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  1. Home
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  3. History of Cinema I
  4. History of Cinema: Class 9, France and Impressionism

History of Cinema: Class 9, France and Impressionism

  • 1 Decline of France’s Output
    • 1.1 Post World War I
    • 1.2 30% of Films screened in France were French
    • 1.3 1929 Features
      • France: 68
      • Germany: 220
      • USA: 562
    • 1.4 Factors
      • Rise of Imported films
      • Not much room to export
        • Belgium
        • Switzerland
        • French colonies
    • 1.5 Vertical Disintegration
      • Hollywood embraced vertical integration
      • Distribution
        • Pathe and Gaumont focused on distribution
        • No import quotas until 1930s
      • Not many resources put into production
        • Small production companies
        • director or actor raised money, often going out of business
        • low budgets
          • $30k France
          • $400k Hollywood
        • outdated facilities
          • glass studios
          • location work
          • few backlots at the studios
      • Exhibition
        • 80–90% of cinemas owned by individuals
        • wanted to show most profitable films (American)
  • 2 Popular Films
    • 2.1 “Cinema libre”
      • documentary-like
      • location setting
      • avoidance of theatricality
    • 2.2 Serial Films
      • Gaumont and Pathé
      • high budget costume dramas
      • profitable when shown in multiple parts
    • 2.3 Historical Epics
    • 2.4 Fantasy Films
      • Rene Clair Paris Qui Dort (1924)
        • mysterious ray that paralyzes Paris
        • revived fantasy tradition of Melies
    • 2.5 Comedies
  • 3 Louis Delluc
    • 3.1 set to link film with other art movements
    • 3.2 cinema’s distinctive qualities
    • 3.3 adored films of Griffith and Swedish films
    • 3.4 Photogenie
      • distinguishes film shot from original object being filmed
      • “each thing existing in the world knows another existence on the screen”
      • process of filming itself: lends an object a new expressiveness by giving the viewer a fresh perception of it
    • 3.5 Style of movement
      • belief in cinema as an art form
      • essays
      • manifestoes
    • 3.6 ciné clubs
      • build support for Deluc’s favorite films
      • attempt to convey emotional “impressions” and sensations
      • interested in rhythmical and lyrical possibilities of the medium
  • 4 Impressionism
    • 4.1 Between 1918 and 1929
      • considered French cinema stodgy
      • preferred Hollywood films
    • 4.2 Pictorial Beauty
    • 4.3 Psychological Exploration
    • 4.4 Film was not theater
      • rhythm
      • aesthetic
      • naturalistic acting
    • 4.5 Impressionists
      • Marcel L’Herbier
      • Jean Epstein
      • Gance
    • 4.6 cinematographie
      • interest in using film to render interior state rather than external world
      • cinema as unique art form
      • conveying personal vision of the artist
      • all theorists agreed that film was opposite of theater thus opposite of most of the types of films being made in France at that time
        • avoid theatricality
        • need for more naturalistic acting, lighting
        • on location work
        • evocative landscapes
        • authentic village scenes
      • properties of camera
        • optical effects
        • point of view shots
        • superimpositions
        • filters all to convey character subjectivity
        • access to a realm beyond everyday experience
          • show us the souls of people and essences of objects
    • 4.7 Napoleon
      • Abel Gance
      • from elaborate dream sequences
      • extraordinary technical experimentation
      • changing 3 screens through framing
      • recreating colors of flag of France
  • 5 Passion of Joan of Arc

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