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In the silent era of film, marrying the image with synchronous sound was not possible for inventors and producers, since no practical method was devised until 1923. Thus, for the first thirty years of their history, films were silent, although accompanied by live musicians and sometimes sound effects and even commentary spoken by the showman or projectionist.
A pair of reverse angles representing
the POV of the people on the ship, and what they see in Back to Nature
(1910).
However, the Vitagraph film-makers continued to be a little uneasy with the device, as a true POV shot is introduced by an explanatory intertitle, “What they saw in the house across the court” in Larry Trimble's Jean and the Waif, made at the end of 1910. But a few months later, Trimble made Jean Rescues, another of the popular series starring the fictional exploits of his Border Collie, which has Point of View [POV] shots introduced at an appropriate point without explanation. After this, un-vignetted POV shots began to appear fairly frequently in Vitagraph films, and also occasionally in films from other American companies. However, D.W. Griffith only used them in a theatrical situation, to show what the audience in a theatre were looking at, as did European film-makers.
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Reverse-angle cutting
Close in reverse angle shots of two
people in confrontation in The Loafer.
Another important development was in
the use of reverse angle shots; that is, continuing a scene with a cut
to a shot of the action taken from the opposite direction. There were
isolated examples of this very early, and the first of these, Williamson's
Attack on a China Mission (1900) has already been mentioned. But in
1908, starting with l’Assassinat du duc de Guise (The Assassination
of the Duc de Guise), there began to be other films in which a scene
was shown from another direction by cutting to the opposite side. This
effect was imitated occasionally in Europe and the United States over
the next couple of years, and came to be called a “reverse scene”.
The next step, in which two actors facing each other are shown in successive close shots from taken opposite directions towards each of them, is first to be seen at the end of 1911 in The Loafer, made by Arthur Mackley for Essanay. This is what is called reverse-angle cutting, and it is used constantly in present day film-making. However, it took some years to catch on with other American film-makers, but by 1913, it was starting to occur with greater frequency in the work of a few directors. This happened entirely when they were filming exterior scenes, where there was no problem about shooting past the edge of the studio set. A leading example of this use of close in reverse-angle cutting is His Last Fight (1913), directed by Ralph Ince for Vitagraph, in which one-third of the cuts are between a shot and the reverse angle. However, this sort of thing never happened in D.W. Griffith's films, or in European films.
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Symbolism and insert shots
In this period the word “Art” was
mentioned more and more in connection with motion pictures, and as a
result of the increasing artistic ambitions of film-makers, poems began
to be transposed directly into films. D.W. Griffith went further than
this, by creating the visual equivalent of the poetic or musical refrain
in The Way of the World (1910), by cutting in shots of church bells
at intervals down the length of the film. However, this was an exceptional
case, and it is not until 1912 that there were the first signs of the
special expressive use of Insert Shots; that is, shots of objects rather
than people. In the Italian Ambrosio companies film La mala planta (The
Evil Plant), directed by Mario Caserini, which involves a case of poisoning,
there is an Insert shot of a snake slithering over the ‘Evil Plant’.
Another of the still very rare examples at this date is in Griffith's
The Massacre, which was made at the end of 1912. This includes an Insert
Shot of a candle at a sick man's bedside guttering out to indicate his
death. Yet another is in the Ambrosio company version of Gli ultimi
giorni di Pompei (The Last Days of Pompeii) (1913). This film includes
a scene, preceded by the title “The thorns of jealousy”, in which
a rejected woman overhears the man she loves with another woman, and
this is followed by a fade to a shot of a pair of doves, which then
dissolves into a shot of a bird of prey.
