Category Archives: Reading Response

Fuller, Chpts. 4,5,6

In Fuller’s chapters 4, 5, and 6, we examine first (in chapters 4 and 5) the differences between the desires and needs of urban audiences and rural audiences, and then the subject that we have definitely already examined in class which is the development of the “movie fan.”

Firstly, when comparing the differences between rural and urban audiences we see the competition between narrative cinema and that of the “scenics,” the educational films, and the advertisement films.  At first reading, there were a lot of concepts that surprised me.  The desire for scenics instead of narrative seemed odd to me, and I couldn’t believe that people would pay just to see advertisement films (although I have stayed at home and watched the “Magic Bullet” infomercial more than once).  That said, it would make sense that a rural community would like to see the scenics that they do not get to see, and advertisements that aren’t already plastered all over the city like the urban audience sees.  This difference in communities also became present in viewing habits.  Urban audiences started to form “serious movie-watchers” who emphasized dark rooms, quiet theaters, and a deep focus on the film.

The idea of the fan is one that we have already begun to examine in class (starting with our very first screening of “The Purple Rose of Cairo”).  I hope to discuss further the idea of the quintessential movie fan as this was a concept that I am not sure I fully understood.

Hastie: Louise Brooks, Star Witness

Louise Brooks played quite the important role as a celebrity of early cinema.  I think one thing that Hastie’s essay really proves is that whatever Louise Brooks was doing, she was doing it right.  Most of the essay (and from what I gather most of the writing about Brooks) is a whole lot of “is she a lesbian? is she not a lesbian? was she sexual? wasn’t she sexual?”  I think regardless of the answers to those questions, what is important is that people were talking about Brooks, and that in 1997 there are still 20 pages essays debating the sexuality of the actress.  Brooks wanted people to discuss her and she was a master of giving enough information while still being vague enough to keep her name under discussion.  In an era today where celebrity gossip is a huge industry it is interesting to read about how it functioned in that era.  Brooks managed to accomplish on her own what only a small number of celebrities (who probably spend lots of money to hire people to do it for them), to be not only in a movie that people talk about but to be an actress that people talk about.

The second concept that this article brought to mind for me was the idea of the self-aware filmmaker.  The idea that Brooks may be a lesbian as was considered somewhat a sexual icon added to her identity in the film Pandora (or at least Hastie argues).  I think the concept of real life actors/directors affecting the way we take in a film is a very interesting one.  I see many films being released today where who the director is, or what an actor has done in the gossip pages, or even genre bending occurs.  These meta-films, where the film reflects upon itself to achieve more, is an interesting current trend, but it is also clear from Hastie’s article that it was something that was present in the era of Brooks and Pabst.

Altman: The Silence of Silents

Altman’s article is a very long winded history of the “silent film era” in which he attempts to debunk the classic theories of silent films, mainly that they all had the same kind of music playing similar to that played in the 1920’s.  While I found the history somewhat interesting to hear about, I am starting to get a little tired of these scholars writing long pieces that “finally debunk the common belief that…” as so many of these readings have been.  This isn’t to say that I think challenging the theories of early cinema is providing for good discussion and making me think about things differently.  I suppose I just do not like the tone of these pieces, where authors make it sound like they have written the most ground-breaking, riveting, piece of film history.

Anyway, Altman describes the different ways in which sound was incorporated into silent film including live music (improvised or well rehearsed), phonograph machines, player pianos, singing, and others.  He also contradicts the very first line of his article, a quote: “There never was a silent film” by explaining that sometimes silent films were shown in silence with no accompanying music.  Altman makes it very clear (as other authors we have read this semester also have) that the music of cinema was not just a straightforward evolution/copy of the theater, but rather its own creative original and diverse thing.

At The Picture Show: Preface/Chpt. 1

One of the concepts that I found interesting about Fuller’s preface and first chapter of “At The Picture Show…” was the culture clash between what urban audiences wanted to and were seeing and what people of the rural small town wanted to and were actually seeing.  Today I can see the same film here in Middlebury, Vermont than I can in New York city, and while I am sure there are probably still small towns in the United States that may ban “inappropriate” films, it seems that this was a culture clash that only existed in the early stages of film audiences.  It sounds like how this happened is something that will be addressed in much more detail later in Fuller’s book.

It seemed as if the wants of the small town audience that Fuller described made a quick and almost contradictory shift during the period she describes in Chapter 1.  At first, she describes a small town audience that was used to local entertainment by local performers, and a population of people who were somewhat afraid of the rapid growth of urban cities and of the films that came out of them.  The phrase “approved by the clergy” was very necessary on an advertisement for a traveling moving picture show company that came to town.  Companies like Cook and Harris had a decent market going.  To me the idea of the Nickelodeon contradicts these ideals and shows a shift in the market, in that now the audiences were looking for the same films that were being played in the urban cities.  The films were changing all the time allowing the mass-produced urban culture to continually flow through the small town.  Fuller makes the point that it was people like Cook and Fuller coming to the small town and changing audiences, but then audiences changing the way in which the films were presented.

Burian: Laterna Magika

Disclaimer: this reading response is probably going to be a little “I” oriented, but this is my internet journal so I think that that is okay…

I tried to keep an open mind while reading Burian’s article about Laterna Magika but after the first four pages or so I started to get frustrated that I was actually reading this article.  Burian accomplishes to very simply describe what Laterna Magika is, where it originated, who some of the big names are, and then lists in great detail simple examples in history of notable Laterna Magika performances, or times when the form slightly changed.

