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Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7
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Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Dec 15, 2015

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Abbie Pillow
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Page 1: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Movies and the Impact of Images

Chapter 7

Page 2: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

“Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s

personal filmmaking and focused the industry on big-budget special-effects

blockbusters.”

—Roger Ebert

Page 3: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Movies as Modern Mythmakers

Movies tell communal stories. Evoke and symbolize our most enduring values and secret

desires Make the world seem clearer, more manageable, and more

understandable

Movies distract us from our daily struggles. Movies encourage us to rethink contemporary ideas.

What may be considered violent, unpatriotic, or sacrilegious can change a viewer’s outlook for the better.

Page 4: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Early Film Technology

1889 celluloid Bought by Eastman

Edison patented kinetoscope and vitascope. Méliès and narrative film Nickelodeons

Silent films, “shorts” Popular with new immigrants—images crossed

language barriers Numbers of nickelodeons rise rapidly.

Page 5: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The Power of the Studio System

Edison’s “Trust” Cartel of major U.S. and French producers Exclusive deal with Eastman

Defeated by Zukor and Fox Went on to create their own oligopoly

The studio system (1920s) Created stars

Mary Pickford key figure Helped create directors as “auteurs”

Zukor’s block booking Exhibitors forced to rent new or marginal films along

with popular films Zukor and Fox worked to control distribution and exhibition.

Page 6: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Hollywood Storytelling

Talkies 1927 Warner Brothers’ film The Jazz Singer

Starring Al Jolson Fox studio’s newsreels

Movietone captured first film footage with sound. Takeoff and return of Charles Lindbergh

Blockbusters The Birth of a Nation (1915), D. W. Griffith’s epic,

is considered the first such film.

Page 7: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Hollywood Genres

Action/Adventure Comedy Drama Fantasy/Science Fiction Film Noir Gangster Horror Musicals Mystery/Suspense Romance Westerns

(See listings on pages 224 and 225)

Page 8: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

1960s and 1970s: The Rise of Star Directors

Dennis Hopper, Easy Rider George Lucas, American Graffiti Francis Ford Coppola, The Godfather Brian De Palma, Carrie Martin Scorsese, Taxi Driver Steven Spielberg, Jaws Female directors receive few opportunities.

Sofia Coppola (Lost in Translation) and Nancy Meyers (Something’s Gotta Give) are among the few female American directors to achieve critical, commercial success.

Page 9: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Breaking the Racial Barrier

Minority groups, including African Americans, Asian Americans, and Native Americans struggle for recognition

Some have succeeded as directors Spike Lee (Do the Right Thing, 1989) Ang Lee (Brokeback Mountain, 2005) Chris Eyre (Smoke Signals, 1998)

Page 10: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Documentary Film Nanook of the North, 1922 Cinema verité

Portable cameras Rough, grainy look Robert Drew: key innovator

Michael Moore Controversial

Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004): a critique of the Bush administration’s Middle East policies and the Iraq war

Sicko (2007): an investigation of the U.S. health-care system

Page 11: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The Transformation of the Hollywood System

The Hollywood Ten Investigations of alleged subversive and communist ties Led by the House Un-American Activities Committee

(HUAC) Blacklisted

Hollywood Ten boycotted by major studios

Paramount decision Major studios forced to end vertical integration

Page 12: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Television Changes Hollywood

By the mid-1950s TV replaces radio and movies for family entertainment.

Movies begin to take on more serious content in response. Anti-Semitism: Gentleman’s Agreement,

1947 Sexuality: Peyton Place, 1957

Also develop new technologies CinemaScope, Technicolor

Page 13: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

By 2008… More than 50% of domestic revenue for

Hollywood studios came from video/DVD rentals. Continued popularity of DVD players

DVD introduced 1997 Sales began to outpace rentals, but rentals still

profitable. Netflix

High-definition DVD battle won by Sony’s Blu-ray discs

Page 14: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Figure 7.1

Page 15: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Hollywood and Home Entertainment

“In a world where Amazon offers every book, and iTunes offers every song, people aren’t going to put up with, or even understand, that the film they want to watch is simply unavailable.”

—Saul Hansell, New York Times, 2008

Page 16: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The Movie Business

1.4 billion movie tickets sold in 2007 2007 gross revenues = $9.63 billion Sales and rental business still

produces more revenue: $15.7 billion

Movie business revamped its production, distribution, and exhibition system and consolidated its ownership to survive.

Page 17: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The Blockbuster Mentality

In the 1970s, suburban moviegoers made hits of Jaws (1975) and Star Wars (1977).

Studios devised strategies to create future blockbusters.

Studios need one major hit each year to offset costs of other films. 80–90% of films fail at box office

Page 18: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Figure 7.2

Page 19: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The Major Players

Warner Brothers Paramount Twentieth Century Fox Universal Columbia Pictures Disney

Only Disney not owned by larger conglomerate

Page 20: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Figure 7.3

Page 21: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

What Disney OwnsMovies• Walt Disney Pictures– Walt Disney AnimationStudios– Pixar Animation Studios– DisneyToon Studios– Touchstone Pictures– Hollywood Pictures– Miramax Films• Walt Disney Studios MotionPictures International• Walt Disney Studios HomeEntertainment• Disney TheatricalProductions• ImageMovers Digital

Music• Disney Music Group– Walt Disney Records– Hollywood Records– Lyric Street Records

Publishing• Disney PublishingWorldwide– Hyperion Books forChildren– Disney Press• ESPN The Magazine• Wondertime magazine• FamilyFun magazine

Television/Radio• Disney-ABC TelevisionGroup– ABC– ABC Family– ABC Studios– Disney ChannelWorldwide– SOAPnet– The Radio DisneyNetwork

– Lifetime EntertainmentServices– A&E Television Networks• ESPN, Inc (80% ownership)• ABC-owned televisionstations (10)

Internet/Mobile Content• The Walt Disney InternetGroup– Disney.com– ESPN360.com– ESPN Mobile Properties– mDisney mobile– Movies.com

Disney Parks and Resorts• (5) Disneyland Resorts andParks• Disney Cruise Line• Adventures by Disney

Page 22: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

Film and the Internet

One of the biggest challenges facing the movie industry is the Internet. With broadband Internet, movie watchers likely to

get films from the Web. More and more online portals to watch films

Apple’s iTunes store began selling films in 2006, renting in 2008

Hulu: Free streaming TV and movie clips How often do you watch movies online?

Page 23: Movies and the Impact of Images Chapter 7. “Star Wars effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the.

The American Way

Do U.S. films contribute to a global village in which people share a universal culture?

Or do U.S. films stifle local culture and diversity?