It was in 1914 that D.W. Griffith began to bend the use of the Insert towards truly dramatically expressive ends, but he had not done this often, and it is really only with his The Avenging Conscience of 1914 that a new phase in the use of the Insert Shot starts. In this film the intertitle “The birth of the evil thought” precedes a series of three shots of the protagonist looking at a spider, and ants eating an insect, though at a later point in the film, when he prepares to kill someone, these shots are cut straight in without explanation. As well as the symbolic inserts already mentioned, The Avenging Conscience also made extensive use of large numbers of Big Close Up shots of clutching hands and tapping feet as a means of emphasizing those parts of the body as indicators of psychological tension. Griffith never went so far in this direction again, but his use of the Insert shot made its real impression on other American film-makers during the years 1915-1919.
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Film art
A scene in les Debuts de Max Linder
au cinematographe (1910) showing a Pathé film crew at work.
The vast increase in film production
after 1906 inevitably brought specialist writers into film-making as
part of the increasing sub-division of labour, but even so the film
companies still had to buy stories from outsiders to get enough material
for their productions. This introduced a greater variety into the types
of story used in films. The use of more complex stories derived from
literary and stage works of the recent past also contributed to developments
in script film construction. The general American tendency was to simplify
the plots borrowed from novels and plays so that they could be dealt
with in one reel and with the minimum of titling and the maximum of
straightforward narrative continuity, but there were exceptions to this.
In these cases the information that was difficult to film and lacking
in strong dramatic interest was put into narrative titles before each
scene, and this was also mostly the custom in European films of the
more seriously intended kind. Motion pictures were classified into genres
by the film industry following the divisions already established in
other media, particularly the stage. The main division was into comedy
and drama, but these categories were further subdivided. Comedy could
be either slapstick (usually referred to as “burlesque farce”),
or alternatively “polite comedy”, which later came to be referred
to as “domestic comedy” or “sophisticated comedy”. D.W. Griffith
made a small number of the latter type of film in his first two years
at Biograph, but had little interest or aptitude for the genre. From
1910 he let Frank Powell, and then Mack Sennett direct the Biograph
comedies. Sennett left in 1912 to set up the Keystone company, where
he could give his enthusiasm for the slapstick comedy style derived
from the earlier Pathé comedies like le Cheval emballé (The Runaway
Horse) full rein. In Europe the more restrained type of comedy was developed
in substantial quantities in France, with the films of Max Linder for
Pathé representing the summit of the genre from 1910 onwards. Linder's
comedy was set in an upper middle-class milieu, and relied on clever
and inventive ways of getting around the embarrassments and obstacles
arising in his single-minded pursuit of a goal. Quite often a goal of
a sexual nature.
D.W. Griffith had a major influence on the simplification of film stories. After he had been at Biograph for a year, Griffith started to make some films that had much less story content than any previous one-reel films. In The Country Doctor, the action is no more than various people, including the doctor, hurrying backwards and forwards between the doctor's house, where his child is sick, and a neighbouring cottage, where another child is also sick. By 1912 and 1913, there are beginning to be many films from many American companies that rely on applying novel decoration to the story, rather than supplying any twists to the drama itself to sustain interest.
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Intertitles
Intertitles containing lines of dialogue began to be used consistently from 1908 onwards. In that year, Vitagraph's An Auto Heroine; or, The Race for the Vitagraph Cup and How It Was Won, contains a couple of dialogue titles, and the same firm's Julius Caesar includes three lines of dialogue from Shakespeare's play quoted in intertitles before the actors speak them, finishing with “This was the noblest Roman of them all”. From 1909 a small number of American films, and even one or two European ones, came to include a few dialogue titles, or “spoken titles” as they were called at the time. Film-makers slowly progressed from putting these dialogue titles before the scene in which they were spoken, to cutting them into the middle of the shot at the point at which they were understood to be actually spoken by the characters. This transition began in 1912. Once underway, the trend was aided by the move towards the increasing use of cuts within scenes in American films. In 1913 a substantial proportion of the dialogue titles that were used in American films were cut in at the point when they were spoken. Hardly any of the films where this happened were D.W. Griffith films, and indeed many of his 1913 films still contain no dialogue titles at all. Although some European film-makers picked up the trend towards using dialogue titles, they did not pick up on the move towards cutting them into the scene at the point at which they were actually spoken until a few years later. The introduction of dialogue titles was far from being a trivial matter, for they entirely transformed the nature of film narrative. When dialogue titles came to be always cut into a scene just after a character starts speaking, and then left with a cut to the character just before they finish speaking, then one had something that was effectively the equivalent of a present-day sound film.
