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Film-Philosophy International
Salon-Journal (ISSN 1466-4615) Vol. 9 No. 19, April 2005 |
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Marshall Deutelbaum Studying Early Film History: On Popple and Kember's _Early Cinema_ Simon Popple and Joe Kember _Early Cinema: From Factory Gate to Dream Factory_ London and New York: Wallflower Press, 2004 ISBN 1-903364-58-2 136 pp. Rather than a historical survey of the cinema's
development over its first twenty years, Simon Popple and Joe Kember's _Early
Cinema: From Factory Gate to Dream Factory_ is intended to introduce
undergraduate students to early cinema as a field of study. The authors, both
from the University of Teeside in England, have done a remarkable job of
presenting a great deal of information within the restrictive format of
Wallflower Press's Short Cuts series. After a first chapter that presents a
time-line whose chronology of events more or less maps the field between 1895
and 1914, the second chapter summarizes the key methodological approaches
that have been used in attempts to organize the field of study. Some of
these, the authors explain, are insufficient because they are predicated upon
the assumption that the history of film is simply a linear progression caused
either by ever-finer technical perfection (technological determinism) or the
inventive minds of exceptional filmmakers (The Great Man Theory). More
productive approaches in the form of revisionist histories began to appear
after 1978. The authors note that: 'the birth of early film history as a substantial
academic discipline is often cited as a consequence of the 1978 Brighton FIAF
conference . . . A subsequent process of re-evaluation, applying approaches
derived largely from the modern discipline of film studies and textual
analysis, generated a series of publications and conferences with
ramifications both for the study of early film and for film studies in general'
(30). Throughout the remainder of their text the authors use a
case study approach to illustrate how reception theory and formal analysis
can reveal the significance of films that at first glance seem to be of
little or no interest. The authors quote newspaper notices about one-shot
films shot at factory gates, for example, to document the pleasure audiences
expressed at seeing local sights and people with whom they worked. Another
case study illustrates the intertextual influence of other media on the
depictions of the Boers in films depicting the Boer War. Throughout the text
they insist that meaning and significance are never self-evident, but must be
discerned through contextualization. Chapter 3 touches upon the beginnings of film censorship
and swiftly surveys the non-narrative uses of film, particularly films for
educational purposes, reconstructed actualities, and trick films. Curiously,
even though they discuss Melies here, they wait until Chapter 4 to present a
lengthy discussion of J. A. Maskelyne's use of film in his magic shows at
London's Egyptian Hall. In the remainder of Chapter 4 they draw upon their
considerable expertise in the history of fairground entertainments and
itinerant showman to discuss changing exhibition practices and audience
reception in the years before and after fixed cinemas became the norm. With Chapter 5 (half again as long as any of the earlier
chapters) the authors turn to a survey of the form and content of narrative
film. They organize their discussion around Andre Gaudreault's distinction
between films from the earlier part of the period like British Biograph's _He
and She_ (1899), that show events but do not invite audience involvement,
with films from the latter half of the period like _Rescued by Rover_ (1906),
in which editing encourages the emotional involvement of viewers through
identification and suspense. Not surprisingly, the authors offer _The Birth
of a Nation_ (1915) as the period's crowning example of this type of film. Unfortunately, exactly what happened stylistically in
the years between _Rescued by Rover_ and _The Birth of a Nation_ is handled
quite briefly, most likely because of the authors' decision to devote the
chapter that might have surveyed these developments to exhibition and reception.
