Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDemarcus Deale Modified over 9 years ago
1
Movies
2
Thomas Edison
3
The Creation of Motion Pictures A weird and wonderful tale of unrelated things coming together
6
That’s gun cotton Soak cotton in nitric and sulfuric acid Soak cotton in nitric and sulfuric acid Let dry Let dry Wash in water Wash in water Let dry Let dry Light it and get… Light it and get…
9
It’ll make sense later
10
Franz Uchatius
12
Projector - 1853
16
Ludwig Doebler
17
Aristotle
18
Pinhole camera
19
Ibn Al-Hathem (Alhazen)
20
Joseph Nièpce
21
World’s first photograph
22
Louis Daguerre
23
Daguerrotype of Lincoln
24
William Henry Fox Talbot
25
Photograph of Lincoln
26
Ludwig Doebler (again)
27
Uchatius’ projector
28
Eadweard Muybridge
29
The Horse Bet - 1872
31
Muybridge’s disk
32
The Zoopraxiscope - 1879
33
John Wesley Hyatt - 1863
34
Why is Hyatt important?
35
Hyatt, a printer, combined camphor, alcohol and gun cotton, compressed it into billiard balls Hyatt, a printer, combined camphor, alcohol and gun cotton, compressed it into billiard balls The material was called “celluloid” The material was called “celluloid” Great stuff, except Great stuff, except
37
They had an unfortunate tendency to explode – after all, they were made of gun cotton.
38
Hannibal Goodwin Took the celluloid invented by Hyatt and turned it into sheets Took the celluloid invented by Hyatt and turned it into sheets
39
George Eastman Took Goodwin’s celluloid sheets and turned them into strips These strips are called film
40
Etienne Jules Marey Added sprocket holes to the edge of film in order to pull it through the projector The first movie projector using strips of pictures instead of disks
41
Thomas Alva Edison
42
Edison put together all the parts Parts and ideas he got from others Parts and ideas he got from others Uchatius’s idea of passing pictures rapidly in front of a light and through a lens, creating the appearance of moving pictures, which was taken by Doebler as stage show, attracting the attention of Muybridge, who told Edison about it Uchatius’s idea of passing pictures rapidly in front of a light and through a lens, creating the appearance of moving pictures, which was taken by Doebler as stage show, attracting the attention of Muybridge, who told Edison about it Hyatt’s celluloid, turned into sheets by Goodwin, and then into strips as film by Eastman Hyatt’s celluloid, turned into sheets by Goodwin, and then into strips as film by Eastman Marey’s sprocket holes on the edge of the film Marey’s sprocket holes on the edge of the film
43
Edison’s parts Edison’s parts The light bulb for a light source The light bulb for a light source Marketing the whole idea, selling his Marketing the whole idea, selling his
44
Edison’s Kinetoscope – 1894
48
Movies were short films of regular life Movies were short films of regular life Two men boxing Two men boxing A girl dancing A girl dancing Personal lives, such as Personal lives, such as
51
Lumière Brothers
52
Lumière’s program La Sortie des usines Lumière (quitting time at the Lumiere factory) La Sortie des usines Lumière (quitting time at the Lumiere factory)
54
Le Repas de bébé (a Lumiere child eating)as Le Repas de bébé (a Lumiere child eating)as
56
L’Arroseur arrosé (a boy playing a practical joke on a gardener) L’Arroseur arrosé (a boy playing a practical joke on a gardener)
58
L’Arrivée d’un train en gare L’Arrivée d’un train en gare
59
Arrivee d’un train en gare
61
All this was fine, but soon the novelty wore off. More was needed.
62
George Méliès
63
Méliès - 1902
64
Melies and others followed the Lumieres and showed movies in theatres. They were called “Nickelodeons” – odeon from the Greek for theatre, and nickel for what patrons paid to watch the movies.
65
Edison jumped on the bandwagon.
66
Edison’s projecting kinetoscope
67
The Great Train Robbery - 1903
68
Again, the novelty soon wore off. The time had come for longer films – two and three reelers instead of one-reelers, like D.W. Griffith’s “Birth of a Nation”
70
You may have noticed something
71
No sound
72
Edison tried adding sound by combining his kinetoscope and his kinetophone, showing the film while playing the sound.
75
The major problem was synchronization
76
Remember the telephone – How sound could be converted to electrical impulses
77
Changing the amplitude of an electrical current can cause a light to brighten or dim in direct relation to the amount of electricity.
78
Danish researchers – Discovered selenium would generate an electrical signal in direct relation to the amount of light shining on it.
79
Exposing film to the flickering light created by sound, then putting it on one side of the film created the sound track.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.