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1920's - rise of Nazism Rejects Naturalism |
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What does German Expressionism represent? |
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Psychological truths, essence of the art form. The relationship of self/subject to modern environments especially urban/industrial. |
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"Chamber-drama" film Stories of social problems/the poor More Naturalistic and contrasted with Expressionist Drama. |
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Kammerspiel Concentration |
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Few characters and crisis. Emphasis on slow, evocative acting and telling details. |
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Psychological situations and unhappy endings. |
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German Expressionism Actor vs. Set |
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Actor and Set are equal in importance. |
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Decla and Deutsche Bioscop |
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Absorbs Decla & Bioscop in 1921 |
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1927 to nationalist publisher Alford Hugenberg. |
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Core of Nazi-controlled film. |
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1925. Ufa rescued from bankruptcy by Paramount and MGM. Also set up a new German Distro company - Parufamet. |
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Kammerspiel Scriptwriter. Coscripted "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari |
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Director of "The Mummy" 1932 |
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Director of "M" and "Metropolis" |
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Produced "The Last Laugh" 1924 |
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Erich Pommer Produces for |
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Decla, Decla-Bioscop, Ufa |
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Major Figure in German Expressionism "Nosferatu" |
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Everything that appears before the camera and its arrangement - composition, sets, props, actors, costumes, lighting. Includes blocking. |
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Narrative Thematics of German Expressionism |
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1. Loss of Individual will (vs. Hollywood heroes) 2. Character with internal conflicts (vs. external conflicts) 3. Focus on pathological or unnatural (vs. Hollywood's naturalism) |
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German Expressionist techniques to represent subjectivity |
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Definition
1. Low-Key lighting (chiaroscuro) "shadows" (vs. three point) 2. Camera angles - high and low (vs. eye-level camera) 3. Moving camera (vs. stationary) |
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Non-Linear narrative (Framing Device) |
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Narratives that were set in the past or in exotic locals or that involve elements of fantasy or horror. |
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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) |
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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari was the: |
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First film to be considered German Expressionist. |
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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari Represents: |
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Subjectivity (judgement based on individual personal impressions and feelings and opinions rather than external facts) through Non-Linear Framing Device, Mis-en-scene. |
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Kammerspiel film produced by Erich Pommer, Directed by F.W. Murnau |
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The most successful and famous of the Kammerspiel films. |
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Directed by Fritz Lang, the story of a pedophile |
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Represented by POV shots, low-key lighting, camera movements. |
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Realism and cool-headed cultural criticism. |
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Part of "New Objectivity" - where characters from sheltered middle-class background suddenly become exposed to world grit/social ills. |
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Emigration of German film talent |
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Fox hires Murnau after finishing Faust. Lubitsch. |
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French Impressionism (1918 - 1929) |
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Movement that displayed fascination with pictorial beauty and intense psychological exploration. Directors expressed their beliefs in poetic, abstruse, essays and manifestos helping to define them as a distinct group. |
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Directed by Abel Glance. Wedding night is conveyed by a series of gauze filters dropping one by one over lens. |
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Movement closely associated with realism *but quite different* Rejects conventional art |
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20th century avant-garde movement in art and literature that sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind. |
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Repression vs. Sublimation |
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Repression = bad Sublimation = good. |
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"Le Chien Andalou" (1929) |
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"The Andalusian Dog" by Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali |
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Soviet Montage Cinema (Early 1920's - Early 1930's) |
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A Cinema of Short Takes "montage = editing" |
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Bolshevik Revolution (1917) |
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Favored a Marxist revolution to bring the worker and peasant classes to power.
Determinant for Soviet Montage Cinema |
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Refers generally to dynamic, often discontinuous, narrative editing. (meaning through Pudovkin) |
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Scientific study of literary devices. |
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New Economic Policy (1921) |
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Formulated by Lenin - allowed a limited and temporary reintroduction of private ownership and capitalist style. |
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New Economic Policy (1921) |
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Formulated by Lenin - allowed a limited and temporary reintroduction of private ownership and capitalist style. |
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Result of New Economic Policy |
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Hoarded raw stock reappears and increase in film production. |
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Russian organized central distribution monopoly. Fails. |
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Company created after Goskino, production firms had to invest in stock.