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Film history from 1914 to 1919
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The film business from 1914 to 1919
The years of the First World War were
a complex transitional period for the film industry. It was the period
when the exhibition of films changed from short programmes of one-reel
films to longer shows consisting of a feature film of four reels or
longer, though still supported by short films. The exhibition venues
also changed from small nickelodeon cinemas to larger cinemas charging
higher prices. These higher prices were partly justified by the new
film stars who were now being created. In the United States, nearly
all the original film companies which formed the Motion Picture Patents
Company went out of business in this period because of their resistance
to the changeover to long feature films. The one exception to this was
the Vitagraph company, which was already moving over to long films by
1914. The move towards shooting more films on the West coast around
Los Angeles continued during World War I, until the bulk of American
production was carried out there.
The Universal Film Manufacturing Company
had been formed in 1912 as an umbrella company for many of the independent
producing companies, and continued to grow during the war. Other independent
companies were grouped under the Mutual banner in 1912, and there were
also important new entrants, particularly the Jesse Lasky Feature Play
Company, and Famous Players, which were both formed in 1913 to take
advantage of the fact that films could reproduce the real substance
of a stage play (plus embellishments), and so the best plays and actors
from the legitimate stage could be enticed into films. In fact, the
film industry adopted the term “photoplay” for motion pictures at
this time. In 1914 the Lasky company and Famous Players were amalgamated
into Famous Players-Lasky, with distribution of their films handled
by the new Paramount Pictures Corporation.
Another new major producing company
formed during the war years was Triangle, with Mack Sennett, D.W. Griffith
and Thomas Ince heading its production units. Despite the talents involved,
it only lasted from 1915 to 1917, after which its separate producers
took their films to Paramount for distribution. Equally short-lived,
but still very important, was the World Film Company, which recruited
most of the French directors, cameramen, and designers who had previously
been working at the Fort Lee, New Jersey studios for Pathé and Éclair.
The biggest success of these years was D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915), made for Triangle. Griffith applied all the ideas for film staging that he had worked out in his Biograph films to a bigoted white southerner's epic view of the Civil War and its aftermath. Despite protests in the northern cities of the United States organized by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and others, it took many millions at the box office. Stung by the criticism of his film, Griffith made a new film he had just finished, The Mother and the Law, into one of the strands of an even bigger film with an even bigger theme, Intolerance (1916).
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European film production
In France, film production and exhibition
closed down as its personnel became part of the general military mobilization
of the country at the beginning of the war. Although film production
began again in 1915, it was on a reduced scale, and the biggest companies
gradually retired from production, to concentrate on film distribution
and exhibition. Hence the cinemas were given over to imported films,
particularly American ones. New small companies entered the business,
and new young directors arrived to replace those drafted or working
in the United States. The most notable of these was Abel Gance.
Italian film production held up during
the war, with long features already established as the main form. However,
there was a disastrous move in subject matter to what were called “diva
films”. These romantic dramas had the female star (the “diva”)
suffering from unhappy love, and striking endless anguished Art Nouveau
poses, while surrounded by male admirers and luxury. They were a commercial
failure outside Italy.
In Denmark the Nordisk company increased
its production so much in 1915 and 1916 that it could not sell all its
films, which led to a very sharp decline in Danish production, and the
end of Denmark's importance on the world film scene. The Nordisk distribution
and cinema chain in Germany was effectively expropriated by the German
government in 1917. The Swedish industry did not have this problem,
as its production was more in balance with the market, and more importantly,
the quality of its films was now superior to those from Denmark.
The German film industry was seriously
weakened by the war, though with the major companies continuing as before.
