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1 ) "There exists today no means of influencing the masses more potent than the cinema"
2 ) "The cinema must and shall become the foremost cultural weapon of the proletariat."
3 ) "The cinema will only become an art when its raw materials are as cheap as pencil and paper." |
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1 ) Pope Pius XI
2 ) Vladimir Lenin
3 ) Jean Cocteau |
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- slide projector show using a lantern and painted glass
- contained movement, commercial, communal experience
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- camera without film
- image; used to relearn representational skills
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- one of the perfectionists of fixed image technology
- invented photography
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- landscape photographer
- set up with still cameras, a way to capture a horse running and getting all feet in the air
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- wanted to capture fast moving things with camera
- invented photographic gun
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Persistence of Vision
10 - 12 fps |
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- the retention of a visual image for a short period of time after the removal of the stimulus that produced it
- the phenomenon that produces the illusion of movement when viewing motion
- once you have fast exposure time you have reached the persistence of vision
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- mass production of the processes of invention
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- small
- built to revolve resulting in a short distance from camera to subject
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Dickson and Heisse - Camera - 1889 |
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- continuous and intermittent drives (motors)
- loop
- sprocket holes, sprocketed/toothed wheels
- shutter and aperture
- aperture as a control of depth of field - mono, ortho and Pan chromatic film stocks
- electrically powered - big/heavy - subject must come to the camera
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- only survivor of pure-photographic, movie-like experiences
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Edwin S. Porter
WKL Dickinson
William Heisse |
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- hired by Thomas Edison to invent the movie camera which he took credit for
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- subject must come to the immovable, bulky camera
- intended for solitary viewing experience
- theatrical vignettes
- tight framing- short distance from camera to subject
- flat, even lighting
- action composed/staged parallel to the picture plane as if we were viewing a stage play from a 3rd row center seat
- fixed camera; each film is one action, one shot
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- an unbroken exposure/ a perspective on the action
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- a self-contained dramatic unit, most commonly set in one place
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- a thin ribbon of transparent, flexible material
- the alternation of images and black screens
- 3 parts - base, emulsion, silver salts
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- portable, lightweight camera goes to subject
- with simple alterations, the same machine is a camera, a developing chamber or a projector
- product intended for public projection exhibition
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- reportage, actualitie - ancestor of documentary film
- real-life subject matter
- tight or loose framing, depending on whether intimate/private (tight) or public (loose) subject
- 10 AM to 2 PM light, unless the public subject occurred ealier or later in which case the cameraman/operator had to adapt his imagery to the situation
- compositions/staging on diagonal for public, parallel to picture for private subjects
- fixed camera most of the time - rarely the camera was mounted on a movable platform (rickshaw, moving sidewalk, trolley car, etc.) - in which case the camera moves in photographing the subject
- each film is one action, one shot with the duration determined by the time the action took to play out
- framing device of doors opening, closing
- ethnography
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- one of the most important of all filmmaking techniques
- the placement and movement of the characters in relation to each other, the decor and the camera during the shot
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another vitally important technique which temporal relationship of the elements in motion during staging |
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- Parisian (french) stage magician turned filmmaker
- began with long in duration one shot and went on to elaborate multiscene/shot films
- 'Trick' films - persistence of vision/stop motion photography. Superimpositions, lap dissolves
- Decor
- Extremely elaborate staging and timing - highly trained, physically adept stage performers (from his magic theater troupe)
- entirely artificial, interior/theatrical spaces
- tongue in cheek, sophisticated awareness of the absurdity of the presentation - silly but wonderous
- unified, consistent style and tone
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- british
- most technically sophisticated filmmaker before Griffith
- does not build on or develop a lexicon of filmmaking technique
- over the long haul, not story-oriented
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- American - the first important American filmmaker
- innovative use of technique, combined with considerable common sensein ordering his visualizing his stories
- strong emphasis on narrative, on story-telling
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- film by G.W. Griffith
- so big, makes feature films the thing to do
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