Top Banner
Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History
90

Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

Dec 21, 2015

Download

Documents

Kelley Cook
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: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

Looking at MoviesFourth Edition

Richard Barsam Dave Monahan

CHAPTER TEN

Film History

Page 2: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

2

What Is Film History?

• Film history traces the development of moving images from early experiments with image reproduction and photography through the invention of the movies in the early 1890s, as well as subsequent stylistic, financial, technological, and social developments in cinema that have occurred up to now

Page 3: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

3

Page 4: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

4

Four Traditional Approaches to Studying Film History

• The aesthetic approach• The technological approach• The economic approach• Film as social history

Page 5: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

5

The Aesthetic Approach

• Seeks to evaluate individual movies and/or directors using criteria that assess their artistic significance and influence

Page 6: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

6

The Technological Approach

• Examines the circumstances surrounding the development of each technological advance, as well as subsequent improvements

• Focuses on the interaction of technology with aesthetics, modes of production, and economic factors

Page 7: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

7

The Economic Approach

• Examines the economic history of the individual movie, as well as the place in the economic history of the movie’s studio and the historical period and country in which it was produced

Page 8: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

8

Film as Social History• Because society and culture influence the movies, and

vice versa, the movies serve as primary sources for studying society

• Considers such factors as religion, politics, and cultural trends and taboos

• Asks to what extent, if any, a particular movie was produced to sway public opinion or effect social change

• Examines the complex interaction between the movies – as a social institution – and other social institutions

Page 9: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

9

A Short Overview of Film History to 1947: Precinema

• Photography – “writing with light,” coined by Sir John Herschel (1839)

• Camera obscura (Latin for dark chamber) – a location large enough for a viewer to stand inside. Light entering through a tiny hole on one side of the space projects an image from outside the space onto the opposite wall.

• Series photography – records the phases of an action

Page 10: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

10

Page 11: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

11

Milestones in Photography

• Negative (William Henry Fox Talbot)• Revolver photographique – chronophotographic gun

(Pierre-Jules-César Janssen, 1874)• First series of photographs of continuous motion

(Eadweard Muybridge, 1877)• Zoopraxiscope (Muybridge, 1880)• Fusil photographique (Étienne-Jules Marey, 1882)

Page 12: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

12

Page 13: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

13

The First Movies (1891–1903)

• Kinetograph and Kinetoscope (W. K. L. Dickson, 1891)

• Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze (1894) – first film

• Cinématographe (1895) and actualitiés – Auguste and Louis Lumière

• Georges Méliès – the cinema’s first narrative artist

Page 14: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

14

Page 15: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

15

Page 16: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

16

Page 17: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

17

Page 18: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

18

Page 19: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

19

Page 20: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

20

1908–1927: Origins of the Classical Hollywood Style – Silent Period

• D. W. Griffith’s developments in narrative form• Crystallization of classical Hollywood style and

stature• Development of movie genres• Early experiments with color and animation• Feature-length films began to replace short films• The movie director was a central development• Walt Disney made his first cartoon in 1922

Page 21: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

21

Page 22: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

22

Page 23: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

23

1919–1931: German Expressionism

• Distorted and exaggerated settings; compositions of unnatural spaces

• Use of oblique angles and nonparallel lines• Moving and subjective camera• Highly stylized acting; unnatural costumes, hairstyles,

and makeup

Page 24: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

24

Page 25: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

25

Page 26: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

26

Page 27: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

27

Page 28: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

28

1918–1930: French Avant-Garde

• Short dadaist and surrealist films of an anticonventional, absurdist nature

• Short naturalistic psychological studies• Feature-length films that emphasized pure visual form

Page 29: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

29

Page 30: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

30

Page 31: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

31

1924–1930: Soviet Montage Movement

• Directors: Dziga Vertov, Lev Kuleshov, Sergei Eisenstein, Vsevolod Pudovkin

• Montage – to fragment and reassemble footage so as to manipulate the viewer’s perception and understanding

• Eisenstein’s “montage of attractions”

Page 32: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

32

Page 33: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

33

Page 34: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

34

Page 35: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

35

1927–1947: Classical Hollywood Style in Hollywood’s Golden Age

• Transition from silent to sound production (1927)• Consolidation of the studio system• Exploitation of familiar genres• Motion Picture Production Code• A new “look” to movies• Economic success of feature-length narrative films

Page 36: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

36

Page 37: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

37

Page 38: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

38

Page 39: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

39

Page 40: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

40

Hollywood’s Golden Age: Cinematic Style

• Narrative and editing conventions adapted to sound production

• Significant innovations in design, cinematography, lighting, acting, and editing

• Improvements in lighting, makeup, and film stock• Black-and-white film stock – the industry standard

through the 1950s

Page 41: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

41

Page 42: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

42

1927–1947: Hollywood’s Golden Age: Citizen Kane

• A radical film for Hollywood that revolutionized the medium 46 years after the invention of motion pictures

• Astonishing complexity and speed of narrative• Achieved the highest degree of cinematic realism• Sound design – an aural realism equivalent to the

movie’s visual realism• The cast rehearsed for a month before shooting began

Page 43: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

43

Page 44: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

44

1942–1951: Italian Neorealism

• Shot on location; used nonprofessional actors; documentary visual style

• Long takes, spare dialogue, ambiguous endings• Humanist – placed the highest value on the lives of

ordinary working people

Page 45: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

45

Page 46: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

46

Page 47: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

47

1959–1964: French New Wave

• Origins: 1930s poetic realism; philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre

• Cinéma vérité style – lightweight filmmaking devices• André Bazin – realism, mise-en-scène, authorship;

Cahiers du cinéma• Self-reflexive films• Director as auteur

Page 48: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

48

French New Wave: Breathless

• Rapid action, handheld cameras, unusual camera angles, direct address to the camera, borderline improvisational acting, anarchic politics, emphasis on sound’s importance, especially words.

