Wednesday 29 January 2014

animation, mise en scene research and inspiration

Similar to Tangled, Frozen employed a unique artistic style by blending features of both computer-generated imagery (CGI) and traditional hand-drawn animation together.[39] The film's animators visited an Ice Hotel in Quebec City to study how light reflects and refracts on snow and ice. For the film's setting, the animators used the landscape of Norway and the feel of the winter season of Wyoming for inspiration.[40] "We had a very short time schedule for this film, so our main focus was really to get the story right but we knew that John Lasseter is keen on truth in the material and creating a believable world, and again that doesn't mean it's a realistic world - but a believable one. It was important to see the scope and scale of Norway, and important for our animators to know what it's like," Del Vecho remarked. "There is a real feeling of Lawrence of Arabia scope and scale to this," he finished. Back at the studio, Del Vecho explained the film's production: "On this movie we do have character leads, supervising animators on specific characters. The animators themselves may work on multiple characters but it’s always under one lead. I think it was different on Tangled, for example, but we chose to do it this way as we wanted one person to fully understand and develop their own character and then be able to impart that to the crew. Hyrum Osmond, the animator on Olaf, is quiet but he has a funny, wacky personality so we knew he'd bring a lot of comedy to it; Anna's animator, Becky Bresee, it's her first time leading a character and we wanted her to lead Anna."[27][34][41] In order to get the general feeling of each scene, some animators did their own acting. "I actually film myself acting the scene out, which I find very helpful," said animation supervisor Rebecca Wilson Bresee. This helped her discover elements that made the scene feel real and believable.[42]
Regarding the look and nature of the film's cinematography, the film's art director Michael Giaimo was greatly influenced by Jack Cardiff's work in Black Narcissus. According to him, it lent a hyper-reality to the film: "Because this is a movie with such scale and we have the Norwegian fjords to draw from, I really wanted to explore the depth. From a design perspective, since I was stressing the horizontal and vertical aspects, and what the fjords provide, it was perfect. We encased the sibling story in scale." Ted D. McCord's work in The Sound of Music was another major influence for Giaimo; "The juxtaposition of character and environment and the counterpart of how they played in terms of cinematography was brilliant in that film." It was also Giaimo's idea that Frozen should be filmed in CinemaScope, which was approved by Lasseter.[43] Giaimo also wanted to ensure that Norway's fjords, architecture and rosemaling folk art, were critical factors in designing the environment of Arendelle. Giaimo, whose background is animation, noted that the art design environment represents a unity of character and environment and that he originally wanted to incorporate saturated colors, which is typically ill-advised in computer animation.[41] A live reindeer was brought into the studio for animators to study its movements and mannerisms for the character, Sven.
During production, the film's English title was changed from The Snow Queen to Frozen, a decision that drew comparisons to Tangled. Peter Del Vecho explained that "the title Frozen came up independently of the title Tangled. It's because, to us, it represents the movie. Frozen plays on the level of ice and snow but also the frozen relationship, the frozen heart that has to be thawed. We don't think of comparisons between Tangled and Frozen, though." He also mentioned that the film will still retain its original title, The Snow Queen, in some foreign countries: "because that just resonated stronger in some countries than Frozen. Maybe there's a richness to The Snow Queen in the country's heritage and they just wanted to emphasize that."[27]
Test scenes demonstrating snow effects employed in the film.
The studio also developed several new tools to generate realistic and believable shots, particularly the heavy and deep snow and its interactions with the characters. Disney wanted an 'all-encompassing' and organic tool to provide snow effects but not require switching between different methods.[44] Dr. Kenneth Libbrecht, a professor from the California Institute of Technology, was invited to give lectures to the effects group on how snow and ice form, and why snowflakes are unique. Using this knowledge, together with maths, physics and the help of computers, the effects group created a snow simulator and snowflake generator called Matterhorn that allowed them to randomly create 2,000 unique snowflake shapes for the film, according to effects supervisor Dale Mayeda.[42] The software was also capable of depicting realistic snow in a virtual environment and it held responsibility for several key sequences of the film.[34][44][45] This method, in addition, gave audiences an illusion that the snow packs together as one thing and then breaks into pieces, while they are actually pieces already, the snow particles are just moving around, as explained by principal software engineer Andrew Selle.[44] Other tools designed to help artists complete complicated effects included Spaces, which allowed Olaf's deconstructible parts to be moved around and rebuilt, Flourish, which aided extra movement such as leaves and twigs to be art-directed; Snow Batcher, which helped preview the final look of the snow, especially when characters were interacting with an area of snow by walking through a volume, and Tonic, which enabled artists to sculpt their characters' hair as procedural volumes.[44] Tonic essentially aided in animating elements such as Elsa's hair, which contains 420,000 CG threads, while the average number for human is only 100,000. The number of character rigs in Frozen is 312 and the number of simulated costumes also reached 245 cloth rigs, which were far beyond all other Disney films to date, according to Frank Hanner, character CG supervisor.[13][42] Besides 3D effects, the filmmakers also used 2D artworks and drawings for specific elements and sequences in the film, including Elsa's magic and snow sculptures, as well as freezing fountains and floor.[44][45] The effects group created a "capture stage" where the entire world of "Frozen" gets displayed on monitors, which can be "filmed" on special cameras to operate a three-dimensional scene. "We can take this virtual set that's mimicking all of my actions and put it into any one of our scenes in the film," said technology manager Evan Goldberg.[42]

