An Introduction to Film

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Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy), innovative direc-
tors (Mack Sennett and Hal Roach), and such
enduring silent movies (shorts, series, and fea-
tures) as Chaplin’s The Gold Rush (1925) and
Keaton’s The General(1926).
Other notable films produced in this period
include Robert J. Flaherty’s Nanook of the North
(1922), regarded as the first significant documen-
tary film. The art of animation progressed in the
hands of such artists as Otto Messmer (the Felix
the Cat series), Walt Disney, who made his first car-
toons in 1922, and Max and Dave Fleischer, who

experimented with color and sound in the early
1920s and whose most endearing character was
Betty Boop. Benefiting from Griffith’s enormous
influence, other filmmakers made improvements in
design, lighting, cameras and lenses, the use of
color, special effects, and editing equipment. Noth-
ing, of course, would be more important than the
experiments with sound that led to the complete
transformation of the movie industry after 1927. In
the meantime, however, international develop-
ments were influencing film history.

1919—1931: German Expressionism


During part of the period just discussed, Eastern
and Western Europe were engulfed in chaos. The
First World War (1914–18), in which many millions of
people died, pitted the United Kingdom, Russia, Italy,
and the United States against Germany, Austria-
Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria. (The

The first female directorAmong early filmmakers, Alice
Guy Blaché stands out as the first female director in film
history. Born in France, where she worked with the Gaumont
Film Company, she came to the United States shortly after
1907, founding her own studio and making dozens of
narrative films, most of which are lost. Making an American
Citizen(1912; 16 min.) is unremarkable in its theatrical staging
and acting but is well photographed and edited. What’s most
important is its outspoken feminist message. It tells the story
of Ivan and his wife, new Russian emigrants. Ivan believes in
the Old World custom of wife abuse. In this shot, a well-
dressed New Yorker threatens Ivan when he catches him
beating his wife (note the Statue of Liberty in the
background). This and other encounters with liberated
American males (including a judge who sentences him to
prison) convince him to love and respect his wife. With the
happy ending, he is, as the title card proclaims, “Completely
Americanized.” Guy Blaché was not only ahead of her time as
a film director, but also highly optimistic in her views about
American male-female relationships.


The Birth of a NationThe turning point in D. W. Griffith’s
great epic (1915) comes in the middle of the movie, as the
title card says: “And then, when the terrible days were over
and a healing time of peace was at hand... came the fated
night of April 14, 1865.” The scene is Ford’s Theatre in
Washington, D.C., where a gala performance is being held to
celebrate General Robert E. Lee’s surrender. In this shot,
President and Mrs. Abraham Lincoln enter and greet the
enthusiastic audience. Moments later, he is assassinated,
ending Part I, “War,” and opening Part II, “Reconstruction,” a
saga of Southern white racism that is the most controversial
part of the movie.

A SHORT OVERVIEW OF FILM HISTORY 443
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