I do not want to sound bitter and angry, and to be honest I actually think that the idea of Laterna Magika sounds pretty cool and I would love to see a live performance of it.  Having said that, I did not enjoy reading Burian’s long winded descriptions of past performances that I feel I cannot really gather the full description of from a brief text.  I felt like Burian’s most descriptive analysis of the artform was a very short section where, to paraphrase, she (I don’t know if Jarka is a man or woman’s name) says “When combining two media you must be very careful and some critics say it is impossible.  Laterna Magika succeeds in combing two media, and it is good and interesting.”

To conclude, I would love to see a performance of Laterna Magika.  I think it would be an interesting experience and I’m sure it is an art form that beautifully combines two media that I find very entertaining.  However, I did not particularly enjoy reading Burian’s article describing this form of film/theater that is really only predominantly used in Czechoslovak  and what appears to have no real evolution of audience similar to what we have been describing in class.  I am very curious to see how are discussion will go in class about this reading, and how we are going to tie it into what we have been looking at.

Kramer: Buster’s Cinematic Fame

The story of Buster Keaton’s rise to vaudevillian fame and shift to a career in cinema was definitely an interesting look at the entertainment industry of the time.  That said, Kramer Kramer uses the story to debunk the popular myth that Keaton’s career was started by a chance encounter on the street, and makes claims about why the shift from theater to cinema took place.  I am not sure how much I agree with the latter of Kramer’s arguments.

When reading about the long career of Keaton and his family on stage it is interesting to hear about the strong reluctance the performer(s) had towards a film adaptation of the routine considering how famous he became as a film actor.  The opinion that Buster’s father, Joe Keaton, had about needing to connect with his audience and the manner in which he had perfected their performance but only for a live audience coincides with a lot of what we have been reading for class lately relating to an audiences need to interact with the performance.  I agree with Kramer’s argument that Keaton’s career was not started by an encounter on the street as it is clear from the history that Keaton had a long lasting career, a necessity to shift his audience/act, and a longstanding relationship with many of theater big shots that were moving towards film.

A problem with Kramer’s article that I do have is his claim near the end of the piece where he claims that Keaton’s shift towards film was not necessarily a given choice, and that the balance between stage and film was a very tight and not always decidedly advantageous one way or the other.  It just seemed to me that the entire rest of the article seemed to illustrate that Keaton’s act was struggling on the stage and that actors of his type and caliber were all gaining significantly more respect and money by switching to film.  In this sense, I disagree with Kramer and think that the shift from vaudevillian stage to the film screen was kind of an obvious choice and was a natural progression of the industry and the market.

Fuller’s Boundaries of Participation

I didn’t quite get what the final message of Fuller’s article was.  In her piece, “Boundaries of Participation…” she seems to give a pretty basic history of audience participation at the beginning of the 20th century, filled with important cultural and technological shifts, as well as colloquial stories that give us an idea of what she is describing.  That said, I was unclear as to how important she thinks audience participation is.  She mentions the works of other film historians and their fear that audience members were turning into comatose blobs in their seats, simply taking in the images on the screen.  What I would have liked from her was whether or not she thought this was true or false and whether or not it was a major problem.  I guess what she was trying to do was show little ways in which participation was still very active even after the shift towards taming audiences, thus proving those historians wrong. Again, though I would have liked her to make some bolder statements, and maybe to have addressed the fact that the audience has experience has definitely evolved to that of a tame and quiet one during screenings (despite all the obvious participation that is still possible).

What I found interesting about Fuller’s historical description of audience evolution, was the way in which individual participation became a mass produced commodity.  Instead of things like intimate screenings with a live musician that only a small group could find themselves participating with, the studios found ways like star promoting and the appeal of screenplay writing to essentially sell everyone the same feeling of participation.  To me this is a strange and almost contradictory concept.  The idea of connecting individuals to your art through a mass-produced corporate creation is definitely something present in so much of our media today, and it was sad to read about its beginnings considering the wholesome (and probably really entertaining, in my opinion) ways in which audience participation started.

Reading Response: Gunning’s Aesthetics and Attraction

The period known as the “Cinema of Attractions” as been one that I have discussed in many of my film classes.  That said, while in all of those classes we looked at the type of film and what made it a cinema of attraction this is the first time when I am really thinking about the audience.  I know what makes a film an “attraction film” but I guess I never really examined the audience motivation for those characteristics (or maybe I just forget doing it…).

What was interesting about these Gunning readings was that, unlike my previous discussions of cinema of attractions where I interpreted the evolution of moving pictures as the evolution of the filmmakers learning how to use a new art form, these two articles focus on the evolution of the audience.  I think that the example of the audience fleeing from the image of the oncoming train illustrates an audience that was new to the attraction and was willing to believe the impossible.  The films were geared towards the audience, whether it be a train coming right at you, a wink from an actor, or a filmed burlesque/magic show aimed at an audience.  I think the difference between these early audiences and the audiences of today is that we are no longer willing to accept those actions geared towards us.  We are aware of a camera and what it can do and while many of the films of today are filled with plenty of attractions, we need the narrative that was lacking in the films of pre-1906 in order to hook us in.  We are no longer relying purely on the aesthetics of the visual but we also need to story and the mental in order to connect us to the film.

Question: Is Gunning giving early audiences too much credit or not enough?  He confused me there.