Norwegian and Sámi inspiration

The film contains elements specifically drawn from Norwegian culture and northern and central Norway's indigenous Sámi culture. Several landmarks in Norway appear in the film, including the Akershus Fortress in Oslo, the Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim and Bryggen in Bergen. Numerous other typical cultural Norwegian elements are also included in the film, such as a Stave church, trolls, Viking ships, Fjord horses, clothes and food such as lutefisk. A maypole is also present in the film, a tradition more common in Sweden and Denmark than Norway. The movie also contains several elements specifically drawn from Norway's Sámi culture, such as the usage of reindeer for transportation and the equipment used to control these, clothing styles (the outfits of the ice cutters), and parts of the musical score.[46][47] Decorations, such as those on the castle pillars and Kristoff's sled are also in styles inspired by Sámi duodji decorations. During their field work in Norway, Disney's team visited Rørosrein, a Sámi family-owned company in the village Plassje which produces reindeer meat and arranges tourist events, for inspiration.[48] Arendelle was inspired by Naeroyfjord, a branch of Norway's longest fjord Sognefjorden, which has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[49]
The filmmakers' trip to Norway provided essential knowledge for the animators to come up with the design aesthetic for the film in terms of color, light, and atmosphere. According to Giaimo, there were three important factors that they had acquired from this research trip: the fjords, which are the massive vertical rock formations, and serve as the setting for the secluded Arendelle kingdom; the medieval stave churches, whose rustic triangular rooflines and shingles inspired the castle compound; and the rosemaling folk art, whose distinctive paneling and grid patterns informed the architecture, decor, and costumes.[41]

Music

The songs for Frozen were written and composed by the husband-and-wife songwriting team of Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, both of whom had previously worked with Walt Disney Animation Studios on Winnie the Pooh.[14][50] Lopez and Anderson-Lopez's "Let It Go" and "In Summer" were previewed at the 2013 D23 Expo, with the former being performed by Idina Menzel.[51] In February 2013, Christophe Beck was hired to score the film, following his highly acclaimed work on Paperman, a Disney animated short film released the year prior to Frozen.[52] Kristen Bell also confirmed that there would be a duet between her and Menzel.[18] It was also revealed on September 14, 2013 that Sámi musician Frode Fjellheim's Eatnemen Vuelie would be the film's opening song, as it contains elements of the traditional Sámi singing style joik.[53][54] The songs by Lopez and Anderson-Lopez were arranged and orchestrated by Dave Metzger, who also orchestrated a significant portion of Beck's score.[55]
For the orchestral film score, composer Christophe Beck gave homage to the Norway- and Sápmi-inspired setting, employing regional instruments such as the bukkehorn and traditional vocal techniques, such as kulning.[56] The music producers recruited a Norwegian linguist to assist with the lyrics for an Old Norse song written for Elsa's coronation, and also traveled to Norway to record the all-female choir Cantus, for a piece inspired by traditional Sámi music.[56] The score was recorded by an 80-piece orchestra, featuring 32 vocalists, including native Norwegian Christine Hals.[56] Beck worked with Lopez and Anderson-Lopez on incorporating their songs into arrangements in the score. The trio's goal "was to create a cohesive musical journey from beginning to end."[56]

Frozen - storyline

102 minutes
Rated: PG


Anna, a fearless optimist, sets off on an epic journey - teaming up with rugged mountain man Kristoff and his loyal reindeer Sven - to find her sister Elsa, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom of Arendelle in eternal winter. Encountering Everest-like conditions, mystical trolls and a hilarious snowman named Olaf, Anna and Kristoff battle the elements in a race to save the kingdom. From the outside Anna's sister, Elsa looks poised, regal and reserved, but in reality, she lives in fear as she wrestles with a mighty secret-she was born with the power to create ice and snow. It's a beautiful ability, but also extremely dangerous. Haunted by the moment her magic nearly killed her younger sister Anna, Elsa has isolated herself, spending every waking minute trying to suppress her growing powers. Her mounting emotions trigger the magic, accidentally setting off an eternal winter that she can't stop. She fears she's becoming a monster and that no one, not even her sister, can help her.


Frozen (2013) Poster

Trailer

 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2294629/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

Genres:

Animation | Adventure | Comedy | Family | Fantasy | Musical



Origins

Concept art from Disney's shelved hand-drawn film, The Snow Queen.
In 1943, Walt Disney and Samuel Goldwyn had considered the possibility of collaborating to produce a biography film of author and poet Hans Christian Andersen, where Goldwyn's studio would shoot the live-action sequences of Andersen's life and Disney would create the animated sequences. The animated sequences were to include stories of Andersen's works, such as The Little Mermaid, The Little Match Girl, The Steadfast Tin Soldier, The Snow Queen, Thumbelina, The Ugly Duckling, The Red Shoes, and The Emperor's New Clothes. Disney and his animators encountered difficulty with The Snow Queen, as they could not find a way to adapt and relate the Snow Queen character to modern audiences. Even as far back as the 1940s, Disney's animation department saw great cinematic possibilities with the source material, but the Snow Queen character proved to be too problematic. This, among other things, led to the cancellation of the Disney-Goldwyn project. Goldwyn went on to produce his own live-action film version in 1952, entitled Hans Christian Andersen, with Danny Kaye as Andersen, Charles Vidor directing, Moss Hart writing, and Frank Loesser penning the songs. All of Andersen's fairy tales were, instead, told in song and ballet in live-action, like the rest of the film. It went on to receive six Academy Award nominations the following year. Back at Disney, The Snow Queen, along with other Andersen fairy tales (including The Little Mermaid), were shelved.