Consequently, there's little discussion of the development of cross-cutting
during those years, as well as almost no mention of how the realism of
three-dimensional film sets came to replace painted backdrops. This weakness
is underlined most glaringly by the absence from the otherwise excellent and
extensive bibliography of a number of references related to these
developments. Among the missing are both volumes of the _Biograph Bulletins_,
the ongoing re-evaluation of D. W. Griffith's work in the multi-volume _The
Griffith Project_, Charlie Keil's _Early American Cinema in Transition:
Story, Style, and Filmmaking, 1907-1913_, and Ben Brewster and Lea Jacobs's
_Theatre to Cinema: Stage Pictorialism and the Early Feature Film_. Another serious omission -- at least for students -- is
the absence of any mention of the most striking of re-evaluations in early
cinema, pre-Soviet Russian film. Even though the authors declare their
intention to restrict _Early Cinema_ to British films primarily, I wish they
would have included some mention of Evgenii Bauer. Curiously enough, even
though the authors include Yuri Tsivian's _Early Cinema in Russia and its
Cultural Reception_ in the bibliography, neither _Silent Witnesses: Russian
Films 1908-1919_, which lists the some 300 surviving films from the Czarist
era with annotations from newspapers and filmmakers' diaries and memoirs, nor
Tsivian's remarkable CD-ROM, 'Immaterial Bodies: A Cultural Anatomy of Early
Russian Films' appear there. Also missing is the DVD of three of Bauer's
films, _Mad Love_, with Tsivian's insightful commentary. The two discs offer
students a remarkable introduction to the acting styles, set design, and
cinematic aesthetics at the end of the early era. Despite these omissions _Early Cinema_ is an impressive
achievement. Indeed, a more troubling problem is the editorially imposed
format which undoubtedly has limited the depth of the discussion and
permitted only a half dozen illustrations. Unfortunately, there is only so
much that can be crammed into prescribed space. The initial chronology
illustrates the problems the authors faced in constructing their text: much
of what is mentioned cannot be addressed in the following chapters.
Consequently, for students new to the subject, the chronology will seem at
times an opaque list of facts without consequence (e.g. the names of the
various sound and color processes patented within the period) and events
whose outcomes are left unexplained (e.g. the establishment of the Motion
Pictures Patent Company is noted (19), but its demise is never mentioned).
Perhaps the authors might have lessened the problem by integrating the
chronology of events within the following chapters, which are themselves
already ordered chronologically. Indeed, students would benefit from a similar
redistribution of at least some of the titles listed in the bibliography.
Even though the authors divide the bibliography into a short group of titles
headed 'Essential Reading' and a considerably longer list headed 'Secondary
Reading', the lack of annotations means that for beginning students the
bibliography may well be even more opaque than the chronology of events.
Indeed, there would be a number of practical benefits from the integration of
some bibliographic entries into the existing chapters. I want to suggest the benefits to be gained from such a
repositioning by citing titles *missing* from the bibliography whose
incorporation within the text demonstrate the critical methodologies the
authors encourage students to adopt. For example, even though the authors
identify the 1978 FIAF conference as the impetus for the critical
reexamination of early cinema, they do not include in their bibliography the
two volume set that resulted from the conference, _Cinema 1900-1906: An
Analytical Study_. How much more pedagogically effective it would be to
apprise students of these essays and analytic filmography close to the
mention of the conference in the text, rather than bury their existence in an
un-annotated bibliography. The striking results of revisionist history
deserve to be highlighted. Incorporating some references within the text would also
enable the authors to direct students to exemplary illustrations of
contextualization. For example, in _Edison Motion Pictures, 1890-1900: An
Annotated Filmography_, Charles Musser quotes extensively from newspapers of
the era to explain the significance of actualities that without explanation
might seem unimportant. The same is true of _La Production cinematographique
des Freres Lumiere_, the standard reference for the Lumiere Films, which also
quotes from travel guides of the era to suggest why some subjects were
selected and camera positions chosen to match their verbal descriptions. Both
