美国电影发展史
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论美国电影的发展历程作者:刘丽娜来源:《北极光》2016年第06期摘要:美国电影行业,作为世界电影行业的领头羊,其艺术表现形式,拍摄技法,电影运营模式,创新思维等等值得我们中国电影行业学习。
本文从美国电影的发展历程出发,从不同历史时期分析美国电影的突出作品,为中国电影的发展提供理论基础。
关键词:美国电影;无声电影;有声电影;生产力当前世界电影工业发展的佼佼者当属美国的电影。
自1895年12月28日世界上第一部电影《工厂大门》诞生于法国开始,电影这一被称之为第七艺术的艺术形式在各国蓬勃发展。
电影的发展与生产力水平的提升是密不可分的。
1893年T.A.爱迪生发明电影视镜并创建“囚车”摄影场,被视为美国电影史的开端。
1896年,维太放映机的推出开始了美国电影的群众性放映。
纵观世界电影发展史,格里菲斯,卓别林等等一系列优秀的导演创作出的作品具有里程碑式的意义,给世界电影的发展起到了一定的推动作用。
格里菲斯的《一个国家的诞生》,《党同伐异》。
尤其是《党同伐异》中特有的“最后一分钟营救”即“平行蒙太奇”更是革新了电影的拍摄技法。
他将发生在不同地点的平行动作交替切入,摆脱实际时间的束缚,打破传统戏剧叙述原则,创造真正符合电影艺术规律的叙事时空。
美国电影的发展历程大致分为无声电影,早期有声电影,美国电影走向巅峰。
一、无声电影美国早期的无声电影因着严格的审查制度,其主要类型为喜剧片,历史片和西部片。
严格审查制度的由来是因着当时美国各个电影公司的明星行为不检点,于是招致了公众的广泛抨击,于是美国电影业成立了“美国制片人与发行人协会”。
在W.H.海斯的主持下这一组织制定了“伦理法典”这就是著名的海斯法典。
其主要职能是审查影片时剔除不合乎美国公众道德观念和生活方式的情节和场面。
于是从侧面推动了既能够娱乐大众的同时又不违背美国公众的道德观念和生活方式的喜剧片,历史片和西部片。
喜剧片的典型电影当属查理卓别林的电影。
肥裤子、破礼帽、小胡子、大头鞋,再加上一根从来都不舍得离手的拐杖,卓别林用他的表情和动作将美国默片带到最高峰。
美国电影发展史Of all the products of popular culture, none is more sharply etched in our collective imagination than the movies. Most Americans instantly recognize images produced by the movies: Charlie Chaplin, the starvin g prospector in The Gold Rush, eating his shoe, treating the laces like spaghetti. Paul Muni, the jobless World War I veteran in I am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang, who is asked how he lives and replies, "I steal." Gloria Swanson, the fading movie goddess in Sunset Boulevard, belittling suggestions that she is no longer a big star: "It's the pictures that got small."Movies are key cultural artifacts that offer a window into American cultural and social history. A mix ture of art, business, and popular entertainment, the movies provide a host of insights into Americans' shi fting ideals, fantasies, and preoccupations. Like any cultural artifact, the movies can be approached in a variety of ways. Cultural historians have treated movies as sociological documents that record the look an d mood of particular historical settings; as ideological constructs that advance particular political or moral values or myths; as psychological texts that speak to individual and social anxieties and tensions; as cul tural documents that present particular images of gender, ethnicity, class romance, and violence; and as vi sual texts that offer complex levels of meaning and seeing.Beside Macy's Department Store in Herald Square New York City there is a plaque commemorating t he first public showing of a motion picture on a screen in the United States. It was here, on April 23, 1896, at Koster and Bial's Music Hall in New York City, that Thomas Alva Edison presented a show in cluded scenes of the surf breaking on a beach, a comic boxing exhibition, and two young women dancin g. A review in The New York Times described the exhibition as "all wonderfully real and singularly exh ilarating."The first successful efforts to project lifelike images on a screen took place in the mid-seventeenth ce ntury. By 1659, a Dutch scientist named Christiaen Huygens had invented the magic lantern, the forerunn er of the modern slide projector, which he used to project medical drawings before an audience.The first true moving images appeared in the 1820s, when the concept of the p ersistence of vision wa s used to create children's toys and other simple entertainments. The thaumatrope, which appeared in 182 6, was a simple disk with separate images printed on each side (for example, a bird on one