Later attempts in the 1990s and 200o's also failed due to problematic story line and developmental issues. 

"Hans Christian Andersen’s original version of The Snow Queen is a pretty dark tale and it doesn’t translate easily into a film. For us the breakthrough came when we tried to give really human qualities to the Snow Queen. When we decided to make the Snow Queen Elsa and our protagonist Anna sisters, that gave a way to relate to the characters in a way that conveyed what each was going through and that would relate for today’s audiences. This film has a lot of complicated characters and complicated relationships in it. There are times when Elsa does villainous things but because you understand where it comes from, from this desire to defend herself, you can always relate to her. “Inspired by” means exactly that. There is snow and there is ice and there is a Queen, but other than that, we depart from it quite a bit. We do try to bring scope and the scale that you would expect but do it in a way that we can understand the characters and relate to them."
— Producer Peter Del Vecho, on the difficulties adapting The Snow Queen[27]


 






















Revitalization

On December 22, 2011, following the success of Tangled, Disney announced a new title for the film, Frozen, a release date, November 27, 2013, and a different crew from the previous attempt.[32] A month later, it was confirmed that the film would be a computer animated feature in stereoscopic 3D, instead of the intended hand drawn animation.[25] On March 5, 2012, it was announced that Chris Buck would be directing, with John Lasseter and Peter Del Vecho producing.[33]
After Disney decided to advance The Snow Queen into development again, one of the main challenges Buck and Del Vecho faced was the character of the Snow Queen, who in that earlier version of the story was a villain. Buck and Del Vecho presented their storyboards to John Lasseter, with the entire production team adjourned to a conference to hear Lasseter's thoughts on this work-in-progress. Production designer Michael Giaimo, recalled; "That was the game changer...I remember John saying that the latest version of The Snow Queen story that Chris Buck and his team had come up with was fun, very light-hearted. But the characters didn't resonate. They aren't multi-faceted. Which is why John felt that audiences wouldn't really be able to connect with them." The production team then addressed the film's problems, drafting several different variations on the Snow Queen story until the characters and story felt relevant. Finally, the team decided to rewrite the film's protagonist, Anna (who was based on the Gerda character from The Snow Queen), as the younger sibling of Elsa, effectively establishing a family dynamic between the characters.[34]

Selected film - FROZEN

 I selected Frozen because animation has always fascinated me.



Frozen is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated musical fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures.[4] It is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Snow Queen, and featuring the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, and Santino Fontana, the film tells the story of a fearless princess who sets off on an epic journey alongside a rugged, thrill-seeking mountain man, his loyal pet reindeer, and a hapless snowman to find her estranged sister, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.
The film underwent several story treatments for several years, before being commissioned in 2011, with a screenplay written by Jennifer Lee, and both Chris Buck and Lee serving as directors. Christophe Beck, who had worked on Disney's award-winning short Paperman, was hired to compose the film's orchestral score, while husband-and-wife songwriting team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez penned the songs.
Frozen premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 19, 2013,[5] and went into general theatrical release on November 27. The film has so far grossed $811 million in worldwide box office revenue, $349 million of which has been earned in the United States and Canada, and has been met with widespread critical acclaim, with several film critics considering it to be the best Disney animated musical since the studio's renaissance era.[6][7] The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film and two Critics' Choice Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "Let It Go", and has received Academy Award, BAFTA, Annie Award, and Satellite Award nominations.[8]

Directed by Chris Buck
Jennifer Lee
Produced by Peter Del Vecho
Screenplay by Jennifer Lee
Story by Chris Buck
Jennifer Lee
Shane Morris
Based on The Snow Queen
by Hans Christian Andersen
Starring Kristen Bell
Idina Menzel
Jonathan Groff
Josh Gad
Santino Fontana
Music by Christophe Beck
Editing by Jeff Draheim
Studio Walt Disney Pictures
Walt Disney Animation Studios
Distributed by Walt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
Release dates
Running time 102 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $150 million[2][3]
Box office $811,958,295[3]