of these reference works are extensively illustrated with frame enlargements
from every one of their surviving films. (The frame enlargements in _La
Production cinematographique des Freres Lumiere_ are on a CD-ROM which also
includes several complete films.) Bibliographic citations can direct students to other
sorts of visual material that the authors have been unable to include in the
text. This is particularly true in the case of early color processes. Two
worthwhile texts missing from the bibliography that would serve this purpose
are _'Disorderly Order': Colours in Silent Film_ and the bilingual _Tutti I
Colori del Mundo: Il Colore nei Mass Media tra 1900 e 1930/All the Colours of
the World: Colours in Early Mass Media 1900-1930_. Annotated references within a chapter can also
illustrate how the new insights of revisionist history have corrected
erroneous, if firmly established, truths of received film history. While the
authors briefly mention Melies's _A Trip to the Moon_ and its trick
photography, how much more striking it would be if they also cited essays that
corrected our understanding of both. In _Melies, Images et Illusions_,
Jacques Malthete convincing demonstrates that even though Melies created his
trick transformations, appearances, and disappearances by stopping his camera
as received history tells us, when it came to printing his films he was much
more concerned with editing than has generally been thought. He carefully
trimmed and edited those transformational moments before printing to make
their appearance perfect, something that was impossible to do solely within
the camera. Received history also claims with certainty that _A Trip to the
Moon_ was inspired by Jules Verne's speculative fiction. However, in an essay
entitled 'Le Voyage dans la Lune, Film Composite', in _Melies: Magie et
Cinema_, Thierry Lefebre demonstrates that Melies conceived the film
especially for the US market in imitation of a cyclorama entitled _A Trip to
the Moon_, the most successful attraction on the midway of the 1901
Pan-American Exposition held in Buffalo, New York. Moreover, on the basis of
surviving stereopticon cards, Lefebre shows that much of the film's visual
design, if not its narrative sequence, was based upon the 1877 staging of
Jacques Offenbach's opera, _Le Voyage dans la Lune_. Integrating such results of revisionist history as these
would offer useful supplements to the authors' own case studies.
Nevertheless, even without the degree of integration I have described, _Early
Cinema_ remains an effective introduction for undergraduate students to the
issues and potentialities of studying early film. West Lafayette, Indiana, USA Bibliography Aubert, Michelle and Jean-Claude Seguin, eds, _La
Production cinematographique des Freres Lumiere_ (Paris: Centre nationale de
la Cinematographie (CNC), 1996). Bowser, Eileen, ed., _Biograph Bulletins, 1908-1912_
(New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1973). Brewster, Ben and Lea Jacobs, _Theatre to Cinema: Stage
Pictorialism and the Early Feature Film_ (New York: Oxford University Press,
1997). Cherci Usai, Paolo, ed., _The Griffith Project_ (London:
British Film Institute, 1999-Present). Cherchi Usai, Paolo, ed., _Silent Witnesses: Russian
Films 1908-1919_ (London: British Film Institute, 1989). Hertogs, Daan and Nico de Clerk, eds, _Disorderly Order:
Colours in Silent Film_ (Amsterdam: Stichting Nederlands Filmmuseum, 1996). Holman, Roger, ed., _Cinema 1900-1906: An Analytical
Study_, 2 vols (Brussels: FIAF, 1982). Keil, Charlie, _Early American Cinema in Transition:
Story, Style, and Filmmaking, 1907-1913_ (Madison: University of Wisconsin
Press, 2001). Lefebre, Thierry, 'Le Voyage dans la Lune, film
composite', in Jacques Malthete, Jacques Mannoni, and Laurent Mannoni, eds,
_Melies: Magie et Cinema_ (Paris: Paris-Musees, 2002). Malthete, Jacques, _Melies, Images et Illusions_ (Paris:
Association Exporegie, 1996). Musser, Charles, _Edison Motion Pictures, 1890-1900: An
Annotated Filmography_ (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997). Niver, Kemp, eds, _Biograph Bulletins, 1896-1908_ (Los
Angeles: Locare Research Group, 1971). Tsivian, Yuri, _Immaterial Bodies: A Cultural Analysis
of Early Russian Films_ (Los Angeles: University of Southern California
Annenberg Center for Communication, 1999). _Tutti I colori del mundo: il colore nei mass media tra
1900 e 1930/All the Colours of the World: Colours in early mass media
1900-1930_ (Reggio Emilia: Edizioni Diabasis, 1998). Copyright © Film-Philosophy 2005 Marshall Deutelbaum, 'Studying Early Film History: On
Popple and Kember's _Early Cinema_', _Film-Philosophy_, vol. 9 no. 19, April
2005 <http://www.film-philosophy.com/vol9-2005/n19deutelbaum>. |
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