Development of Film
The underlying principle of cinema, that an image of an object remains projected on the retina for a split-second longer than it is actually there, causing the images to blur into the illusion of
motion, was introduced to the scientific world in 1824 by English physician Peter Mark Roget in his paper "Persistence of Vision with Regard to Moving
Objects". The film process may first have been created by Louis Le Prince, working in New York City,
who patented his process for "the successive production... of objects in motion... by means of a projector" in 1886. But while travelling to Paris to demonstrate his process in 1892 he vanished.
The first commercially developed process was by Thomas
Edison's employee William Kennedy
Laurie Dickson, who first demonstrated his Kinetoscope in March 1891. The first public display of this process took place on May 20, 1891 to members of the National Federation of Women's Clubs. Dickson left Edison Co. in 1895 and Edison himself claimed all credit for the process. People were paying to view Kinetoscope films by
April 1894. The Kinetoscope was a powerful viewing experience but a private one, meant for
an individual or perhaps a family.
It was in America that people were first induced
to pay to watch -- in May 1895 in a store on Broadway. In Europe it was not until November 1895 in Berlin that a public 'film' was shown.
The quality of the films shown in New York and Berlin was extremely poor and used processes that had no lasting impact on film
technology. The 'true' debut of the motion picture is therefore usually dated to December 28, 1895 in Paris, where
at the Grand Cafe in Boulevard des Capucines the Lumière brothers had their first paying audience.
Color and Sound
Commercially successful color process dates from 1906 when George Albert Smith produced a two-color system using panchromatic stock in Brighton for Charles Urban Trading Co. as Kinemacolor. The first public presentation was not until February 1909 in
London, when a series of twenty short films by the Natural Colour Kinematograph Company
was shown at the Palace Theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue. However
there were a number of problems with Kinemacolor and colour stock cannot be regarded as a commercial reality until 1932 with the Technicolor three-colour
process.
Synchronized sound
was first demonstrated in 1900 at the Paris Exposition with a separate
sound-on-disc system. Sound-on-film was first patented in 1906 by Eugene Lauste in London, although the
system was not really successful until 1910 with the words "J'entends très bien
maintenant". A completed projector project was stymied by the outbreak of war and it was not until September 1922 that the process was demonstrated to an invited audience in Berlin. Yet again it was in New York in April
1923 that people first paid.
The first (reasonably) permanent cinema was the Vitascope Hall in New
Orleans. It opened in June 1896. Admission was 10 cents. The first important
purpose-built cinema was the Gaumont Film Company's
Gaumont-Palace in Paris, which opened in 1910 and could seat 5,000 people. There are many
early cinemas still in use in the UK, including the Electric Palace in Harwich.
Soon, the French concept of movies being shown in theaters became the dominant model, and entrepreneurs scurried to build
impressive movie houses all across North America and Europe.
The shift that occurred in the 1980s from seeing movies in a theater to watching
videos on a VCR, is a move quite close to the original idea of Thomas Edison. In the early part of that decade, the movie studios
tried legal action to ban home ownership of VCRs as a violation of copyright
which proved unsuccessful. However, that proved most fortituous as the sale and rental of their films on home video became a significant source of revenue for the film companies.
Film is now (2001) in the process of making another transition, from physical film stock
to digital cinema technology, driven by the availability of low cost
data storage and high-resolution digital displays.
History of Cinema by Region
The above article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
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