Wednesday 22 January 2014

resource history of cinema

1910

1910
The first screen credit was given to Florence Lawrence, in IMP's short crime romance The Broken Oath (aka The Broken Bath), directed by her husband Harry Solter.
1910
Dialogue titles began to appear with regularity. Studios began distributing publicity stills of actors and actresses.
1910
The first US multi-reel "feature" film was Vitagraph's five-reel Life of Moses. It was shown at a single sitting in New Orleans. Such multi-reel films weakened exhibitors' control of their programs (i.e., prior to this development, exhibitors effectively "edited" the program by arranging their selections of short films without directorial intervention.)
1910
Film companies began to move to the area later known as Hollywood. Los Angeles annexed Hollywood.
1910
The first film made in the new municipality of Hollywood, by Biograph and director D.W. Griffith, In Old California, was released. It launched the film industry in the city.
1910
For the first time, Hollywood purchased the rights to adapt a novel from a publisher (Little, Brown & Company who published Helen Hunt Jackson's novel Ramona), for a D.W. Griffith film to be made in 1910.
1910
The first western silent film super-star Tom Mix made his first major screen appearance as Bronco Buster in Selig Polyscope's Ranch Life in the Great Southwest (1910), filmed at their studio in the Los Angeles area. The one time bartender, cow hand and Texas Ranger would go on to make hundreds of silent westerns for both Selig and Fox Studios, some of which he also produced, wrote or directed.
1910
Brooklyn Eagle newspaper cartoonist John Randolph Bray patented the 'cel' process ultimately used by animators. He pioneered true animated (motion-picture) cartoons with structured story lines.
1910
The first movie stunt -- a man jumped into the Hudson River from a burning balloon.
1910
Filmdom's first major comedy star of the early silent film era, the happy and rotund John Bunny (almost 300 pounds), originally a successful stage comic, made his film debut in Brooklyn-based Vitagraph's Jack Fat and Jim Slim at Coney Island (1910), and was paid $40/week. By 1911 he was Vitagraph's biggest moneymaker. He died in 1915 at the height of his fame.
1910
The first Frankenstein monster film in the US was Edison's Frankenstein, a 16-minute (one-reel) version made by the Edison Motion Picture Studios and starring stage veteran Charles Ogle (uncredited) as the monster, and Mary Fuller as Frankenstein's fiancée Elizabeth. The film was directed and written by J. Searle Dawley and filmed in the Bronx. The monster appeared misshapen and pathetic rather than horrifying in this first film adaptation of Mary Shelley's novel. In this early version, the Monster was created in a cauldron of chemicals.
1910
Vaudeville press agent William Foster launched his Foster Photoplay Company, the first African-American film production company (to produce "race films" as they were called), in Chicago. It produced primarily slapstick comedies starring black vaudeville performers.
1910
Max Factor created the first makeup formulated especially for film.
1910
The Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC) tried to monopolize film distribution and absorb independent distributors by setting up the General Film Company. Independent William Fox responded by making his own films.
1910
In Denmark, Fotorama introduced the multi-reel documentary film Den Hvide Slavehandel (The White Slave Trade) - one of the first examples of a vice film, and the first time film was used to study prostitution.
1910
At the Gaumont Palace in Paris, French engineer Leon Gaumont demonstrated his more advanced Chronophone system, a synchronized sound system using phonograph cylinders, to allow synchronized sound while viewing films.
1910
Pioneering French female filmmaker, the first female film director Alice Guy Blache, became the first - and so far the only - woman to own and run her own studio plant - The Solax Company Studios - first in Flushing, NY from 1910 to 1912 (and then in Fort Lee, NJ from 1912 to 1914). It was the largest pre-Hollywood studio in America. From 1896 to 1920, she directed hundreds of short films (including over 100 sychronized sound films and twenty-two feature films), and produced hundreds more.

1907

Year
Event and Significance
1907
In Chicago, an ordinance was passed by the city council to prohibit the exhibition of "immoral or obscene pictures" in mutoscopes, kinetoscopes, cinematographs, and penny arcades - it granted police permission to ban a film's release. It was required for a person exhibiting moving pictures to first obtain a permit from the chief of police for each film after it was reviewed and approved.
1907
The first film-makers arrived in Los Angeles. Filmmakers began to realize that the Los Angeles area was a good filming area with a favorable climate and a variety of natural scenery. The first movie was also made in Los Angeles soon afterwards (see 1909). Previously, movies were filmed in New York City and in Fort Lee, NJ.
1907
American Vitagraph (or Vitagraph Studios) had become the most prolific and leading American film production company, producing many famous silent films.
1907
The first feature-length (90 minutes) film produced in Europe was L'Enfant Prodigue (aka The Prodigal Son) (1907, Fr.), directed by Michel Carré and shot at the French film production company, the Gaumont Film Company.
1907
Edwin S. Porter directed Rescued From an Eagle's Nest (1907), another Edison production. Richard Murphy created a mechanical eagle for this early film (starring future director D. W. Griffith in his first major screen role, after he failed to sell a script to the studio) - in the scene, a stuffed eagle with movable wings kidnapped a baby and battled the heroic father.
1907
The Kalem Film Company was founded in New York City. The Kalem Film Company's first film production was The Runaway Sleighbelle (1907). It soon became a member of the Motion Picture Patents Company, a trust or monopoly.
1907
The Essanay Film Manufacturing Company (Essanay Studios) was formed, later becoming best known for its series of Charlie Chaplin short comedies in the mid-1910s. Its first released film was An Awful Skate; or The Hobo on Rollers (1907) with comedic star Ben Turpin as the Hobo/Tramp (on roller skates), and directed/produced/written by Gilbert M. "Broncho Billy" Anderson.
1907
The entertainment industry magazine, Variety (founded in 1905), published its first film reviews on January 19, 1907, for two films: the French comedy short An Exciting Honeymoon (1906) and Edwin S. Porter's (and the Edison Manufacturing Company) western short The Life of a Cowboy (1906). These have often been cited as the first film reviews in history. They appeared in an expanded section of the magazine that covered new vaudeville acts and reviews of films.
1907
The Bell and Howell Company, founded by Chicago movie projectionist Donald H. Bell and camera repairman Albert S. Howell, developed a film projection system. Their firm went on to revolutionize motion picture photography and projection equipment.
1907
The first documentary re-creation, Siegmund Lubin's The Unwritten Law (1907) (subtitled "A Thrilling Drama Based on the Thaw-White Tragedy") dramatized the true-life murder -- on June 25, 1906 -- of prominent architect Stanford White by mentally unstable and jealous millionaire husband Harry Kendall Thaw over the affections of showgirl Evelyn Nesbit (who appeared as herself in the one reel film). [Alluring chorine Nesbit would become a brief sensation, and the basis for Richard Fleischer's biopic film The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing (1955), portrayed by Joan Collins, and E.L. Doctorow's musical and film Ragtime (1981), portrayed by an Oscar-nominated Elizabeth McGovern.]
1907-1914
The Broncho Billy series, with 400 episodes, popularized westerns. Gilbert Anderson became the first cowboy hero and perhaps the first recognizable character in American films.

