Monday, November 25, 2019
Birth of Talkies essays
Birth of 'Talkies' essays Today American, and worldly, society views movies as one of it is most center focus of Entertainment and Media Culture. They started out in disjointed, scratchy, non-real-time clips. Short silent films soon grew into full silent movies. Eventually, piano was added as decorative background music, and then came recorded voices, and before anyone knew it, films had the public wrapped up in their spell. The real kick-off started when four American brothers started a family company. The children of poor Polish immigrants, Jack, Abe, Harry, and Sam Warner opened their own nickelodeon movie theatre in 1903 and began producing films in 1912 (Encarta) . Their real dream was to someday earn enough money to start producing and presenting their own films. Ultimately earning enough money through their work at the movie theatre; they bought the Burbank film lot from First National Pictures in Hollywood, California in 1918 and a half a decade later founded Warner Brothers Pictures Incorporated (Movie) . During the mid-20s they bought the Vitagraph Company, which allowed them to distribute their films directly to nickelodeons. This was a very important step in films evolution. They developed a sound-on-disk process to which voices and music could be recorded on and played at the same time as the movie. The first use of this was in several musicals such as 1927s The Jazz Singer. The very first all talking picture, talkies, was Lights of New York in 1928 ( Vitaphone ) . It not only revolutionized the film industry but also started the era of Hollywood musicals and gangster movies. Audiences loved to be entertained and forget the hard times in the past and just have fun. Spending money on a movie was a great way to just relax and let the world slip by, especially if the movie they saw had sound in it! During World War I, films were mostly used for teaching and propaganda. However, after the wa...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.