Toggle navigation
Juan Monroy
Curriculum Vitae
Courses
Elements of Film Style
Connect
Personal
Queens College
LaGuardia CC
Pratt Institute
Office Hours
Personal Site
Courses Blog
Pay Me with Square Cash
Pay Me with PayPal
Pinboard
Instapaper
Flickr
Instagram
Ride with GPS
YouTube
Vimeo
Student Association of Cinema Studies at NYU
Robots Softball
Contemporary Media
Media Criticism
History of Film
The Art of Film
Home
Courses
History of Cinema I
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outdated facilities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