1906

Year
Event and Significance
1906
J. Stuart Blackton made the earliest surviving example of an animated film - a 3-minute short or 2D cartoon called Humorous Phases of Funny Faces (1906). It was the first cartoon to use the single frame method, and was projected at 20 frames per second. In the film, a cartoonist's line drawings of two faces were 'animated' (or came to life) on a blackboard. The two faces smiled and winked, and the cigar-smoking man blew smoke in the lady's face; also, a circus clown led a small dog to jump through a hoop.
1906
The world's first true feature-length film at 70 minutes in length, director Charles Tait's Australian film The Story of the Kelly Gang (aka Ned Kelly and His Gang) (1906), premiered in Melbourne, Australia on December 26, 1906. It was the longest narrative drama seen there and in the world. The showing of the film was accompanied by an orchestra, sound effects, and a narrator. When the popular film was screened in England in 1907, it was claimed to be "the longest film ever made." The film told about Australian popular culture icon and folk hero Ned Kelly (portrayed by Canadian actor Frank Mills) from the late 1800s, who was a notorious outlaw (or "bushranger"). Today, only fragments of the film exist.
1906
Chicago's White Front Theater opened - the nickelodeon was future Universal Studios' head Carl Laemmle's first business venture into the film industry. He invested most of his savings in the rental and fix-up of an empty building on Milwaukee Avenue, and painted its facade white, naming it the White Front Theatre. Due to the theatre's instant success, quickly becoming the most popular in the city, Laemmle also opened up a second theatre called "The Family Theatre" and established the Laemmle Film Service - it soon became the largest film distributor in the country.
1906
Vitagraph (or American Vitagraph) Studios opened the first modern film studio in the US, built in 1906, in Brooklyn, NY, and for a short time, it was considered "the movie capital" of the world.
1906
Edwin S. Porter directed the amusing fantasy film Dream of a Rarebit Fiend (1906), using trick photography. [The name was based on a Winsor McCay newspaper comic strip - McCay served as the film's writer.] It was the Edison Manufacturing Company's most popular film of the year.
1906
Biograph's dramatic short The Paymaster (1906) was noted for its creative use of available light, due to innovative filming by cinematographer G.W. "Billy" Bitzer. [Bitzer, later considered the greatest cinematographer of his time, would eventually shoot all of director D.W. Griffith's most important works.] The characters in a New England village were a heroine mill-girl, her love-interest - the mill's young paymaster, and the dastardly swindling villain who was superintendent of the mill.
1906
Pioneering motion-picture mass marketer Siegmund Lubin, a Polish immigrant, was expanding his chain of theaters, with film exchanges in Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Norfolk. He was one of the first movie producers to control a film's production, distribution, and exhibition in a vertically-integrated business model.
1906-1908
About 5,000 nickelodeons existed throughout the United States. Many studios were created to keep up with the increased demand for films. In 1907, The Saturday Evening Post reported that daily attendance at nickelodeons exceeded two million. In 1907, the Chicago Daily Tribune denounced nickelodeons as firetraps and tawdry corrupters of children. Nickelodeons spread and numbered between 8,000 to 10,000 by 1908 with 200,000 customers a day, charging five cents for a movie accompanied by a piano.

1905

Year
Event and Significance
1905
Harry Davis and John Harris opened their first movie theater, dubbing it a nickelodeon, in Pittsburgh. The opening feature was The Great Train Robbery (1903). The name for the converted storefront, dance hall or theater was derived from the cost of admission -- a nickel -- and the Greek word for theater -- "odeon."
1905
The Warner Brothers (three brothers, Harry, Sam, and Albert) opened their first nickelodeon (theatre), a building that they called the Cascade Movie Palace, in New Castle, Pennsylvania. The historical marker at the present-day site stated: "WARNER BROTHERS' FIRST THEATRE - An early milestone for the Warners' film empire was the operation by Harry, Sam, and Albert Warner of a theater her, 1906-07. It seated 99 persons, who could view three movies for a nickel. Sixteen years later, Warner Bros. Pictures was established." [Two years later, the Warners sold the Cascade and left New Castle, moving to Pittsburgh where they established their own film exchange, the Duquesne Amusement and Supply Company.]
1905
Cooper Hewitt mercury lamps made it practical to shoot films indoors without sunlight.
1905
The American entertainment trade journal Variety began publication weekly in New York City.
1905
The short action-oriented British melodrama Rescued by Rover (1905, UK) was produced by Cecil Hepworth, and was the earliest cinematic canine feature. It was a very early and notable example of creative cutting and energetic traveling shots (moving across the screen in a consistent direction) to make it more suspenseful.
1905
Director Edwin S. Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company's family-oriented comedy short The Whole Dam Family and the Dam Dog (1905) was based upon a popular postcard fad of its day, and daringly created humor from the name of the dysfunctional family. It combined live-action comedy and graphics.

