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Moving Picture News (1911) (1911) (14594882258)

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Summary

Moving Picture News (1911)

Year: 1911 (1910s)

Authors:

Subjects: motion pictures

Publisher: Cinematograph Publishing Company

Contributing Library: Library of Congress, MBRS, Moving Image Section

Digitizing Sponsor: Library of Congress, Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division

By 1908 there were 10,000 permanent movie theaters in the U.S. alone. For the first thirty years, movies were silent, accompanied by live musicians, sound effects, and narration. Until World War I, movie screens were dominated by French and Italian studios. During Great War, the American movie industry center, "Hollywood," became the number one in the world. By the 1920s, the U.S. was producing an average of 800 feature films annually, or 82% of the global total. Hollywood's system and its publicity method, the glamourous star system provided models for all movie industries. Efficient production organization enabled mass movie production and technical sophistication but not artistic expression. In 1915, in France, a group of filmmakers began experimenting with optical and pictorial effects as well as rhythmic editing which became known as French Impressionist Cinema. In Germany, dark, hallucinatory German Expressionism put internal states of mind onscreen and influenced the emerging horror genre. The Soviet cinema was the most radically innovative. In Spain, Luis Buñuel embraced abstract surrealism and pure aestheticism. And, just like that, at about its peak time, the silent cinema era ended in 1926-1928.

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moving picture news 1911 movie industry high resolution silent films motion pictures cinematography public domain comics
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Date

1911
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in collections

Silent Film Era

Silent Cinema: 1908-1926
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Source

Internet Archive
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Link

https://archive.org
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Copyright info

public domain

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moving picture news 1911 movie industry high resolution silent films motion pictures cinematography public domain comics