In charge of opening up theaters and export and import. |
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Used to do avant-garde sound art. Newsreel editing in 1916, edits raw footage to create meaningful whole. |
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"Man With a Movie Camera" (1929) |
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Directed by Dziga Vertov. An onscreen audience watching a documentary about the making of the same movie. |
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Idea from Dziga Vertov that the cinema eye is more perfect than the human eye. |
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Influenced by "Intolerance" and trained under Kuleshov. |
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THE MOST POPULAR OF ALL MONTAGE FILMS, directed by Pudovkin |
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Workshop and Experiments: each shot has two values 1. Representational value - content 2. Relational value - juxtaposition of shots. |
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Lev Kuleshov Experiments and Shot values (2) |
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1. Representational value - content 2. Relational value - juxtaposition of shots |
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Based on leaving out a scenes establishing shot and leading the spectator to infer spatial or temporal continuity from the shots of separate elements. |
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Newsreel and stage footage. |
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Trains, trucks, steamboats that visited Russian countrysides as propaganda machines. Carried small filmmaking setups for local crowds. |
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Civil engineer to theater person |
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Eisenstein and "Collective Protagonist" |
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No individual heroic subject - the proletariat (working individual). |
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"Strike" (1924) conclusion: |
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"Dialectical Montage" by Eisenstein |
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"The Battleship Potemkin" (1925) |
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Five Types of Dialectical Montage |
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Definition
1. Metric 2. Rhythmic 3. Tonal 4. Overtonal 5. Intellectual - calculated to communicate idea. |
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"Strike" (1924) is the first: |
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First major film of Montage movement. |
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Criticism of "Formalist Excess" |
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Stylistic experiments or complexities that would make them hard to understand |
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Socialist Realism Policy (1935) |
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Definition
Official policy for "Party-mindedness" - the party had to propagate Communist ideology. |
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Concentration of Ownership in Film Industry (Hollywood) |
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Definition
Production companies started buying theaters and sought to be more vertically integrated. |
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Hal Roach Studios Republic Monogram Grand National |
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"Imitation of Life" (1934) and Subjectivity |
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1. Progressive image of race relations 2. Domestic melodrama "women's picture" 3. Depression era Hollywood narratives 4. Talkie style |
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Black prolific and successful director/producer |
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"God's Step Children" (1937) |
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Directed by Oscar Micheaux |
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"Jazz" Series by Paramount |
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All-Black cast short films. St. Louis Blues with Bessie Smith |
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"Cabin in the Sky" (1943) |
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Directed by Vincente Minnelli Black film. |
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Showings late at night for black audiences of black films due to Jim Crow laws. |
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Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors of America, INC. MPPDA |
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Created to clean up Hollywood's image, hired Will Hays |
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Charged with manslaughter when a young actress died at a drunken party, but he was acquitted. |
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The Production Code (1930) |
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Last of several "codes of conduct" Not censorship but self regulation. |
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The Production Code replaces: |
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Definition
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Five Majors or Big Five (Late 1920's - Early 1950's) |
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MGM - Did the best, had little debt, films looked more luxurious
Paramount - Began as distro, expanded by buying theaters
Warner Bros - screenwriting dept. known as "echo chamber"
20th Century Fox - Fox merges Twentieth Century in 1935.
RKO - Shortest lived, hired Orson Welles. |
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Term
Justice Dept. and Big 5 and Little 3 (1938) |
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Definition
Sues for antitrust violations, during WWII case is suspended |
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Three Minors or Little Three |
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Not Vertically Integrated
Universal - Biggest, had most money problems. Promoted new stars in visually striking horror films.
United Artists - Only one who profits fell during wartime boom.
Columbia - borrowed stars to avoid contract cost. Biggest hit was "It Happened One Night" |
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The Production Unit and Division of Labor |
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Creative Guilds and unions - no writers or directors involved. |
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End of Vertical Integration
Agreement between film industry and Justice Dept.
Requires selling of theatre chains - great for tv. |
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Silent Comedies commanded biggest draws. Westerns Horror Films Gangster Films |
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Formed with brother Roy. "Alice Comedies" first success. Switched to full animation with "Oswald the Rabbit" |
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Rotoscoping 1915 Koko the Clown |
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"Nanook of the North" (1922) |
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Definition
Directed by Robert Flaherty Romantic Bias, Nanook as a "noble savage" |
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"Berlin: Symphony of a City" (1927) |
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By Walter Ruttman, aesthetic perspective on urban environment. |
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Critic then Documentary producer. |
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Term
Grierson and Coining the term "Documentary" (1926) |
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"Poetic record [with] documentary value" "creative treatment of actuality" |
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Canadian Film Board (1939) |
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Established by Grierson - produces war propaganda |
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Empire Marketing Board Film Unit |
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Headed by Grierson, moves to General Post Office - GPO Film Unit |
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"Housing Problems" (1935) |
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Definition
Sponsored film by Gas, Light, and Coke Co.
Structures Problem to solution
Non-Artistic
Synch sound - unusual, literally giving voice to working poor. |
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Starts out from Empire Marketing Board but gets finished at Post Office. |
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Antecedents of Western Genre |
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"The Captive" (1682) - earliest version of captivity tale. |
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Earliest version of captivity tales. |
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Antecedent of Western Genre |
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"Last of the Mohicans" (1826) |
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James Fenimore Cooper's antecedent of Western Genre |
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"The Oregon Trail" (1849) |
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Francis Parkman, antecedent of Western Film Genre |
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By Mark Twain, antecedent of Western Genre |
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"Cripple Creek Barroom" (1899) |
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By Edison, early Western film. |
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Pastoral Landscapes (vs. frontier) "Indians sometimes sympathetic |
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First Western star from teens-mid 1920's |
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Western as B Picture and from Poverty Row |
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"Hopalong Cassidy" (1930's) |
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Directed by John Ford - cynicism about civilization, "saved from the blessings of civilization" |
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