side and a cage on another). When rapidly spun, the images appeared to blend together (so that the bird seemed tobe inside the cage). A simpler way to display movement was the flip book, which became popular by th e late 1860s. Each page showed a subject in a subtly different position. When a reader flipped the book' s pages, the pictures gave the illusion of movement.In 1887, Thomas Edison gave William K.L. Dickson, one of his leading inventors, the task of develop ing a motion picture apparatus. Edison envisioned a machine "that should do for the eye what the phono graph did for the ear." Dickson initially modeled his device on Edison's phonograph, placing tiny pictures on a revolving drum. A light inside the drum was supposed to illuminate the pictures. Then he decided to use the flexible celluloid film that George Eastman had invented in 1880 and had begun to use in hi s Kodak camera. Dickson added perforations to the edge of the film strip to help it feed evenly into his camera.To display their films, Dickson and Edison devised a coin-operated peepshow device called a "kinetosc ope." Because the kinetoscope could only hold fifty feet of film, its films lasted just 35 to 40 seconds. This was too brief to tell a story; the first kinetoscope films were simply scenes of everyday life, like th e first film "Fred Ott's Sneeze," reenactments of historical events, photographed bits of vaudeville routines, and pictures of well-known celebrities. Nevertheless, the kinetoscope was an instant success. By 1894, c oin-operated kinetoscopes had begun to appear in hotels, department stores, saloons, and amusement arcad es called nickelodeons. In 1894, the Lumiere brothers introduced the portable motion picture camera and projector.Finally recognizing the potential of the motion picture projector, Edison entered into an agreement wit h a Washington, D.C. realtor, Thomas Armat, who had designed a workable projector. In April, 1896, th e two men unveiled the Vitascope and presented the first motion pictures on a public screen in the Unit ed States.Competition in the early movie industry was fierce. To force their competitors out of the industry, mo viemakers turned to the courts, launching over two hundred patent infringement suits. To protect their pro fits and bring order to the industry, Edison and a number of his competitors decided to cooperate by est ablishing the Motion Picture Patents Company in 1909, consisting of six American companies and two Fr ench firms. Members of the trust agreed that only they had the right to make, print, or distribute cameras, projectors, or films. The trust also negotiated an exclusive agreement with Eastman Kodak for commer cial quality film stock.During film's first decade from 1896 to 1905 movies were little more than a novelty, often used as a "chaser" to signal the end of a show in a vaudeville theater. These early films are utterly unlike anythi ng seen today. They lasted just seven to ten minutes -too brief to tell anything more than the simplest st ory. They used a cast of anonymous actors for the simple reason that the camera was set back so far th at it was impossible to clearly make out the actors' faces. As late as 1908, a movie actor made no more than $8 a day and received no credit on the screen.In 1905, hundreds of little movie theaters opened, called nickelodeons, since they sold admission nicke l by nickel. By 1908, there were an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 