1904

Year
Event and Significance
1904
Narrative film began to become the dominant and more popular form of film-making production. "Story films," although more expensive to make than actualities (daily life scenes), or documentary-like records of news events, were being produced in greater numbers.
1904
Biograph's short comedy The Escaped Lunatic (1904) told about an imprisoned lunatic who believed himself to be Napoleon. After breaking out from his cell, the remainder of the film was a chase sequence - it was one of the first American films to be structured around the chase. The film ended with the lunatic tiring of his pursuit and returning to his cell.
1904
Biograph's short (fictional) "story" film The Moonshiner (1904), a documentary-like copyrighted film about primitive life among whiskey-making mountain hillbillies, liberally used narrative titles (called "intertitles"). In the last scene titled "The Law Vindicated," a lawman was shot in the back by the moonshiner's wife. It was a big hit in the early nickelodeon trade.
1904
Biograph's Personal (1904) combined two plot lines: personal ads and a comedic chase, involving a recently-arrived young French gentleman whose advertised request for a wife became overwhelming. After many females responded at the assigned meeting place of Grant's Tomb in NYC, a chase ensued after him. To duplicate its success, it was remade by the Edison Manufacturing Company as How a French Nobleman Got a Wife Through the New York Herald Personal Columns (1904).
1904
Georges Méliès released the first two-reel film, The Impossible Voyage (aka Le Voyage a Travers L'Impossible) (1904) - at about 20 minutes in length, it was about four or five times longer than the average film at the time.
1904
Marcus Loew founded Loew's Theatres - it would eventually become the longest-lived theater chain in America.
1904
The first film exchange (or distribution company) in the US, the Duquesne Amusement Supply Company, was founded in Pittsburgh, PA by Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack Warner for the distribution of films -- it was the precursor to Warner Bros. Pictures. (Some sources claimed it was formed in 1907).  

1903

Year
Event and Significance
1903
American director Edwin S. Porter, chief of production at the Edison studio, helped to shift film production toward narrative story telling, with such films as the first realistic (or documentary) story film Life of an American Fireman (1903) and the popular western tale The Great Train Robbery (1903).
1903
The Great Train Robbery (1903), one of the first westerns (filmed on the East Coast in New Jersey - not in Hollywood), was a 12-minute dramatic film. It was the first to use modern film techniques, such as multiple camera positions, filming out of sequence and later editing the scenes into their proper order. There were 14 scenes with parallel inter-cutting or cross-cutting between simultaneous events. It was also memorable for its audience-shocking scene (placed at the beginning or end) of a cowboy shooting his pistol.
1903
The first male movie star, and first Western star was Max Aronson, aka Bronco Billy, Max Anderson, and Gilbert M. Anderson, who made his first film appearance in The Great Train Robbery (1903), as a bandit, a passenger who was shot in the back, and a tenderfoot dancer.
1903
Edwin S. Porter's comedy shorts Rube and Mandy at Coney Island (1903) and A Romance of the Rail (1903) were noted for combining a story-line with a travelogue.
1903
The American Mutoscope & Biograph Company, the oldest movie company in America (founded in 1895), moved to a converted NYC brownstone on E. 14th Street, its first indoor studio. It was the first movie studio in the world to rely exclusively on artificial light.
1903
Hollywood was officially incorporated as a municipality.
1903
The Danish film Capital Execution (1903) (aka Henrettelsen) was the first feature film made by Denmark's film industry, which went on to thrive until the Great War.
1903
Thomas A. Edison brought a lawsuit (Edison v. Lubin) against rival competitor and producer Siegmund Lubin for copyright infringement. Many of Lubin's films were remakes, mimics or "dupes" of the movies Edison and Edwin S. Porter were making. At first, Lubin successfully defended himself by claiming that each frame, rather than each film, had to be submitted separately. On appeal, the court eventually declared that the frame-by-frame method of copyrighting was impractical, and so the lower court's ruling violated the intent of Congress. The judgment allowed a film to be copyrighted in its entirety by one copyright submission (instead of by each individual frame).
1903
Edwin S. Porter's (and the Edison Company) enterprising and ambitious adaptation of Harriet Beecher Stowe's familiar and popular novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1903) was one of the earliest 'full-length' feature films (about 14 minutes!). The film reduced the 500-page novel down to 14 short sequences. At the time, the Edison film catalog advertised that it was the first American film ever to include titles (called "announcements") to identify and introduce each new scene. The film pre-dated Porter's own The Great Train Robbery (1903) by about 3 months. Between 1903 and 1927, at least nine films titled Uncle Tom's Cabin were made in the US, making it the most-filmed story of the silent era.

