Thursday, February 18, 2010

Learn How To Suck Your Own Dick

: manufacturing ...

V his is an excerpt from a biography of Alfred Hitchcock. He says the incidents that marred the production of Suspicions and illustrate what we saw during the "Hollywood mode of production". You'll notice:
- the source of the history of film and processing - the time before the adaptation (storage of raw material) - the differentiation of tasks and division of labor (working at least for the scenario writer, the wife of H. and his principal collaborator) - the level where the decision is taken on the title - the importance of public opinion (denial of L. Olivier, Gallup, preview ...) - the importance of censorship (not suicide as a pregnant woman in the book) - the 'happy ending' - ... and the relative unpredictability of the reaction of the viewer.
...
"The English novelist Anthony Berkeley Cox was published in 1932 (under the pseudonym Francis Iles) a book entitled Before the Fact, which he had sold the rights three years later RKO. It was one of the titles that Hitchcock detained immediately when he discussed the project with Arthur Edington in June 1940. ....
The RKO tried since 1935 to produce a film version of the novel. It was at that Emmlyn Williams asked to write the screenplay, while Louis Hayward was to play the role of the husband. In 1939, RKO contacted Robert Montgomery and Geraldine Fitzgerald, and then (Lawrence) Olivier desired to make this film with a newcomer to partner, Maureen O'Hara. In May 1940, that Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent was finalizing ( Correspondent 17), professional journals indicated that it was a mistake from RKO to Laurence Olivier in the shoes of a murderer. In June, during his meeting with Edington, Hitchcock explained that Alma, Joan and himself would change history by putting the nasty actions of the husband on behalf of the fevered imagination of a woman suspicious and neurotic. it is crucial to insist on that, Hitchcock has always insisted that the situation was quite different: he wanted, he explained later, staying very faithful to the novel ....
Raphaelson ... accepted the proposal to work with Hitchcock. For their part Alma and Joan added scenes on the indications of Hitchcock. In late March, the scenario was hopelessly confused, real mixture of moods, styles and motivations that could never make a homogeneous film ....
There was first the problem of the title. At the time, the studios were wont to hire Gallup to ask viewers across the country to respond to proposals as they are submitted. the original title Before the Fact ( Before the facts) did not inspire many people. Hitchcock had originally thought Fright Fright, RKO to Suspiscious Lady ( A suspicious woman ) and Gallup had tested fifty titles sometimes pretty crazy. .... Only a few days before the November release of the film, that senior officials of the studio opted for a title for which Hitchcock was fighting since early summer., Suspicion (French Suspicion ) ....
Nobody knew quite what would be the end of the film. It was not only foreign to the methods of work of Hitchcock, but it also put the players in the most absolute confusion as they do not know what was the purpose of any sequence. ...
Alma and Joan worked hard at various possible endings. according to one version, Cary Grant devait, dans une brusque impulsion d'héroïsme assez mal justifiée, s'engager dans la Royal Air force afin de se laver de ses ignominies passées. Cette solution, rapidement abandonnée, le voyait mourir, patriote et repentant, ce qui évitait par la même occasion de recourir au suicide ou a l'assassinat. ...
Ils (Hitchcock et ses collaborateurs) envisagèrent , en dernier ressort, de passer outre aux objections du censeur devant le suicide d'une femme enceinte en ajoutant une scène où Fontaine rencontrerait secrètement un autre homme (le code admettait parfois le suicide quand il s'agissait d'un pécheur ou d'une pécheresse). la réaction à l'avant première was very clear. When the film, still untitled, was projected to pasadena with this final scene, the audience roared with laughter, so that Hitchcock and his team had to turn to other coils. Alma and Joan then devised a new ending, but the variations were so numerous, so we did not know very well what story was being told. A decision was finally made: the supçons Fontaine were based on his own neurosis, so that Grant was guilty of levity and indiscretion against the taxman.
... Yet to the surprise of everyone, the audience liked the movie, although critics were divided on the end. "
From PP 267-268Donald Spoto, Real Life of Alfred Hitchcock, Ramsay Pocket Theater, 1994 (1983), 615 p.
-------
century

Thursday, February 11, 2010

How Often Should I Clean My Katana

Duty free time

Topic: "Choose a film produced by a Hollywood studio before 1960 and show how this film is both an industrial object and a work of art.
You first described the conditions of production that determine the film developed as an object:
-
conditions of production - the organization of the studio,
- budget,
- personality and position, or producers,
- self-censorship and the Hays Code enforcement,
- "final cut" and / or "happy ending",
- advertising (Analysis of the poster), promotion. Warning signs exist in different countries.
- use the star system. Tell how the characteristics of the stars contributing to the publicity of the film.

also will explain how this film can be considered a work:
- Gender:
- What genre is the movie (western gangster, comedy ...)?
- he obeys the rules of the genre?
-how deviates he renews or there?
- author:
- director stage is considered to be a writer? since when? by whom? what are his other films?

