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FS 101

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Cheap tickets attract: working class. growing pop of immigrants. Ques: why these audiences? ... Nicer venues tickets more expensive. Longer films w/ more ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FS 101


1
FS 101
  • Universal Language of Silence

2
Introduction
  • Last Week
  • C19th visual media
  • Early cinema
  • This Week
  • Silent cinema
  • Development of film language
  • NOTE Quiz 1 next week

3
Tutorial Information
  • Thursday
  • 1 230 S101
  • 5 330 P3015
  • 6 330 W4-209
  • 7 330 S103
  • 8 330 StM123
  • 9 430 P2015
  • 10 430 StM122
  • 11 430 S102
  • Friday
  • 13 1230 StM101
  • 14 1230 StM102
  • 17 130 StM101
  • 18 130 StM102
  • S Seminary
  • P Peters
  • W Woods
  • StM St. Mikes

4
For Tutorial Presentations
  • Multi-media facilities
  • Overhead projector
  • Black board or white board
  • TV cart
  • Tutorial Leaders will bring the TV carts
  • TV and VCR - - - BUT No DVD
  • TIME your pres and clips (5 mins)

5
Asking Questions (outside of class)
  • Tutorial leaders
  • Ask them first - not me
  • Lectures
  • NO do not ask me ques before lecture
  • YES in 10 min break before film screening
  • Email
  • Courtesy and respect
  • Formal like asking us in person

6
Evaluation
  • Presentation 10
  • Quizzes (x3) 20
  • Essay 25
  • Final Exam 35
  • Attendance/participation 10

7
Quiz 1 Next Week
  • For Quizzes, you are responsible for
  • Lectures
  • Readings
  • Films
  • Not tutorials
  • Not presentations
  • NOT to test memorisation
  • ie dates, names, etc
  • But to for you to demonstrate your understanding
    of the main ideas of course
  • ie. what does this have to do with film?

8
Example
  • 1. Eisenstein argues the films of Griffith had
    little impact on Soviet filmmaking in the 20s
  • True or False
  • Which of the following was NOT a subject of one
    of the short films in PrimitivesPioneers?
  • a) people playing chess
  • b) people playing hide and seek
  • c) people sitting a train
  • d) people driving a car

9
Layout of Quiz
  • Different kinds of question
  • multiple choice
  • true or false
  • short answer
  • Lots of choice
  • ie. answer 12 out of 20 ques
  • 30 mins
  • On readings, lectures, and films
  • Important ideas from each week/topic

10
HOWEVER
  • DO NOT GUESS!!!!
  • Wrong answers carry a penalty (negative mark)
  • Right answer 1 mark
  • No answer (blank) 0 marks
  • Wrong answer -½ mark
  • ie.there is a possibility to get less than 0
  • Better to leave blank than guess

11
What to Study
  • Readings
  • Main ideas, people, events
  • Main arguments
  • Lectures
  • main ideas/arguments
  • Website www.wlu.ca/wwweng/faculty/pgates
  • Films
  • Important contribution/example
  • Main characters, events, themes

12
Quizzes
  • BRING
  • Your own pencils
  • Lead/HB - you need to make dark marks
  • Pen WILL NOT work
  • AND AN ERASER
  • More than one circle and
  • you dont get a point

13
If you miss a quiz
  • If you are ill and have a doctors note
  • Or some other major impediment
  • Then you can make-up the quiz
  • HOWEVER
  • The version you write longer answers
  • ie significantly more writing
  • Not multiple choice, true or false, etc

14
Last Week
  • C19th optical innovations and toys
  • Birth of cinema
  • Early films 1895-1903
  • Individual viewing films
  • ie. Kinetoscope
  • Mass viewing in cinema
  • ie. Cinematographe

15
Kinetoscope Vitascope
  • Kinetoscope open
  • Vitascope

16
Shifts in Exhibition 1890s
  • Projection and commercialisation
  • ie Edison
  • From kinetoscope (1893)
  • To vitascope  (1896)
  • Early to mid 1890s Kinetoscope parlors
  • Pay per film view 1min through eyepiece
  • Then go to the next machine to see another film
  • Mid to late 1890s Projection
  • shorts shown in music hall, vaudeville,
    fairgrounds

17
1900s Nickelodeon
  • After 1906, develop of narrative system
  • ie. a formalised way to tell stories visually
  • Pay a nickel to watch longer 1 reel films
  • up to 12 mins
  • By 1910
  • over 10,000 Nicklelodeons
  • attracting 26 m customers each week!

