New Hollywoodmore characteristics
Sequels
Younger viewers
Series
Less dialogue, more spectacle
Remakes