nickelodeons. Contrary to popular belief, t he nickelodeon's audience was not confined to the poor, the young, or the immigrant. From the start, the aters were situated in rural areas and middle class neighborhoods as well as working-class neighborhoods. Nevertheless, the movies attracted audiences of an unprecedented size, as a result of their low admission prices, "democratic" seating arrangements, convenient time schedules (films were shown again and again), and lack of spoken dialogue, which allowed non- English speaking immigrants to enjoy films.By 1907, narrative films had begun to increase in number. But most films still emphasized stunts and chases and real life events-like scenes of yacht races or train crashes--and were rented or sold by the f oot regardless of subject matter. Exhibitors were expected to assemble scenes together to form a larger s how.The formation of the movie trust ushered in a period of rationalization within the film industry. Came ra and projecting equipment was standardized; film rental fees were fixed; theaters were upgraded; and th e practice of selling films outright ended, which improved the quality of movies by removing damaged p rints from circulation. This was also a period intense artistic and technical innovation, as pioneering direc tors like David Wark Griffith and others created a new language of film and revolutionized screen narrati ve.By focusing the camera on particular actors and actresses, Griffith inadvertently encouraged the develo pment of the star system. As early as 1910, newspapers were deluged with requests for actors' names. But most studios refused to divulge their identities, fearing the salary demands of popular performers. But the film trust's leading opponent, Carl Laemmle, was convinced that the key to the financial stability lay in producing films featuring popular stars. As one industry observer put it, "In the 'star' your producer gets not only a 'production' value...but a 'trademark' value, and an 'insurance' value which are...very poten t in guaranteeing the sale of this product." In 1910, Laemmle produced the first star; he lured Florence Lawrence, the most popular anonymous star, away from Biograph, and launched an unprecedented publicit y campaign on her behalf. As the star system emerged, salaries soared. In the course of just two years, t he salary of actress Mary Pickford rose from less than $400 a week in 1914 to $10,000 a week in 191 6.During the second decade of the twentieth century, immigrants like Laemmle and Zukor came to domi nate the movie business. Unlike Edison and the other American-born, Protestant businessmen who had co ntrolled the early film industry, these immigrant entrepreneurs had a better sense of what the public want ed to see. Virtually all of these new producers emigrated to the United States from central Europe and were Jewish. Less conservative than the American-born producers, they were more willing to experiment with such innovations as the star system and feature-length productions. Since many had come to the fil m industry from the garment and fur trades where fashions change rapidly and the successful businessma n is one who stays constantly in touch with the latest styles, they tried to give the public what it wante d.As Samuel Goldwyn, one of the leading moguls, noted, "If the audience don't like a picture, they hav e a good reason. The public is never wrong. I don't go for all this thing that when I