• Radical, restless editing style• Broad range of pastiche (intertextual reference)

Page 49: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

49

Page 50: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

50

Page 51: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

51

Page 52: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

52

Page 53: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

53

1947 to the Present: New Cinemas in Britain, Europe, and Asia

• Made a clean break with the cinematic past• Injected new vitality into filmmaking• Explored cinema as a subject in itself

Page 54: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

54

England and the Free Cinema Movement

• Free Cinema (1956–1959) – a cinema of social realism and documentary films

• British New Cinema (1960s) – dealt with controversial issues of class, race, gender, and sexual orientation

Page 55: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

55

Page 56: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

56

Denmark and the Dogme 95 Movement

• Founded in 1995 by three directors, including Lars von Trier

• “The Vow of Chastity” – manifesto of ten rules• Directors often broke their vows

Page 57: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

57

Page 58: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

58

Germany and Das Neue Kino (1962–1980s)

• Oberhausen Manifesto (1962) – sought to create a new cinema free from historical antecedents, one that criticized bourgeois German society and exposed viewers to new modes of looking at movies

Page 59: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

59

Page 60: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

60

Japan’s and Postwar Filmmaking

• Owed much to Japanese literacy and theatrical traditions

• Strongly influenced by John Ford, Howard Hawks, and Orson Welles

• Akira Kurosawa is the most recognizable (and Western-style) director, followed by Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujiro Ozu

Page 61: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

61

Page 62: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

62

Page 63: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

63

Page 64: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

64

Japan’s Nubero Bagu (1950s–1970s)

• Hiroshi Teshigahara, Yasuzo Masumura, Nagisa Oshima

• Significantly influenced by the French New Wave• Emphasis on upsetting cinematic and social

conventions

Page 65: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

65

Page 66: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

66

China and Postwar Filmmaking: People’s Republic

• Since 1976 (the death of Chairman Mao), filmmakers are more concerned with individuals

• Chen Kaige, Yimou Zhang, Tian Zhuangzhuang have managed to make films about taboo subjects despite a repressive society

Page 67: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

67

Page 68: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

68

China and Postwar Filmmaking: Hong Kong

• 1920s–1970s – wuxia and kung fu• Melodramatic plot; philosophical codes of honor • Spectacular violence; brilliantly choreographed fight

sequences• Conflicts between cops and gangsters; lavish

production values

Page 69: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

69

Hong Kong: Formal Characteristics

• Spectacular studio settings and natural locations• Saturated colors; moody lighting • Constant motion (slow and fast); disjointed editing

techniques• Extensive computer manipulation of images and

motion

Page 70: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

70

Hong Kong New Wave (late 1970s–early 1980s)

• Stimulated cinematic innovations• Encouraged the movement of directors between TV

and mainstream cinema• Introduced new genres and tackled formerly taboo

subjects

Page 71: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

71

Page 72: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

72

China and Postwar Filmmaking: Taiwan

• Developed independently of Hong Kong and the People’s Republic

• Concerned with realistic depictions of ordinary people• Ang Lee, Hsiao-hsien Hou, Edward Yang

Page 73: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

73

Page 74: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

74

India

• Largest film industry in the world• Produces 1,200 features and even more documentaries

each year; commonly known as Bollywood• Satyajit Ray is the dominant figure in Indian cinema• Ray’s work represents the “new Indian cinema,” or

Parallel Cinema, meaning it exists alongside the mainstream commercial industries in the world’s sixth-largest economy

Page 75: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

75

Page 76: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

76

1965–1995: The New American Cinema

• Prevailing spirit of innovation led to a range of styles• Adapted cinematic conventions to a new audience• Predominance of sex and violence in content and

protagonists (male/female)• More structurally complex plots, with new storytelling

techniques

Page 77: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

77

Page 78: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

78

Page 79: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

79

Page 80: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

80

The New American Cinema Style

• Innovation in editing with more stylistic touches• More films shot on location; depiction of recognizable

actuality• Major experimentation with sound design• Definite reliance on naturalistic acting styles

Page 81: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

81

Page 82: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

82

New American Cinema: Other Directions

• Documentary – Direct Cinema (Maysles Brothers, D. A. Pennebaker)

• Experimental films – Stan Brakhage, Andy Warhol• Feature-length animated films have thrived

Page 83: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

83

Page 84: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

84

Page 85: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

85

Review

1. What are the four traditional approaches to studying film history?

a. Technological, social, cultural, aesthetic

b. Aesthetic, technological, economic, social

c. Economic, cinematic, social, cultural

d. Cultural, technological, rhetorical, scholarly

Page 86: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

86

Review

2. The intermediary step between still photography and cinematography is

a. series photography.

b. fusil photography.

c. revolver photography.

d. chronotography.

Page 87: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

87

Review

3. Black Maria was the first

a. motion picture film.

b. motion picture projector.

c. motion picture studio.

d. complete motion picture.

Page 88: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

88

Review

4. The Lumière brothers’ actualités are an example of what type of nonfiction film?

a. Instructional

b. Propaganda

c. Factual

d. Documentary

Page 89: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

89

Review

5. Which film movement was based on the idea that the movie director is an auteur?

a. German expressionism

b. Soviet montage

c. Italian neorealism

d. French New Wave

Page 90: Looking at Movies Fourth Edition Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan CHAPTER TEN Film History.

90

Review

6. Which is NOT one of the ten rules of the Dogme 95 Manifesto?

a. Shooting must be done on location.

b. The camera must be handheld.

c. The film must be genre-specific.

d. The film must be in color.