-critical reception - what the critics said learned of this movie? when? in what media? Make a difference between criticism and scholarly literature promotional

- Film and Society
If the topic prompted, explore the film's relationships with contemporary society Is it a:
- entertainment, a political fable, a movie committed ... (Note: the film is never a reflection of society. It's always more complicated.)
Conclusion summary form.
-----------------------------------
Forme : devoir réalisé en traitement de texte, comportant une bibliographie et des appels de note. Format maximum : huit pages. Une ou deux illustrations bien choisies, légendées et commentées. Je n’ai pas besoin de la «fiche technique»
---------------------------------------
Recommandations ; Lisez bien le sujet : film produit à Hollywood et avant 1960.
Ce sujet est choisi de façon a vous engager à lire un ou des ouvrages d’histoire du cinéma. La meilleure façon de procéder est donc de trouver d’abord un livre de référence sur un réalisateur (Frank Capra, Cecil B. De Mille etc.) ou sur un genre ( la comédie, le western, le film black ...) and then choose the movie. This way you'll have some of the elements necessary for your work. Also I do not ask you how she looks on film, I ask you to identify the fact that criticism has produced an aesthetic appreciation of him, which is different. You also avoid the testimonials rave about the acting ...
Delivery date to be specified
Do not send me any duty by mail please.
--------------------------------------
A small filmography to help you choose
STUDIO TITLE DATE GENRE
Columbia Mr. Deeds Goes to Town 1936
Columbia Social comedy The Lady from Shanghai The Lady Shanghai 1946 Comedy XXth Century Fox drama
The Prisoner of Shark Island I did not kill Lincoln Historical drama
Liberty Films It's a Wonderful Life Wonderful Life 1946 MGM comedy
The Big Store The Marx Brothers department store 1941 Burlesque
MGM A Day at the Races A Day at the Races 1937 Burlesque
MGM Ivanhoe Ivanhoe 1952 MGM Adventure
The Philadelphia Story Comedy
MGM Ziegfield Follies Ziegfield Follies 1945 MGM musical film
Bathing Beauty's Ball Sirens 1944 MGM water ballet
The Shop Around the Corner 1940 Go Comedy
MGM Gone with the Wind Gone with the Wind 1939 Drama
Paramount Roman Holiday Roman Holiday 1953 Paramount Comedy
Rear Window Rear Window 1 954 Drama
Paramount The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance 1961 Western
Paramount The Scarlet Empress The Scarlet Empress 1934 Historical drama
Paramount Gunfight At The OK Corral Gunfight at the OK Corral Western
1957 Paramount Going my way The path strewn with stars 1943 Drama Farewell My Lovely
RKO Farewell My Lovely 1944 Thriller
RKO Once upon a Honeymoon Honeymoon 1942 Comedy (anti-Nazi)
RKO The Narrow Margin The Narrow Margin 1952 Police
United Artists and Warner To Have and have-nots The Port of Anguish 1944-45 Adventure
United Artists That Uncertain feeling Lost Illusions 1941 Comedy
United Artists Stagecoach The ride fantastiqu e 1939 Western
Universal Frankenstein 1931 Horror
Universal His Butler's Sister Sister my vale t 1946 Comedy
Warner Meet John Doe The man in the street 1941 Comedy Drama
The Warner Public Enemy's public enemy c 1931 Crime
Warner Lefthanded Man On The Left 1958 Drama

Warning: Internet plagiarism:
You can use data from the Internet by giving a precise reference for each citation. When the text is fully incorporated it in quotes and its provenance is given in footnotes. It is necessarily brief and a citation. A long text copied from Internet without indication of source is considered plagiarism.
also sticking hazardous chunks of text copied inconsistent on different sources and not responding to the question asked, even made in good faith, never give good results. Good luck

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Motocross Brent Corrigan

Course No. 2 Hollywood

The Hollywood movie, a product of "culture industry"?

