Saint-Saëns and Silent Film / Sound Film and Saint-Saëns

2021 ◽  
pp. 357-369
Author(s):  
MARTIN MARKS
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Cleo Hanaway-Oakley

This concluding chapter briefly turns to Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake (1939). Joyce’s cacophonous ‘book of the dark’, with its many references to cinema, forms the centre of a discussion of the emergence of sound film. The importance of touch in both silent and sound film is restated through reference to the film criticism of Bryher, Dorothy Richardson, and Gertrude Stein, and Chaplin’s City Lights (1931), a late silent film focusing on Chaplin’s relationship with a blind flower-seller. The complex interrelationship between sound and image in both film and Finnegans Wake is contemplated through gestalt theory and multi-perspectival ‘figure–ground images’. The chapter concludes by returning to Ulysses, to consider the never-produced Reisman–Zukofsky screenplay and the ways in which the film would, and would not, have affirmed a phenomenological reading of Joyce’s text.


Author(s):  
James Buhler

Chapter 2 examines several major theories that emerged during the transition to sound film, when even the definition of the sound film was contested. The theories of sound film that arose during the transitional decade from 1926 to 1935 focused on the closely related forms of recorded theater and silent film and worked to articulate how sound film differed from them. They also gave considerable attention to asynchronous sound in part because it was a figure specific to sound film (or in any event more difficult to produce in other art forms) and in part because asynchronous sound had affinities with montage. The chapter focuses on five important theorists who wrote prolifically during the transition years: Sergei Eisenstein, Vsevolod Pudovkin, Béla Balázs, Rudolf Arnheim, and Harry Potamkin.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie K. Allen

This book challenges the historical myopia that treats Hollywood films as always having dominated global film culture through a detailed study of the circulation of European silent film in Australasia in the early twentieth century. Before World War I, European silent feature films were ubiquitous in Australia and New Zealand, teaching Antipodean audiences about Continental cultures and familiarizing them with glamorous European stars, from Asta Nielsen to Emil Jannings. After the rise of Hollywood and then the shift to sound film, this history—and its implications for cross-cultural exchange—was lost. Julie K. Allen recovers that history, with its flamboyant participants, transnational currents, innovative genres, and geopolitical complications, and brings it vividly to life. She reveals the complexity and competitiveness of the early cinema market, in a region with high consumer demand and low domestic production, and frames the dramatic shift to almost exclusively American cinema programming during World War I, contextualizing the rise of the art film in the 1920s in competition with mainstream Hollywood productions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-91
Author(s):  
James Buhler ◽  
Anahid Kassabian ◽  
David Neumeyer ◽  
Robynn Jeananne Stilwell ◽  
Kyle Barnett ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Michael V. Pisani

This chapterexamines the influence of the theater music of the nineteenth century on modern film music practices. It shows that the soundscape of the theater was considerably richer and more varied than has previously been suggested and that the techniques of the nineteenth-century melodrama also leapt beyond the silent film to influence underscoring practices in the sound film of the 1930s and 1940s. It provides examples to illustrate that many more useful connections could be made between the practice of composing music for the theater and composing for film melodramas.


Author(s):  
Emilio Sala

In the methodological introduction to his book Silent Film Sound (2004), Rick Altman focused his attention on “the extremely diverse pre-cinema practices that served as early models for film sound.” The aim of this chapter is to closely examine one such practice: that of the Chat Noir’s Shadow Theatre between 1886 and 1897. The first part of the chapter analyzes the different kinds of music that were used to accompany the shadow plays at the Parisian cabaret. The latter part focuses on the reconfiguration of the shadow plays after the closure of the Chat Noir cabaret (1897), exploring how Maison Mazo transformed the Chat Noir’s “ombres artistiques” into a mediatized and industrial production, while also promoting their artistic character in opposition to cinema’s photographic realism.


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