18
A nickelodeon theater in Pittsburg Claimed to be
the first in US (The Moving Picture World 1907)
19
Audience
  • Cheap tickets attract
  • working class
  • growing pop of immigrants
  • Ques why these audiences?

20
Universal Language
  • Didnt need to know English
  • Didnt need to be literate
  • International capabilities
  • Replace intertitle cards with other language
  • Like Esperanto?
  • language introd in 1887 by Dr. L.L. Zamenhof
  • Inteligentaj personoj lernas la internacian
    lingvon.
  • Intelligent people learn the international
    language.

21
From East to West
  • New York original centre of film
  • 1st film studio 1899
  • Move to Hollywood
  • 1st film studio 1910

22
By 1915
  • Films became more sophisticated
  • Film industry shift from one- and two-reel films
  • To feature-length films
  • ie. one hour or longer
  • Encourages
  • More complicated plots
  • And character development
  • Ques Why make longer films?
  • Note Charlie Chaplins The Tramp was released in
    1915

23
Profit (it is a business afterall)
  • Hoping to attract greater profits
  • Through attracting more people to cinema
  • Specifically middle-class audiences
  • Nicer venues tickets more expensive
  • Longer films w/ more complicated plots
  • More films based on literary classics
  • Like Charles Dickens Great Expectations (1917)
  • Note 1st film based on a Dickens story -
    Scrooge (1901)

24
Narrative Film
  • Between 1902 1903, the average length of a film
    grew from 50 ft to 600 ft
  • By 1904
  • narrative film 53 of all films
  • By 1908
  • Nnarrative film 96 of all films
  • Exhibitors free to
  • Edit sequence and duration of scenes
  • Provide narrative commentary for action

25
Film Language
  • But longer means more complicated
  • Need editing
  • A way to organise the material
  • Maximise narrative clarity
  • Avoid confusing the viewer
  • A kind of language of visual storytelling

26
Editing
  • EDITING
  • selection of significant event details and
  • placing details into comprehensive whole
  • MONTAGE
  • term originally referred to the editorial
    assembling of film segments
  • Montage today
  • describes a rapid succession of images that
    convey a single concept

27
Early Cinema
  • Last week - not much editing
  • Especially within scenes
  • They did use cuts between shots
  • Melies tended just to use tableaux
  • So cut from one long shot to the next
  • All the action happened within the frame
  • Emphasis on actors/props moving
  • NOT the camera or the frame
  • Melies Trip to the Moon (1902)

28
D.W. Griffith b 1875 d 1948
  • Joined film business in 1907
  • Apprentice with Edwin S. Porter
  • His film career began w/ Edison studios
  • as an actor
  • Then w/ American Biograph
  • as an actor
  • Asked to direct one-reelers

29
Father of film technique?
  • 45 films directed or supervised 1908-1913
  • Some scholars say Griffith is
  • the father of film technique
  • Others say not an innovator though
  • an intuitive refiner and extender of existing
    cinematic methods
  • G combined these methods w/conventions of
  • Victorian art, literature, and drama
  • In order to tell stories more effectively

30
Refinement - film as art
  • Variation of camera position
  • Close-ups used more often
  • Intertitles for narrative clarity
  • Editing innovation
  • Longer films - 3 ½ hour film
  • Use of Camera Iris for softened edges

31
Billy Bitzer his cameraman
  • Relationship begins at Biograph
  • Develop the Iris shot
  • whereby corners are softened in the frame
  • Close-up
  • Cutting on action
  • Crosscutting

32
Iris Shot
  • Born out of logic in film language
  • You want to draw viewers attention to a specific
    detail/part of the frame
  • So you black out the rest of frame
  • Develops fade-out by
  • closing iris diaphragm slowly
  • What do films do now instead?