have a failure, it i s because the audience doesn't have the taste or education, or isn't sensitive enough. The public pays mo ney. It wants to be entertained. That's all I know." With this philosophy the outsiders wrestled control ov er the industry away from the American-born producers.During the 1920s and 1930s, a small group of film companies consolidated their control. Known as the " Big Five" - Paramount, Warner Brothers, RKO, 20th Century-Fox, and Lowe's (MGM) and the "Little Th ree" - Universal, Columbia, and United Artists, they formed fully integrated companies. With the exceptio n of United Artists, which was solely a distribution company, the "majors" owned their own production f acilities, ran their own worldwide distribution networks, and controlled theater chains that were committedto showing the company's products. And at the head of each major studio was a powerful mogul such giants as Adolph Zukor, Wiliam Fox, Louis B. Mayer, Samuel Goldwyn, Carl Laemmle, Harry Cohn, Jos eph Schenck, and the Warner Brothers who determined what the public was going to see. It was their vi sion--patriotic, sentimental, secular, and generally politically conservative which millions of Americans sha red weekly at local movie theaters.During the 1920s, movie attendance soared. By the middle of the decade, 50 million people a week went to the movies - the equivalent of half the nation's population. In Chicago, in 1929, theaters had en ough seats for half the city's population to attend a movie each day.In 1926, Warner Brothers released the film Don Juan--the first film with a synchronized film score--al ong with a program of talking shorts. The popularity of The Jazz Singer, which was released in 1927, er ased any doubts about the popular appeal of sound, and within a year, 300 theaters were wired for soun d.The arrival of sound produced a sharp upsurge in movie attendance, which jumped from 50 million a week in the mid-20s to 110 million in 1929. But it also produced a number of fundamental transformati ons in the movies themselves. As Robert Ray has shown, sound made the movies more American. The i ntroduction of sound also encouraged new film genres--like the musical, the gangster film, and comedies that relied on wit rather than slapstick.In addition, the talkies dramatically changed the movie- going experience, especially for the working cl ass. Where many working class audiences had provided silent films with a spoken dialogue, movie-goers were now expected to remain quiet. As one film historian has observed: "The talking audience for silent pictures became a silent audience for talking pictures. "Moreover, the stage shows and other forms of liv e entertainment that had appeared in silent movie houses increasingly disappeared, replaced by newsreels and animated shorts.The film industry changed radically after World War II, and this change altered the style and content of the films made in Hollywood. After experiencing boom years from 1939 to 1946, the film industry be gan a long period of decline. Within just seven years, attendance and box receipts fell to half their 1946 levels.During the 1940s, a new film genre--known as film noir-- arose, which gave tangible expression to th e psychic confusion of a nation that had won the largest war in history but faced even greater uncertaint ies in peacetime. Though film noir received its named from French film critics and was heavily influence d by German expressionist film