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Read • Frédéric Barbier and Catherine Bertho Lavenir, Media History, Diderot Internet, A Colin, 2003, chapters on film • Jean-Loup Bourget, Hollywood, The Standard and the margin , Nathan cinema, chap. Use as needed 3-5 • Jean Tulard Movies Guide and Dictionary du cinéma- Acteurs-Producteurs-Scénaristes-Techniciens, coll Bouquins, nombreuses rééditions.
Compléments (facultatif)Coll., La propagande par les rêves ou le triomphe du modèle américain, Autrement, 1991262 p.Rick Altman, La Comédie musicale hollywoodienne, Les problèmes de genre au cinéma, A. Colin, 1992, 414 p.Jean-Louis Leutrat, Le Western, Quand la légende devient réalité, Découvertes Gallimard, 1995, 160 p. Daniel Royot, Hollywood, Que-Sais-Je, 1992, 127 p.
En anglais (facultatif)Robert Sklar, Movie-Made America , 1975-1994, …Vintage Book, 417 p. Un classique maintes fois réédité, facile à lire et souvent amusant; Janet Staiger(dir), The Studio System , Rutgers University Press, 1995, 333 p. Un ensemble d’articles plein de détails concrets

Films utilisés en cours • Warner, The Public Ennemy , 1931 (gangster)• Universal, Frankenstein , 1931 (fantastique)• RKO, Top Hat , 1935 (comédie musicale) Farewell my Lovely, 1944 (gangster)• Columbia, M. Deeds Goes to Town, 1936 (comédie sociale)• Paramount : Ivanhoe, 1952 (aventure)• United Artists, Stagecoach, 1939 [distribué par ](western)• MGM : Bathing Beauty, 1944 ( ballets aquatiques)


Introduction
Les films produits à Hollywood entre 1920 et 1949 illustrent l’un des aspects de l’industrialisation de la culture. Ils sont produits au sein du « système des studios » (Douglas Gomery, The Hollywood Studio System, 1986) selon un processus qui les apparente à des produits industriels. Pourtant leur contenu symbolique et l’émergence du cinéma comme « 7e art » les inscrivent ne même temps au cœur de la culture du XXe siècle.
On décrira ans une première partie les principaux studios de Hollywood puis on examinera dans une seconde partie les caractéristiques dans le mode de production des films qui apparentent ces derniers à des produits industriels.


1.Les studios : un panorama

Avant 1912 l’essentiel des films distribués aux Etats-Unis est d’origine européenne (Gaumont, Pathé, Mélies, films italiens). Edison, industriel et inventeur, tente de verrouiller le secteur par le biais des brevets sur le matériel. Il met en place le « Trust » mais échoue finalement à contrôler l’industrie du film aux USA.
Le secteur est réorganisé à the initiative of distributors who have networks "movie theaters" in major cities and who wish to supply their own rooms in films. They set up their studios in Hollywood, away from Edison and lawyers in an area where you can turn off most of the year.
The 5 majors (majors) are MGM, Paramount, Warner, Fox, RKO. They control 88% of 1935 total sales of American cinema. Universal, Columbia and United Artists are smaller. Together they control, in 1935, 95% of films distributed in the U.S.. Each
studio has its own history and style but all have similar economic structures

A. The five "major" majors
1) MGM (Loew's)
MGM (Metro-Goldwyn Mayer) was born at the end of the year 1920 from the merger of 3 companies. His boss is Louis B. Mayer (until 1950). It is a manager more than a creator, a conservative who rejects ideological commitments. Despite the studio's motto "art for art 'in the studio the producer comes before the director.
MGM employs directors, however the most prestigious of the 1920s: Von Stroheim Mervyn LeRoy, King Vidor, Cukor.
the studio tends to put them in the service of stars such as Clarence Brown Greta Garbo, Clark Gable or Victor Fleming. Among the female stars at MGM (Garbo, Joan Crawford), Jean Harlow is the figure the less sophisticated. Men (Clark Gable, James Stewart) are emblems of American manhood, sports, enterprising, full of humor and common sense:
The films are made with high professionalism: the costume, sound, photographs are extremely cared

2) Warner Bros
style studio Warner Brothers is more inventive, less rich, more engaged
Owners are 4 and 3 brothers Warner. Jack L. Warner personally directed the studio in Hollywood. He is assisted by Daryl Zanuck as production director from 1931 to 1933 and Hal B. Wallis (1933-46)
Warner considers the film a bit like when one considers the press. Various methods (ground mount, ellipse, music) accelerate the tempo of the films. The studio encourages individuals involved. Warner produced films that tell a story. She produced the first films on social issues. Some tracks sound like a headline news Ex: I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang adapted from the novel by R. Burn (Mervyb LeRoy, 1932) or Heroes for sale Wellman (1933), on the bloody repression of a union demonstration by Chicago police
A Warner celebs are in the service of history. The studio (which has a reputation as actors) uses Errol Flynn adventure films (The Charge of the Light Brigade, 1936), James Cagney, Edward G Robinson in the early gangster movies. Bette Davis, Vivian Leigh depict female characters strong and independent.

