Moving Images, Understanding Media

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Chapter 5 Personal Expression and Studio Production 171

By the middle of the twentieth century, equipment and materials were
developed and made available so that consumers could also create motion
pictures for personal use. Although professional moviemaking tools and
methods remained almost completely separate from those of amateurs for
most of fi lm history, the development of more inexpensive cameras and
more widely available fi lm stocks and other recording media allowed more
widespread creation of motion pictures by small-scale outfi ts, independent
collectives, and individual artists. Associated shift s in production have been
taking place ever since and have accelerated extensively with the advent and
rapid growth of digital media.

Reaching the Audience

Th e conditions of production have been the most central factor of the creation
of motion pictures since the birth of the cinema. Th e next step in the complete
chain of motion picture creation is the point at which a movie reaches an
audience. Th e ability of a movie to reach an audience is fundamental to its
existence, and the capacity of moviemakers to access viewers stems from
their power to assure widespread distribution of their feature fi lm, short,
commercial, or other type of motion picture.
At fi rst, motion pictures were briefl y seen in Nickelodeons and soon
aft er in movie theaters. Cinemas then became the exclusive site for the
experience of viewing motion pictures for nearly half a century. At the core
of the development of fi lm studios was the building and running of movie
theaters across the country and the world as well as the creation of systems
for printing and shipping reels of fi lm to exacting deadlines. As you learned
during the discussion of the integration of sound, the infrastructure of fi lm
distribution and the relationships of fi lm producers with projection venues

Figure 5-3 Tim Robbins
plays studio executive Griffi n
Mill in The Player, a satire on
the Hollywood studio system
written by Michael Tolkin and
directed by Robert Altman.
(Courtesy Fine Line Features/
Photofest)

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