The distribution organization Projektions-AG “Union” (PAGU) acted
as an umbrella company backing production by individual producers, and
the Messter company also made many films. The most important of the
new film producers at the time was Joe May, who made a series of thrillers
and adventure films through the war years, but Ernst Lubitsch also came
into prominence with a series of very successful comedies and dramas.
Because of the large local market for films in Russia, the industry there was not harmed by the war at first, although the isolation of the country led many Russian films to develop peculiarly distinctive features. The Khanzhonkov company retained its dominance, but the Ermoliev company, which had been formed in 1914, became its principal competitor, propelled by the work of its star, Ivan Mosjoukin, and principal director, Yakov Protazanov. The Bolshevik revolution in October 1917 did not eliminate the privately owned film companies at first, though production was reduced through 1918. It was only in 1919 that the exodus of talent from the country took place, and fiction film production was reduced to practically nothing.
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Film studios
The major change in film production methods in the United States during this period was the change to shooting in “dark” studios. The existing glass-roofed studios were blacked out, and the many new ones being built around Los Angeles were constructed with solid walls and ceilings. This meant that shooting could continue all day and night, without being limited by the changing sunlight. The general diffuse daylighting in the old studios was completely replaced with floodlights, and the actors were individually lit with floodlights on floorstands. The use of a spotlight from high at the back onto the actors to rimlight them became more frequent, and around 1918 some American cameramen started to use spotlights to light the actors from the front. All this meant that the figures of the actors were modelled more by the lighting, and more separated from the background by the lower light levels now used on the sets. This was a major step towards the standard studio lighting methods of the sound period. At the same time there was the beginning of a move towards using artificial light to light the actors on location, and some of the biggest studios bought electric generator trucks for this purpose. All these developments took years to reach Europe
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Irising and soft focus
Complex vignette shot in die Austernprinzessin
(The Oyster Princess).
A very noticeable technical development
was the widespread adoption of irising-in and out to begin and end scenes.
This is the revelation of a film shot by its appearance inside a small
circular vignette mask which gradually gets larger till it expands beyond
the frame, and the whole image is in the clear. D.W. Griffith, who used
it relentlessly, was responsible for the popularization of this device.
By 1918 the use of the iris to begin and end sequences was starting
to decrease in the United States, though in Europe it was just starting
to become fashionable. At that date it is quite easy to find American
films such as Stella Maris in which only fades are used. There were
other variants of the simple iris as well and in these the mask opening
or closing in front of the lens had shapes other than circular. One
of the more frequent of these shapes was the opening slit; a vertical
central split appears in the totally black frame, and widens till the
whole frame is clear, revealing the scene that is about to start. Eventually
the diagonally opening slit appeared as well, and then there was the
diamond-shaped opening iris, as in Poor Little Peppina and Alsace (1916),
rather than the usual circle. Again, all of these variant forms were
very infrequently used, and when they did occur in American films it
was usually in the introductory stages. By 1918 the edges of ordinary
circular irises were becoming very fuzzy when they were used in American
films.
Enclosing the image inside static vignettes
or masks of shapes other than circular also began to appear in films
during the years 1914-1919, including symbolic shapes such as a cruciform
cut-out in the Mary Pickford film Stella Maris (Marshall Neilan, 1918),
and Maurice Elvey in Britain put romantic scenes inside a heart-shaped
mask in Nelson; The Story of England's Immortal Naval Hero (1918) and
The Rocks of Valpré (1919). The most elegant variants occur in some
films Ernst Lubitsch made in 1919. In Die Austernprinzessin (The Oyster
Princess) a triple layer of horizontal rectangles with rounded ends
enclose sets of dancing feet at the frenzied peak of a foxtrot, and
in Die Puppe (The Doll) a dozen gossiping mouths are each enclosed in
individual small circular vignettes arranged in a matrix.
A new idea taken over from still photography was “soft focus”. This began in 1915, with some shots being intentionally thrown out of focus for expressive effect, as in Mary Pickford's Fanchon the Cricket. The idea developed slowly through the war years, until in D.W. Griffith's Broken Blossoms (1918) all the Close Ups of Lillian Gish are heavily diffused by the use of layers of fine black cotton mesh placed in front of the lens. Heavy lens diffusion was also used on all the other shots carrying forward the romantic and sentimental parts of the story of this film.
