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Published byJabari Punt Modified over 9 years ago
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Introduction to Film Silent Movies
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1895 Birth of Cinematography Robert W. Paul invented the film projector First public showing in 1895 Movies were shown in: Storefront spaces Traveling exhibitions Vaudeville
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1895 Birth of Cinematography Early Films: Under a minute Usually a single scene authentic or staged everyday life public event sporting event slapstick No editing No camera movement
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1895 Birth of Cinematography One of the most popular short films: Sally Rand, The Fan Dance An exotic dancer and actress.
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Silent Era 1895-1927 A Trip to the Moon (1902) Georges Méliès Directed & Starred Paris stage magician Pioneered many of the basic special effects used in movies Increased the length of movies to fifteen minutes
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Silent Era 1895-1927 The Great Train Robbery (1903) Edwin S. Porter, Director Thomas Edison, Producer First Western Emphasized the shot, rather than the scene
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The Great Train Robbery (1903) Filmed in New Jersey Included shot of a bandit shooting at the audience Audiences at the time would usually scream in fear, then laugh in relief
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Silent Era 1895-1927 Boom in nickelodeons (the first permanent movie theaters) 10,000 in the U.S. by 1908 Standard length of a film remained one reel (ten to fifteen minutes)
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Silent Era 1895-1927 The Birth of a Nation (1915) First full length film (190 minutes) Director D.W. Griffith
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Birth of a Nation (1915) Pioneered cinematic techniques Jump-cut Close-ups Introduced cinematic innovations Documentary Mobile cameras
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Birth of a Nation (1915) "Top 100 American Films" (# 44) by the American Film Institute In its day, the highest grossing film, taking in more than $10 million at the box office ($210 million) In 1992 the United States Library of Congress deemed it "culturally significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry.
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Silent Era 1895-1927 U.S. produced an average of 800 silent films a year The comedies of Charlie Chaplin Swashbuckling adventures of Douglas Fairbanks Romances of Clara Bow
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Talking Pictures 1927 Turning point came in 1927 Warner Brothers Studios released The Jazz Singer First synchronized dialogue (and singing) in a feature film.
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