Silent Film

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Edison claimed that motion pictures would do for the eye “what phonograph does for the ear” (Gitelman, 1999, p.87). And the inventor's kinescope did “locate the common dominator of vision and hearing" (p.87). The Jazz Singer (1927) was the first commercially successful 'talkie', or film that has synchronized sound. By 1930, films that were produced without accompanying sound were becoming more uncommon. While films are occasionally made without a soundtrack as an aesthetic choice, the technology and conventions that were utilized to make silent films are no longer in use. Also exhibitors of films have theaters capable of playing sound films. The main features of the medium, though, display a self awareness that silent film was a transitional mode of mediation that would be quickly supplanted once solutions were found to synchronize sound and amplify it for public display. During the silent film era, inventors looked towards a horizon where “orality, aurality, and visuality would huddle together under one potential umbrella of marvelous future technology” (Gitelman, p.87).

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Pantomime

Silent films tended to be overacted. Due to the lack of sound, the expression of emotion and action was acted out very stylistically and dramatically. Charlie Chaplin was famous for his Tramp character that utilized mime and slapstick to create visual comedy that did not require codified verbal symbols to understand. There was a push for realism in the acting that could have no been made possible without the addition of sound and another layer of code to move the story forward beyond the intertitles that were already utilized in film.

Intertitles

Intertitles were title cards that were placed in a scene in a silent film usually to express dialogue or occasionally to provide some kind of exposition. While earlier films did not have standardized placement of intertitles, the convention that was utilized most frequently mimics the time of speech in the scene in a Skeuomorphic fasion. A character would begin to 'speak,' or move their mouths, and an intertitle would come on screen, then the actor would be shown moving their mouth and finishing there 'speech.'

Speech and the action were therefore two distinct parts of a film. So much so that there were 'scenario writers' and there were 'title writers' during the silent film era. The language and action composed were by two different people. But the dialogue or narrative taking center stage during a film is remediated in the modern industry. Modern film is a vococentric medium that privileges the voice over other sounds that are reduced to the background. Just as the intertitles gave the observer necessary information for understanding the story in addition to the visuals on the screen, the dialogue gives added value to the story. "Principle of synchresis...[is] the forging of an immediate necessary relationship between something one sees and something one hears" (Chion, 1994, p.5). The additional layer of codified expression helps the user quickly understand situations in motion pictures be it in textual and aural.

Textual information was provided in silent film to help frame the action, just as live music did in early films.

Music

Auguste and Louis Lumiére had one of the first public exhibition of motion pictures that were filmed and projected by their Cinématographe in 1895 (Wierzbicki, 2009). There they employed a piano player at their first exhibition and eventually hired full orchestras to accompany their films. The earliest films had similar to the content of stereoscopic studies that included focused on recording and utilizing movements and bodies (Zielinski, 2002, p.245). Out of the 1,424 films the Lumiére brothers created between 1895 and 1907, only approximately 100 were staged and the majority were documenting occurrences. Films were shown in Vaudeville theaters before the rise of the Nickelodeon beginning in 1905. With the release of feature length films, larger theaters were built and the Nickelodeons went into decline. Each of these stages had an impact on the relationship of sound and the silent film.

Vaudeville

"like most films offered to the public after the turn of the century the venue for 'The Great Train Robbery' was the vaudeville theater" (quoted in W FIND PAGE #)

Vaudevillian audiences were accustomed to musical support for the myriad of acts performed on stage, and films were no different. By 1908, 96 percent of American Films had a narrative and the industry was becoming more standardized in technology, content and presentation (W p.27) which lead to the rise of venues just for movie display.

Nickelodeons

Odeion is a Greek word for a theater with a roof. With the rise of Nickleodeons

"Funning" musicians purposely using music to make fun of an aspect of the film. The viewing experience was also very fractured due to funning and musicians that did not play appropriate or constant music. During this time, trade publications began to publish notes to suggest what type of music be played with films. Also they tended to stress music continuality as an important part of the movie going experience (W 2009 p.34-35).

Photoplay Music

Because of the inconsistencies in Nickelodeon music

Films were finished and then the scores were created and distributed to theaters before the release dates.

Remediation

Professional silent films were remediated in the home movies before the 1980s when camcorders began to be able to capture sound. Home screenings of films though, are not typically accompanied by music, but rather conversation (Weirzbicki, 2009, p.19).

References

  1. Chion, M. (1994). Audio-vision: Sound on screen. Columbia University: New York.
  2. Wierzbicki, J.E. (2009). Film music: A history. Routledge: New York.
  3. Gitelman, L. (1999). Scripts, grooves, and writing machines: Representing technology in the Edison era. Stanford University: Stanford.