33
The Close-Up
  • Not invented immediately in film
  • Griffith was a pioneer of this technique
  • For drawing attention to detail
  • you cut from the long shot
  • to a close-up

34
Cutting on Action
  • This is where a cut is made in conjunction to a
    characters movement
  • Side shot of cowboy mounting horse - swings up
  • CUT to new shot from front as he settles
  • picks up reins and giddy-ups and away
  • following movement
  • helps hide the cut
  • through logic of
  • related actions

35
Parallel Editing
  • In 1909 Bitzer and Griffith introduce
  • Cross-cutting or intercutting
  • between two parallel sequences
  • Especially in the last-minute rescue
  • to build suspense
  • becomes a trademark
  • notable for their rhythm
  • and consistency of
  • geography in such seqs

36
Geography
  • Constructs a logic as characters move through
    space
  • You know where one location is in reference to
    another
  • Therefore also the characters
  • Chase scene from Birth of a Nation

37
Birth of a Nation (1915)
  • Celebrated for artistic and
  • filmic innovation
  • Reviled for its racism
  • Based film on controversial book play
  • The Clansman by Thomas Dixon
  • Adaptation to increase box-office sales

38
Racism and Propaganda
  • Griffith innovated film as a tool of persuasion
  • B of N is a film about heroes (Clansmen)
  • defeating the villains (African-Americans)
  • who threaten their women (incl Lillian Gish)
  • You identify with heroes
  • Emotional connection means that politics are
    easily overlooked
  • good v evil rather than black v white

39
Filmic apology
  • Broken Blossoms as his apology
  • positive rep of an Asian man
  • Also an adaptation
  • story by Thomas Burke in Limehouse Nights
  • Called The Chink and the Child
  • The racist epithet is product of its time
  • From hypersexual African-American villains
  • To effeminate Asian hero
  • Is this progress? You decide

40
Broken Blossoms
  • Griffiths last masterpiece
  • First commercial success after B of N
  • Shot entirely in studio in 18 days
  • Lots of rehearsal no retakes
  • Little footage not used
  • Impressionistic cinematography soft
  • Tinted in pastels
  • His most integrated, personal poetic

41
D.W. Griffith
  • With Broken Blossoms
  • One critic wrote that Griffith
  • had far exceeded the power of the written word
  • Another dubbed him
  • The Shakespeare of the Screen

42
Lillian Gish
  • I never approved of talkies.
  • Silent movies were well on their
  • way to developing an entirely new
  • art form. It was not just pantomine,
  • but something wonderfully expressive
  • Those little virgins, after five minutes you
  • got sick of playing them - to make them
  • more interesting was hard work.

43
The Arrival of Sound
  • First 20 years of film Silent
  • Sound arrives in 1927
  • Sound
  • not necessarily improvement
  • Silent film
  • an art by mid-1920s
  • ie.Sunrise (Murnau 1927)

44
The Power of Silent Film
  • According to journalists, intellectuals, social
    workers, clergymen, and filmmakers
  • Film was a universal language
  • Griffith told Lillian Gish that she was
  • working in the universal language that had been
    predicted in the Bible, which was to make all men
    brothers because they would understand each
    other. This could end wars and bring about the
    millennium

45
Never Silent
  • By 1889, WKL Dickson achieved
  • sound synchronization w/ Kinetograph
  • also synchronized phonograph recording in
  • France, Germany, and the UK
  • Silent film always accompanied by
  • Live sound effects machines
  • Live music was employed
  • organ or piano music
  • full orchestral scores with cue sheets

46
Studio Resistance
  • Problems
  • great expense converting to sound-proof studio
  • great expense converting movie theatres
  • large backlog of silent films
  • What happened?
  • overseas market decimated
  • star system thrown into disarray

47
New Talkie Technology
  • Sound-on-Disc
  • Problems with going out of synch
  • Sound-on-Film
  • Always synched to image
  • Some studios invest in one or other
  • Second one wins! (ie Warner Bros)
  • Some studios lose out

48
First Talkie
  • The Jazz Singer (1927)
  • Warner Bros. builds first sound studio
  • Make and release The Jazz Singer
  • Becomes a monumental hit
  • Studios rush to convert to sound

49
Problems of Early Sound
  • When movies first started to talk
  • They stopped moving!
  • You get Canned Theatre
  • ie. put a theatrical performance in a film can

50
Canned Theatre
  • Between 1928 and 1931
  • filmmaking regressed to early cinema style
  • static long shots / tableaux scenes
  • Because cameras in sound-proof booths
  • Editing reserved for scene transitions
  • Lost from silent film
  • cross-cutting, montage, fluid camera

51
Singin in the Rain
52
See you next week
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