1902

Year
Event and Significance
1902
One of the earliest permanent movie houses exclusively designed for showing motion pictures was Thomas Tally's Electric Theater, built in Los Angeles (on South Spring Street) in 1902 - the first for the city. It was also a precursor to the more ubiquitous nickelodeons that opened in 1905. In 1912, Tally became the first to show some kind of process color film in the theater, a first for Los Angeles. [See entry for 1896 for the first permanent movie house.]
1902
Another of the earliest surviving examples of stop-motion (or stop-action) animation was Fun in a Bakery Shop (1902), a trick (experimental) film by Edwin S. Porter, released by Thomas A. Edison's Manufacturing Company. [See also 1900 entry for the earliest "stop-motion" animation.] The 80-second film was a combination of stop-action photography and object manipulation. In the short, a baker's assistant sculpted dough thrown onto the side of a flour barrel, making various faces and comical shapes - executed with smooth edits between "freezes."
1902
Georges Méliès, a magician-turned-filmmaker, introduced innovative special effects in the first real science fiction film, Le Voyage Dans La Lune (1902), aka A Trip to the Moon. This was his 400th film - a narrative fantasy of long shots strung together, punctuated with disappearances, double exposures, and other trick photography and elaborate sets.
1902
As a way to eliminate competition and to protect its inventions and profits, in 1898 the Edison Manufacturing Company brought a patent infringement claims lawsuit against its rivals - including its major competitor, The American Mutoscope & Biograph Company (founded in 1895 by one of Edison's past associates W. K.L. Dickson). In July of 1901, a U.S. Circuit Court in New York ruled that Biograph had infringed on Edison's patent claims. Biograph appealed the ruling, claiming it had a different camera design, and the decision was reversed in March 1902 by a US Court of Appeals. It ruled that Edison did not invent the motion-picture camera, but allowed that he had invented the sprocket system that moved perforated film through the camera. The new ruling essentially disallowed Edison from establishing a monopoly on motion picture apparatus - and ultimately on the making of films.
1902
French engineer Leon Gaumont demonstrated his rudimentary sound-on-disk Chronophone system (an attempt to better Edison's earlier Kinetophone invention) to the French Photographic Society using an electrical connection between the film projector and the turntable. Gaumont's device was a synchronized sound system using phonograph cylinders, to allow synchronized sound while viewing films.

1901

1901
With the arrival of electricity, Broadway set out white lights stretching from 13th to 46th Street in New York City, inspiring the nickname "the Great White Way."
1901
Thomas Edison's "Black Maria" film studio, often called America's first movie studio, was closed, and it was demolished two years later. In its place, Edison built a new movie studio in NYC - it was the nation's first indoor, glass-enclosed studio that could be used year-round.
1901
The U.S. Circuit Court recognized Edison's motion picture patent-infringement claims in his lawsuit against the American Mutoscope & Biograph Company, which appealed the decision to a higher court.
1901
In England, James Williamson (with his Williamson Cinematograph Company) released the authentic-looking action film Fire! (1901) - one of the first films to meaningfully combine indoor studio scenes (a smoking building on fire) with outdoor shots (the summoning of fire-fighters from the fire brigade for a rescue of three occupants). [Note: Edwin S. Porter elaborated on this genre in the making of Life of an American Fireman (1903).]
1901
The 25th US President, William McKinley, the first President of the 20th century, was the first US president to be extensively photographed and captured on film. His first inauguration in March of 1897 was the first to be photographed. A short news-film shot by Edison's Manufacturing Company, was taken during an appearance at the Pan-American Expo (Buffalo, NY), titled President McKinley Reviewing the Troops at the Pan-American Exposition (1901), one day before he was assassinated.
1901
Pathè released director Ferdinand Zecca's short film The Story of a Crime (aka History of a Crime or Histoire d'un crime), with two notable features: editing through a dissolve transition, and the use of a flashback to develop a non-linear narrative. A crime was envisioned in a progression of scenes - a Burglary, Murder, and Arrest. The imprisoned French criminal, while sleeping in his cell and awaiting trial, envisioned his family seated at their evening meal (the vision appeared on the wall of his cell). When he awoke, he was led away, quickly tried, convicted, and prepared for execution in the last scene. (During showings, women and children were allowed to leave before the final scene.) He was promptly guillotined - and then his decapitated body was pushed into a coffin.

1900

Year
Event and Significance
1900s
Movies became a popular attraction in amusement arcades, music halls, traveling fairs, wax museums, and vaudeville houses in many countries. However, audiences had become bored with actualities (daily life scenes) and films of news events (real and reconstructed).
1900
The Eastman Kodak company first introduced the Brownie camera, a very simple cardboard box camera that used roll film. Its original list price was $1.00.
1900
At the Paris World's Fair (The Exposition Universelle), early film pioneers The Lumiere Brothers projected Cinematograph films onto a giant screen (400 square meters, 25 x 15) that was visible to an audience of 25,000. Fifteen films were screened in the 25-minute program.
1900
The historical re-enactment Episodes of the Transvaal War (aka La Guerre de Transvaal), a 'reconstructed' news film, had its premiere showing in Paris on New Years Day. It was filmed by Lucien Nonguet in the bois de Vincennes. It was released by pioneering French filmmaker-producer Charles Pathe, who had formed the Pathé Frères company with his three brothers in 1896. During the early 20th century, the Pathe Brothers Company was the largest film equipment and production company in the world.
1900
Pioneering animator and film-maker James Stuart Blackton produced The Enchanting Drawing (1900), a Vitagraph Studios short film that featured a drawn character and some objects. It was the earliest surviving prototype of stop-motion (or stop-action) animation.
1900
Writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, the immortal, prototypical detective, first appeared on the film screen in a 30-second, 1900 one-reeler (registered in 1903) from American Mutoscope & Biograph Company, titled Sherlock Holmes Baffled (1900). It was the first recorded detective film on record, made specifically for one-person mutoscope viewing machines in amusement arcades.   