making techniques, it stands out as one of the most original and innovati ve American movie genres.After the war, Hollywood's audience not only shrank, it also fragmented into distinct subgroups. An a udience interested in serious social problem films expanded. During the postwar period Hollywood produc ed a growing number addressing such problems as ethnic and racial prejudice, anti-Semitism, sufferings o f maltreated mental patients, and the problems of alcohol and drug addiction. The growing popularity of science fiction thrillers also reflected the emergence of the youth market and the spread of a certain para noid style during the Cold War years.As the 1960s began, few would have guessed that the decade would be one of the most socially cons cious and stylistically innovative in Hollywood's history. Among the most popular films at the decade's st art were Doris Day romantic comedies like That Touch of Mink (1962) and epic blockbusters like The L ongest Day (1962), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), and Cleopatra (1963). Yet, as the decade progressed, Hol lywood radically shifted focus and began to produce an increasing number of anti-establishment films, lac ed with social commentary, directed at the growing youth market. Two films released in 1967--Bonnie an d Clyde and The Graduate--awoke Hollywood to the size and influence of the youth audience.A number of most influential films of the late '60s and early '70s sought to revise older film genres--like the war film, the crime film, and the western--and rewrite Hollywood's earlier versions of American history from a more critical perspective. Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1972) revised and enhanc ed the gangster genre by transforming it into a critical commentary on an immigrant family's pursuit of t he American dream.During the mid- and late-70s, the mood of American films shifted sharply. Unlike the highly politicize d films of the early part of the decade, the most popular films of the late 1970s and early 1980s were e scapist blockbusters like Star Wars (1977), Superman (1978), and Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)-- featur ing spectacular special effects, action, and simplistic conflicts between good and evil--inspirational tales ofthe indomitable human spirit, like Rocky (1976)--or nostalgia for a more innocent past--like Animal Hou se (1978) and Grease (1978).In a 1992 bestseller Hollywood vs. America, Michael Medved, co-host of public television's Sneak Previe ws, described Hollywood as a "poison factory," befouling America's moral atmosphere and assaulting the country's "most cherished values." Today's films, he argued, use their enormous capacity to influence opin ion by glamorizing violence, maligning marriage, mocking authority, promoting sexual promiscuity, ridiculi ng religion, and bombarding viewers with an endless stream of profanity, gratuitous sex, and loutish form s of behavior. Where once the movies offered sentiment, elegance, and romance, now, Medved contends, ideologically-motivated producers and directors promote their own divisive agenda: anti-religion, anti-famil y, anti-military.Nevertheless, as the movie industry enters its second century, many Americans worry about Hollywood 's future. Medved is not alone in complaining that "they don't make movies like they used to." A basic problem facing today's Hollywood is the rapidly rising cost of making and marketing a movie: an