Top Banner
Introduction to Film Silent Movies
13

Introduction to Film

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

Henry

Introduction to Film. Silent Movies. 1895 Birth of Cinematography. Robert W. Paul invented the film projector First public showing in 1895 Movies were shown in: Storefront spaces Traveling exhibitions Vaudeville. 1895 Birth of Cinematography. Early Films: Under a minute - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Introduction to Film

Introduction to FilmSilent Movies

Page 2: Introduction to Film

1895 Birth of Cinematography

Robert W. Paul invented the film projector

First public showing in 1895

Movies were shown in: Storefront spaces Traveling

exhibitions Vaudeville

Page 3: Introduction to Film

1895 Birth of Cinematography

Early Films: Under a minute Usually a single

scene authentic or staged everyday life public event sporting event slapstick

No editing No camera

movement

Page 4: Introduction to Film

1895 Birth of Cinematography

One of the most popular short films: Sally Rand, The Fan

Dance An exotic dancer and

actress.

Page 5: Introduction to Film

Silent Era 1895-1927

A Trip to the Moon (1902) Georges Méliès

Directed & Starred Paris stage magician

Pioneered many of the basic special effects used in movies

Increased the length of movies to fifteen minutes

Page 6: Introduction to Film

Silent Era 1895-1927

The Great Train Robbery (1903) Edwin S. Porter, Director Thomas Edison, Producer First Western Emphasized the shot, rather than the

scene

Page 7: Introduction to Film

The Great Train Robbery (1903)

Filmed in New Jersey Included shot of a

bandit shooting at the audience

Audiences at the time would usually scream in fear, then laugh in relief

Page 8: Introduction to Film

Silent Era 1895-1927

Boom in nickelodeons (the first permanent movie theaters)

10,000 in the U.S. by 1908

Standard length of a film remained one reel (ten to fifteen minutes)

Page 9: Introduction to Film

Silent Era 1895-1927

The Birth of a Nation (1915) First full length film

(190 minutes) Director D.W. Griffith

Page 10: Introduction to Film

Birth of a Nation (1915) Pioneered cinematic

techniques Jump-cut Close-ups

Introduced cinematic innovations Documentary Mobile cameras

Page 11: Introduction to Film

Birth of a Nation (1915) "Top 100 American

Films" (# 44) by the American Film Institute

In its day, the highest grossing film, taking in more than $10 million at the box office

($210 million) In 1992 the United

States Library of Congress deemed it "culturally significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry.

Page 13: Introduction to Film

Talking Pictures 1927 Turning point came

in 1927 Warner Brothers

Studios released The Jazz Singer

First synchronized dialogue (and singing) in a feature film.