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Key Concepts
- When the technologies of chemistry, optics, photography,
precision machinery, electricity, and sound recording came
together in
the second half of the nineteenth century, they made movies
possible.
- Movies evolved from photography by way of series photography,
or the taking of a rapid series of still images. The first movie
on record, Fred Ott’s Sneeze (1894), was made
in Thomas Edison’s lab.
- This chapter presents five fundamental
principles of movies:
- Movies manipulate space and time in
ways that other art forms cannot.
- Movies depend on light.
- Movies provide an illusion of
movement.
- Movies can depict worlds convincingly.
- Movies generally
result from a complex, expensive, and highly collaborative
process.
Learning Objectives
Once you have read this chapter, you should
be able to
- identify the kinds of technology essential to movies.
- compare
the ways in which movies and plays differ in their handling
of space and time.
- explain the principle of “co-expressibility.”
- compare
the way the human eye sees images with the way the camera
sees them.
- describe the stages of the filmmaking production
process and their components.
- list and describe the various
types of movies.
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