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Subjective effects
It was during this period that camera effects intended to convey the subjective feelings of characters in a film really began to be established. These could now be done as Point of View (POV) shots, as in Sidney Drew's The Story of the Glove (1915), where a wobbly hand-held shot of a door and its keyhole represents the POV of a drunken man. In Poor Little Rich Girl (1917) a camera shot tilting sideways is intended to convey delirium, and by 1918 the idea had got to Russia, in Baryshnya i khuligan (The Lady and the Hooligan), where the Hooligan's infatuation with the Lady is conveyed by his Point of View of her splitting into a multiply superimposed image. The use of anamorphic (in the general sense of distorted shape) images first appears in these years with Abel Gance's la Folie du Docteur Tube (The Madness of Dr. Tube). In this film the effect of a drug administered to a group of people was suggested by shooting the scenes reflected in a distorting mirror of the fair-ground type. Later we have Till the Clouds Roll By (Victor Fleming, 1919), where anamorphosis is used to depict the nightmare effects of indigestion in a comic manner. In fact, like so many film effects that distort the representation of reality, anamorphosis was first used exclusively in comic contexts.
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"Poetic Cinema" and symbolism
Symbolic effects taken over from conventional
literary and artistic tradition continued to make some appearances in
films during these years. In D.W. Griffith's The Avenging Conscience
(1914), the title “The birth of the evil thought” precedes a series
of three shots of the protagonist looking at a spider, and ants eating
an insect, though at a later point in the film when he prepares to kill
someone these shots are cut straight in without explanation. Possibly
as a result of Griffith's influence, 1915 was a big year for symbolism,
allegories, and parables in the American cinema. Films following this
route invariably included female figures in light, skimpy draperies,
and indeed sometimes wearing nothing at all, doing “expressive”
dances or striking plastic poses in sylvan settings. Titles include
Lois Weber's Hypocrites, Vitagraph's Youth, someone else's Purity, and
so on. The Primrose Path starts with a large painting illustrating the
concept, which dissolves into a replica of the same scene with actors
posed, and then they come to life, as these would soon become popular
aspects of film making. This is then amplified by closer detailed live
action representations of stations on “The Primrose Path”. An interesting
German example from a few years later is Robert Reinert's Opium (1919),
which has some notable innovations in the use of Insert shots to help
convey the sensation of the drug reveries. These are travelling landscape
shots taken from a boat going down a river, and they are intentionally
shot out of focus, or underexposed, or cut into the film upside down.
Symbolist art and literature from the turn of the century also had a more general effect on a small number of films made in Italy and Russia. The supine acceptance of death resulting from passion and forbidden longings was a major feature of this art, and states of delirium dwelt on at length were important as well. The first Russian examples were all made by Yevgeni Bauer for Khanzhonkov during the First World War, and include Grezy, Schastye vechnoi nochi, and Posle smerti, all from 1915. These to some extent live up to the promise of the `decadent' aesthetic suggested by their titles; Daydreams, Happiness of Eternal Night, and After Death. Schastye vechnoi nochi includes a visually very striking vision of a medusa-like monster superimposed on a night-time snow scene, and *Posle smerti*has a somewhat subtler dream vision of a dead girl, picked out by extra arc lighting, walking through a wind-blown cornfield in the dusk. In Italy, another country somewhat isolated filmically by the war, the same kind of realization of the fin-de-siecle decadent symbolist aesthetic can be found, mostly in films associated with the “diva” phenomenon. The most complete example, which also has decor to match, is Charles Kraus' Il gatto nero (The Black Cat). This last is one of the few films of this kind to use atmospheric insert shots to heighten the mood. The first film explicitly intended by its maker to be a visual analogue of poetry, Marcel L'Herbier'sRose-France (1919), continues further along these same paths.