averag e of $40 million today. The immense cost of producing movies has led the studios to seek guaranteed hi ts: blockbuster loaded with high-tech special effects, sequels, and remakes of earlier movies, foreign films, and even old TV shows.For a century, the movie industry has been the nation's most important purveyor of culture and enterta inment to the masses, playing a critical role in the shift from Victorian to distinctively modern, consumer values; from a world of words to a visual culture; from a society rooted in islands of localities and eth nic groups to a commercialized mass culture. The movies taught Americans how to kiss, make love, con ceive of gender roles, and understand their place in the world. Whether film will continue to serve as th e nation's preeminent instrument of cultural expression--reflecting and also shaping values and cultural ide als--remains to be seen.1893年,T.A.爱迪生发明电影视镜并创建“囚车”摄影场,被视为美国电影史的开端。
《欧美动画电影发展史》参考使用资料开创1907~1937年是开创阶段。
1907年,第一部动画片《一张滑稽面孔的幽默姿态》由美国人布莱克顿拍摄完成,美国动画片史正式开始。
这一时期的动画影片只有短短的5分钟左右,用于正式电影前的加演,制作比较简单粗糙。
这个时期的动画先驱还有温莎·麦克凯、派特·苏立文、弗莱舍兄弟等。
麦克凯是美国商业动画电影的奠基人,他的代表作品有《恐龙》〈露斯坦尼亚号的沉没〉等。
苏立文刨作了美国动画片史第一个有个性魅力的动画人物“菲力斯猫”。
弗莱舍兄弟的作品有<蓓蒂·波普〉<大力水手>等。
华特·迪斯尼在20世纪20年代后期崛起,1928年他推出了第一部有声动画片<汽船威利号〉,1932年推出了第一部彩色动画片《花与树》。
初步发展1937~1949年是美国动画片的初步发展时期。
1937年,迪斯尼公司推出了《白雪公主》,片长达74分钟,这在美国动画片史上是个史无前例的创举,继而推出《木偶奇遇记》《幻想曲》《小鹿班比》等动画长片。
第二次世界大战爆发后,迪斯尼公司停止了动画长片的拍摄,直到40年代末期才恢复过来。
查克·琼斯创作的动画短片如《兔八哥》《戴飞鸭》等在战争期间也非常受欢迎。
第一次繁荣1950—1966年是美国动画片第一次繁荣时期。
这个时期,迪斯尼公司几乎每年都推出一部经典动画片,如《仙履奇缘》《爱丽斯梦游仙境》《小姐与流氓》《睡美人》,等等。
其他的动画制作公司在迪斯尼公司的排挤之下纷纷关门停业,迪斯尼公司成为动画电影业的霸主。
蛰伏1967~1988年是美国动画的蛰伏时期。
1966年12月15日,伟大的华特·迪斯尼因肺癌去世,迪斯尼公司陷入了困境,美国动画业也进入萧条时期。
此时,电视动画逐渐发展起来。
汉纳和芭芭拉是电视动画的代表人物,他们创作了电视系列片《猫和老鼠》《辛普森一家》等。
整个70年代,只有数部动画片,质量也平平。
中外电影史整理电影是一种影像艺术,以电影摄影技术为手段,将故事、人物、事件或思想等内容表现在银幕上,以达到艺术创作和传播的目的。
在电影历史中,有许多经典影片和杰出电影人。
下面将介绍中外电影史的发展和重要人物。
一、中国电影史1.早期阶段(1896年-1949年)1896年,电影诞生于法国。
中国的电影史也从此开始。
1905年,上海传入第一台摄影机。
不久后,电影院开始于中国大陆各地兴起。
不过, 最初的电影大多为欧洲或美国的电影。
1913年,中国第一部电影《定军山》诞生,是中国电影史上的第一部电影。
其后出现了众多的默片、文艺片、戏曲电影和武侠电影等。
1921年,上海“大光影剧院”成立,它也是中国第一个专门放映电影的场所。
这个成立为中国电影发展注入了新鲜血液,同时也开始了电影资本集资的形式。
上世纪30年代,中国电影经历了黄金时期。
那时候有很多优秀电影诞生,如《孔雀东南飞》、《一江春水向东流》、《地道战》等等。
其中,陈省身是当时一流导演之一,他的代表作《乌鸦与麻雀》创造了新规矩,形成中国电影的“民族共生主题”,被誉为中国电影史上的经典之作。
同时,上海也成为中国电影的中心。
然而,到了1937年,中国面临侵略战争和国民党时期的摧残,在此期间,中国电影又一次地停顿了下来。
1949年新中国成立后,国家开始了电影产业的改造和建设,体制化改革也让中国电影进入了新的阶段。
2.新中国时期(1949年-1976年)新中国成立后,电影成为了国家的宣传工具之一。
中国的电影领域在政治、宣传和文化层面开始着手改革。
50年代初,中国电影人开始拍摄反映解放战争与抗美援朝的影片,如《渡江战役》、《英雄儿女》。
这些影片不仅为社会树立起了理念标杆,同时也为新文化的发展做出了很大的贡献。
电影文化的发展成为了中国文化转型的重要组成部分。
到了70年代末,第五代导演潜力崛起,中国电影开始具有艺术性,也在国际上享有很高的声誉。
张艺谋的《红高粱》、陈凯歌的《霸王别姬》、田壮士的《黄土地》等作品让世界再次惊讶,中国电影的资深电影风格和制作技巧成功晋级到世界级影坛。
好莱坞电影的发展历史范文我把自己压箱底的积累给你,供参考,希望能够帮助你:纵观好莱坞发展史,好莱坞电影美学风格在上世纪的六、七十年代有一次较大的变化,在此之前可以称为经典好莱坞时期,而之后则可成为新好莱坞时期。
第一次世界大战结束以后十年中间,对于美国电影而言,乃是一个征服全世界的兴盛时期。
外国影片在美国两万家电影院的上映节目中已经完全消灭。
在世界各国,美国影片占着上映节目60~90%的优势,每年约有两亿美元被用来生产800多部影片。
电影方面的投资超过15亿美元,这样大的资金使电影事业在美国成了一种大规模的工业,在资本上可以与制造汽车、罐头、钢铁、石油、纸烟这些美国最大的工业相比拟。
派拉蒙、劳乌、福斯、米高梅、环球这些大制片公司,支配着影片的生产以及全世界影片的上映和发行。
它们和华尔街的金融巨头如柯恩·洛埃伯银行、通用汽车公司、杜邦·德·奈莫尔、摩根、洛克菲勒等密切地结合在一起。
自从格里菲斯失势之后,金融资本家所重视的已不是导演,而是电影明星。
后者成了制片公司的一种工具或者商标。
从这时起,影片的真正主人是制片人,也就是那些被华尔街的银行家所赏识与选定的企业家。
电影导演和照明技师、摄影师、布景设计师一样,只不过是每周领取一定报酬的受雇者而已。
制片人利用解除合同这种暗中威胁的办法,把导演过去所掌握的大部分实权,如对主题、明星和技师的选择、剧本和蒙太奇的仔细推敲、布景和服装的监督等等,全部夺取过去。
这样一来,制片人便成了决定艺术成败的一切因素的主人。
他最关切的乃是怎样多赚钱,他的董事会也只根据影片的利润率来估量他的价值。
因此摄制影片完全以票房收入为指导原则。
他们对独立的影评家的评论,满不放在眼中,而事实上,这种影评在美国当时可说几乎全未存在。
但制片人自己只在幕后指挥一切。
在好莱坞露面的乃是电影明星,而“明星制度”也成为好莱坞征服世界的基础。
观众对电影明星的崇拜是用几百万张签名的照片来维持的,广告和宣传在这些偶像周围创造一种传奇的气氛。