timeline cinema 300 BC-1889

Year
Event and Significance
300s B.C.
The Greek Aristotle was the first to observe and describe how he saw a light after-effect: a persistent image (that slowly faded away) after he gazed into the sun.
65 B.C.
The Roman poet and philosopher Titus Lucretius Carus described the principle of persistence of vision - the optical effect of continuous motion produced when a series of sequential images were displayed, with each image lasting only momentarily.
130 A.D.
The Greek astronomer and geographer Ptolemy of Alexandria discovered (and proved) Lucretius' principle of persistence of vision.
late 1790s
Belgian optician and showman Etienne Gaspard Robertson's Phantasmagoria - a kind of amusement 'horror show' designed to frighten audiences that became popular in Europe. He produced the show with a 'magic lantern' on wheels (which he called a Phantascope or Fantascope), usually out of view of the audience, to project ghostly-looking, illusory images that changed shape and size, onto smoke or onto a translucent screen.
1820s
The Frenchman Peter Mark Roget (famed as the author of Roget's Thesaurus) rediscovered the persistence of vision principle.
1832-34
The Belgian scientist Joseph Antoine Ferdinand Plateau, who had studied the phenomenon of persistence of vision, developed a spindle viewer or spinning wheel called a phenakistoscope (aka Fantascope or Magic Wheel), the first device that allowed pictures to appear to move - and considered the precursor of an animated film (or movie). [The device was simultaneously invented by Austrian Simon von Stampfer.]
1834
William George Horner invented the first zoetrope (which he called a daedalum or daedatelum), based upon Plateau's phenakistoscope. It was a very crude, mechanical form of a motion picture 'projector' that consisted of a drum that contained a set of still images. When it was turned in a circular fashion, it created the illusion of motion.
1860
The zoetrope, another animation toy, was invented by French inventor Pierre Desvignes.
1872-1878
British photographer Eadweard Muybridge took the first successful photographs of motion, producing his multiple image sequences analyzing human and animal locomotion. California senator Leland Stanford commissioned Muybridge to determine whether the 4 legs of a galloping horse left the ground at the same time, so he set up 24 still cameras along a racetrack. As a horse ran by the cameras, the horse broke strings which were hooked up to each camera's shutter, thereby activating the shutter of each camera, capturing the image and exposing the film. Soon after, the photographs were projected in succession with a viewing device called a Zoogyroscope (aka Zoopraxiscope). Viewing the photos in sequence comprised a primitive movie.
1877
The praxinoscope (which refined the long-established zoetrope with mirrors rather than slots) was invented and patented by the Frenchman Emile Reynaud. In 1892, Reynaud opened his Theatre Optique in Paris with a theatrical form of his 'movie or animation' device designed for public performances. The device reflected out, in long segments, the sequential, hand-painted drawings that were on long broad strips inside the drum.
1882
Etienne Jules Marey in France developed a chronophotographic camera, shaped like a gun and referred to as a "shotgun" camera, that could take twelve successive pictures or images per second.
1886
Pioneering British inventor William Friese-Greene collaborated with John Rudge to make an enhanced magic lantern, one of the earliest motion picture cameras and projectors, termed a Biophantascope, to project photographic plates in rapid succession. He claimed to have sent Thomas Edison (who denied receiving anything) details of his camera designs, but received no replies. In 1890, Friese-Greene received a patent for his 'chronophotographic' camera, capable of taking up to ten photographs per second using perforated celluloid film, but his experiments met with limited success, unlike Edison. However, he became the first man to ever witness moving pictures on a screen.
1886
Daeida, the wife of real-estate developer Harvey Henderson Wilcox, named her ranch in Cahuenga Valley "Hollywood". [Another origin, though probably inaccurate, of the "Hollywood" name may be from the toyon, popularly known as California holly.]
1887
Nitrate celluloid film (a chemical combination of gun cotton and gum camphor) was invented by American clergyman Hannibal W. Goodwin.
1888
Edison filed his first caveat (a Patent Office document) in which he declared his work on future inventions, anticipating filling out a complete patent application for his Kinetoscope and Kinetograph (a motion picture camera).
1888
George Eastman introduced the lightweight, inexpensive "Kodak" camera, using paper photographic film wound on rollers, and registered the trademarked name Kodak.
1888
French inventor Louis Augustin Le Prince developed a single-lens camera which he used to make the very first moving picture sequences (of traffic on a Leeds, England bridge), by moving the film through a camera's sprocket wheels by grabbing the film's perforations. Presumably, it was the first movie ever shot and then shown to the public.
1889
Henry Reichenbach developed (and patented) durable and flexible celluloid film strips (or roll film) to be manufactured by the pioneer of photographic equipment, George Eastman, and his Eastman Company.