HOLLYWOOD Stars & Studios
PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM 1931, industry moved away from Central Producer system to PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM Lasted from around 1931 to around 1955
PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM Specialization increased under Central Producer system Different directors under central producer specialized in various genres of films Difficult for central producer to keep tabs on growing number of films Also difficult for central producer to be an “expert” in every genre
PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM Various studios’ central producers began assigning assistants to take over a degree of control over smaller groups of films Central producer still maintained high degree of control over all of the film production at a given studio Films of a particular studio beginning to all “look alike”, influence of central producer decreasing the individuality of the films
PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM Specialization continued & intensified with Producer-Unit system Central producer replaced by a number of producers ( “associate producers”) Desire to decrease costs; with a smaller number of films for each producer to supervise, he could keeper tighter control over costs More different kinds of movies produced; producers made movies within their specializations Individuality & creativity increased
PRODUCER-UNIT SYSTEM Producer-Unit system adopted by all Big 5 studios Allowed them to make even more films, more efficiently, than during the silent era Part of general increase in specialization & departmentalization at the studios Increased the division of labor Jobs in other departments also became more specialized New jobs created by new technologies of sound & color (technicians, dialogue writers, voice coaches) Required new jobs in other departments (make-up, costume, prop, etc.)
Owned largest chain of theaters, esp. in the South & Midwest In 1930s, during Depression, mortgages on these properties almost sank the company When industry (& US) recovered in WW II, these theaters source of huge profits In 1940s-50s, Paramount by far most profitable & powerful of Big 5 During these years, Paramount made many of the films we value most from the Studio Era
Paramount Stars Marlene Dietrich
Paramount Stars The Marx Bros Mae West
Paramount Stars Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour & Bob Hope
Fleischer Bros. Studio Popeye
Fleischer Bros. Studio Superman
Fleischer Bros. Studio Betty Boop
Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer
MGM production branch of Loew’s, Inc. Loew’s theater chain concentrated in NYC Company survived Depression in good shape (premiere film company of 1930s) In the post-Depression boom, however, lack of theaters hurt Loew’s
MGM Stars Greta Garbo
MGM Stars Clark Gable Spencer Tracy
MGM Movies Tarzan the Ape Man (1932)
Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938) MGM Movies Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938)
Hal Roach Studio Laurel & Hardy
Hal Roach Studio Our Gang
MGM Animation
Tex Avery’s Wolfie and Red MGM Animation Tex Avery’s Wolfie and Red
20th Century-Fox
1935, Fox merged with 20th Century Pictures Best remembered for its Technicolor musicals & its “socially-conscious” films
20th Century-Fox Stars Sonja Henie Shirley Temple
20th Century-Fox Stars Betty Grable Tyrone Power
Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937) 20th-Century Fox Movies Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937)
Warner Bros.
From profits from innovation of sound movies, Warner bought First National in 1928, making it a major player in the Big 5 Remembered for social expose films, gangster films & backstage musicals Most of these films were box office losers Biggest profits from moderately-budgeted mainstream comedies & biographies; specialized in contemporary genre films Warner also distributed Vitagraph musical shorts
Warner Bros. Stars Humphrey Bogart
Warner Bros. Stars Bette Davis
Warner Bros. Animation
RKO Result of RCA’s purchase of Film Booking Office, Keith & Orpheum chains Output was erratic Few of RKO’s films were successful at the box office
RKO Movies
Disney Animation Mickey Mouse Donald Duck
Disney Animation Snow White (1937)
Universal
Important in silent era, but fell on hard times in 1930s-40s It specialized in: Abbott & Costello features Horror films (the best!) Cheap serials (Jungle Jim, Flash Gordon) Cheap newsreels Cheap cartoons
Universal Movies Abbott & Costello
Universal Horror Movies
Universal Horror Movies
Universal Serials
Walter Lantz Studio Woody Woodpecker Chilly Willy
Columbia
Small, cut-rate studio Remembered especially for its Frank Capra films Most of its output consisted of B films Westerns Series based on comic strip & comic book characters Shorts starring the 3 Stooges (very popular)
Columbia Movies Claudette Colbert Clark Gable Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night (1934)
Columbia Movies Batman & Robin
Columbia Shorts The Three Stooges
Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin & DW Griffith United Artists Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin & DW Griffith
Created by Mary Pickford, D. W Created by Mary Pickford, D.W. Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, & Douglas Fairbanks to distribute their films When they decreased or stopped production, could not distribute enough independent product to show a profit Until 1950s, operated on the margins of the industry
Monogram Movies Federal Bullets (1937)
Monogram Stars The Bowery Boys
Republic
Republic Movies
THE FILMS New technologies increased possibilities with which filmmakers could work Concentration of industry led to increased standardization of production Despite the changes, much continuity from the silent era to the sound era New possibilities was countered by increased conservatism at the studios CHC narrative easily absorbed new technologies, resulting in a highly marketable product
ADAPTING TO NEW TECHNOLOGIES SOUND Sound could be used to help define space Offscreen sound helped create a sense of a fully developed, 3-dimensional world Onscreen sound could help define the space it came from (echoes, distant sounds, etc.)
DIALOGUE Remember, in Hollywood narratives individual characters are of paramount importance Sound a way of more fully developing characters & defining character traits
MUSIC Nondiegetic music (“background music”) added to help reinforce “proper” emotional responses: drama, comedy, fear, etc. Music could be used to help define & identify characters; important characters had particular “themes” Both outgrowths of the use of live music in silent film exhibition Studios also found that there was a market for records of film music
SOUND DEVICES FOR CONTINUITY Work with continuity editing to help create smooth transitions between shots & scenes, keeping our attention on the narrative SOUND BRIDGE DIALOGUE HOOK
DEEP FOCUS By late 1930s, clear trend toward the use of deep focus cinematography It had been used as early as the 1920s However, new film stocks & lenses made it more feasible Orson Welles’s Citizen Kane, in 1941, brought it to the attention of mainstream filmmakers
CHC adapted it to the CHC narrative style Used to help establish relationships among characters in a number of planes of action Always used to support the narrative Takes became longer, but not to the point where they would draw attention to their length