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History
Mechanisms
for producing artificially created, two-dimensional images
in motion were demonstrated as early as the 1860s, with devices
such as the zoetrope and the praxinoscope. These machines
were outgrowths of simple optical devices (such as magic lanterns),
and would display sequences of still pictures at sufficient
speed for the images on the pictures to appear to be moving,
a phenomenon called persistence of vision. Naturally, the
images needed to be carefully designed to achieve the desired
effect — and the underlying principle became the basis
for the development of film animation. |
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| A
frame from Roundhay Garden Scene, the world's first motion
picture by Louis Le Prince, 1888.
With the development of celluloid film for still photography,
it became possible to directly capture objects in motion in
real time. Early versions of the technology sometimes required
the viewer to look into a special device to see the pictures.
By the 1880s, the development of the motion picture camera
allowed the individual component images to be captured and
stored on a single reel, and led quickly to the development
of a motion picture projector to shine light through the processed
and printed film and magnify these "moving picture shows"
onto a screen for an entire audience. These reels, so exhibited,
came to be known as "motion pictures." Early motion
pictures were static shots that showed an event or action
with no editing or other cinematic techniques.
A shot from Georges Méliès' Le Voyage dans la
Lune (A Trip to the Moon) (1902), an early narrative film.
Motion pictures were purely visual art up to the late 19th
century, but these innovative silent films had gained a hold
on the public imagination. Around the turn of the twentieth
century, films began developing a narrative structure by stringing
scenes together to tell narratives. The scenes were later
broken up into multiple shots of varying sizes and angles.
Other techniques such as camera movement were realized as
effective ways to portray a story on film. Rather than leave
the audience in silence, theater owners would hire a pianist
or organist or a full orchestra to play music fitting the
mood of the film at any given moment. By the early 1920s,
most films came with a prepared list of sheet music for this
purpose, with complete film scores being composed for major
productions.
The rise of European cinema was interrupted by the breakout
of World War I while the film industry in United States flourished
with the rise of Hollywood. However in the 1920s, European
filmmakers such as Sergei Eisenstein and F. W. Murnau, along
with American innovator D. W. Griffith and the contributions
of Charles Chaplin, Buster Keaton and others, continued to
advance the medium. In the 1920s, new technology allowed filmmakers
to attach to each film a soundtrack of speech, music and sound
effects synchronized with the action on the screen. These
sound films were initially distinguished by calling them "talking
pictures", or talkies.
The next major step in the development of cinema was the introduction
of color. While the addition of sound quickly eclipsed silent
film and theater musicians, color was adopted more gradually.
The public was relatively indifferent to color photography
as opposed to black-and-white,[citation needed] but as color
processes improved and became as affordable as black-and-white
film, more and more movies were filmed in color after the
end of World War II, as the industry in America came to view
color as essential to attracting audiences in its competition
with television, which remained a black-and-white medium until
the mid-1960s. By the end of the 1960s, color had become the
norm for film makers.
Since the decline of the studio system in the 1960s, the succeeding
decades saw changes in the production and style of film. New
Hollywood, French New Wave and the rise of film school educated
independent filmmakers were all part of the changes the medium
experienced in the latter half of the 20th Century. Digital
technology has been the driving force in change throughout
the 1990s and into the 21st Century.
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