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Hollywood’s Golden Age
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Key Features From silent to sound production
Consolidation of the studio system Establish official regulatory organization (MPAA) Changes in the look/technique of movies … and movies & America
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From Silent to Sound The Jazz Singer (1927)
“You ain’t heard nothin’ yet” (* clip)
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Sound conversion complete by 1930
box office up 50% proving again: $ = giving people what they want 1938: ~80 million going to the movies every week today’s numbers
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The Studio System Vertical integration (top-down)
Major studios maximized profits by controlling each stage of a film's life Pre-production, production, distribution, and exhibition
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The Studio System… "The Big Five"
owned vast real estate for elaborate sets set the exact terms of films' release dates, locations… Owned/operated the best movie theaters (movie palaces) decided things like: which sound/tech systems actors and actresses
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“The Big Five” Warner Bros. Paramount 20th Century Fox Loew's (MGM)
RKO (Radio-Keith-Orpheum)
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Controlled which/when films were seen A-level films:
“it” stars, lavish productions only seen in studio-owned, first-run theaters B Movies
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The Rating System 1922, producers create committee
Mostly for public-relations 1930, adopted the Motion Picture Production Code guidelines on acceptable/unacceptable subject matter came about because… art can influence the morality of those that consume it (assumably for the worse) 1934, became mandatory (1968 replaced in by the MPAA rating system) This Film Is Not Yet Rated *
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The Look of the Hollywood Movie
period of conformity, not innovation giving people what they wanted movies stressed the values of the time Pre-WWII: heroism, family, citizenship, etc. with some comic relief Est. new film genres The musical, screwball comedies, gangster & war films
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Citizen Kane (1941) changes it all
Orson Welles’s film revolutionized film storytelling success: a complex plot told by 7 narrators (not all reliable) historical success: 7 months before Pearl Harbor – antifascist message cinematic success: innovative techniques and will influence the structure and pace of nearly all movies that came after
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Homework (s) DUE TOMORROW, 8pm (even if you are absent on Tuesday!)
- Read a little about the film Citizen Kane (1941) and its director Orson Welles - Then, before 8pm on Wednesday (10/10), add one fun fact you learned about the film/director here. - Write the fun fact (and “fun” isn’t specific, it can be interesting, surprising, weird, intriguing, etc.) in your own words; copying and pasting info will not suffice. - And please don’t send the first fact you find, read a bit – if your fact is unique, you’ll be rewarded.
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