Childrens Illustrated Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

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movies

360


1895 First public movie show
held in Paris.
1905 In the United States the
first nickelodeon film theatre
opens.
1907 Hollywood founded.
1927 The Jazz Singer (USA) is the
first full-length film with sound.
1929 First Academy Awards.
1928 American cartoonist Walt
Disney (1901-66) launches his
most popular cartoon character,
Mickey Mouse, in the movie
Steamboat Willie.
1935 First full-spectrum
Technicolor feature, Becky Sharp,
is released.
1953 First CinemaScope (wide
screen) movie, The Robe, released.
1995 Toy Story, first completely
computer-animated feature
film, released.
2003 Lord of the Rings trilogy is
the first movie to win an award for
Best Digital Acting Performance.
2009 Avatar becomes the first
movie to create an entire world
using motion capture technology.

Movies

SPeCIAl eFFeCTS
Special effects have created a vast new fantasy world in movies. In a technique known as
back projection, first used as early as 1913, the cinematographer projected a previously
filmed background on to a screen from behind. Actors or models were then filmed in
front of the screen, giving the impression that they were actually at that location. Glass
screens painted with realistic backgrounds, studio sets wired up with controlled explosions,
special smoke and wind machines, and stop-frame animation of models were all used to
help bring make-believe scenes to life. As recently as the 1970s, life-like models were still
being filmed in a studio to produce gruesome horror effects, such as the shark in Jaws,
and convincing space battles, such as those in Star Wars. Today, almost all of these
effects are created digitally using powerful computers.

DIGITAl TrICkery
Digital video editing software allows moviemakers to insert
actors into almost any environment imaginable. Actors are
filmed in front of a green or blue “matte” background, which
is later replaced with a new scene—one either filmed
elsewhere or created on computer. real people can also be
combined with computer-generated characters and models,
as in Harry Potter, and whole armies can be created that have
an “artificial life” entirely of their own, as in Lord of the Rings.

The actors are
superimposed on a
new background, and
the wires supporting
them are erased.

DUBBInG
The sound editor is responsible
for assembling the soundtrack for the
movie. This consists of dozens of separate tracks, including all
the dialogue, music, sound effects, and background sound.
After editing, these sounds have to be balanced against each
other and blended in a process called dubbing. Technicians
known as mixers watch the movie and operate controls on
a sound console to get perfect timing and balance of sounds.

The actors are filmed
against a background of
solid blue or green color.

spielberg
Directors often become
“stars” in their own
right. Director Steven
Spielberg was born in


  1. He shot his first
    film when he was 12
    and won a contract
    with Universal Studios,
    Hollywood, after
    leaving college. He
    became the most
    successful American
    director of the 1970s,
    1980s, and 1990s with
    blockbusters such as
    Jaws (1975) and Jurassic
    Park (1993), and Oscar
    winners such as
    Schindler’s List (1993).


Find out more
Cameras

Music 364-

Television
Theater

eDITInG
The movie editor ensures that all
the shots are in the right order,
and that the movie lasts the right
amount of time. But editing is
more complex than that. A
good editor can improve the
movie by cutting out
sequences that slow down the
action or inserting close-up
shots to make a scene more
dramatic. editing is a highly
skilled process. In the past it
involved physically cutting
and taping together pieces of
film, though now it is usually
done digitally. The director
and movie editor work together
for hours to get the right
combination of shots in each scene.

“BUlleT-TIMe” SlOW MOTIOn eFFeCT
each small hole in the scene above conceals a
still camera taking a picture of the scene from a
different angle. The series of shots is put together
in sequence on computer, along with thousands
of extra “in-between” frames created using
software. The effect is of the camera moving
around the action in extreme slow motion.

On computer, the colored
background is easily
removed using a software
filter—sometimes called
“Chromakey”.

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