The great filmmakers Michael Curtiz Warner has specialized in films of adventure or espionage ( Casablanca, 1942). He realizes 80 films in 25 years or Raoul Walsh.

3) Paramount (Famous Players Lasky)
Paramount has long chaired by Zukor who titled his autobiography The Public is Never Wrong. He died in 1976 more than a century. The "director" was in the studio, a lot of prestige: some authors are considered, and Cecil B. De Mille, Lubitsch, Sternberg. The studio producing historical films and comedies
It uses sophisticated stars often "imported" from Europe as Marlene Dietrich, Emil Jannings, Claudette Colbert, Maurice Chevalier.

4) Fox (XXth century)
Fox moved to Hollywood in 1917. It merges with the XXth Century Productions Daryl Zanuck in 1935 after difficulties in passing the talking and the crisis of 29. Fox shows the documentary tradition. It attaches great importance to the scenario. It produces Grapes of Wrath ( Grapes of Wrath ) by John Steinbeck (1940). Many of his films are devoted to America "modern." The stars are less sophisticated and more representative of a contemporary America at the Warner: Gregory Peck, Richard Widmark, Betty Grable.


5) RKO
The acronym stands for Radio Keith Orpheum. The company is a partner of CAR and is investing in techniques of excellent sound quality. "Cultural, intellectual and refined" (JL Bourget), RKO productions likes upscale decor and are considered the most beautiful scenery of Hollywood (art deco). See Top Hat (Top The dancer, 1935), the most famous films of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. In a very different kind Orson Welles shot for RKO Citizen Kane (1940) and The Magnificent Ambersons (The Magnificent Ambersons , 1941)

B. The "little three"

1) Universal Universal
The company was founded by Carl Laemmle in 1912. ; He moved to Universal City in 1915. Early in the studio shows great skill in the fantasy genre (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, 1923, The Phantom of Opera, 1925, Frankenstein 1931, The Invisible Man, 1933). In difficulty in 1930 the studio will be redeemed multiple times. It merges with International Pictures in 1946 and was bought in 1962 by the giant Music Corporation of America. Its stars are Boris Karloff (Frankenstein, The Mummy 1932) and Bela Lugosi (Dracula, 1931). After 1946 Universal covers a wide range of genres: movies exotic westerns, comédies

2) Columbia
Columbia est fondé en 1924 par les frères Cohn. Harry Cohn en devient président en 1931 avec l’appui de Sam Spiegel et règne sur la société jusqu’en 1958. L’auteur principal du studio dans les années trente est Frank Capra (1927-1939) dont les comédies sociales traient des problèmes du New Deal ( Mr Deeds Does to Town, Mr Smith Goes To Washington, …). Le studio produit aussi des « screwball comedies ».
Dans les années 1940 Columbia fait des films divers illustrant les genres à succès : The Lady from ShangaI d’Orson Welles (1946, film noir), Gilda Charles Vidor with Rita Hayworth, will star in erotic affirmed (1946).


3) United Artists
Founded in 1919 by Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford and DW Griffith, United Artists was originally intended to free the creators and actors of the requirements of production houses . The company is led by Joseph Schenk between 1926 and 1935. United Artists is not a "studio" in the classic sense. The company will never walk on the entire infrastructure of a studio or a network of theaters. It is a host structure intended to produce or distribute films of independent producers (JL Bourget). It has in its catalog The Thief of Baghdad where Douglas Fairbanks plays, Rosita, Lubitsch's first American film with Mary Pickford, and The Private Life of Henry VIII, 1933, Alexander Korda's British but also to films produced by independent producers Walter Wanger (Ford's Stagecoach), DO Selznick (Rebecca, Hitchcock), Samuel Goldwyn often associated with William Wyler (Wurthering heigth, 1939).


II. The studios, one industry?

What makes that one can speak of "industry" About the studios?

The term "studio system" was released through the book by Douglas Gomery, The Hollywood Studio System , 1986. It means how to produce films in Hollywood between 1919 (installation of Adolph Zukor in Hollywood) and 1941, when the court against Paramount forcing the studios to divest their theater networks.

This system is characterized by: high capital intensity (the studios have a lot of capital), vertical integration (the same firm has the systems of production and distribution and sometimes operating) ; Division and rationalization of labor, the marketing of films considered products, the use of advertising

1 ° A capital-intensive

value of assets in 1936
Paramount 136 Warner
RKO 173 117

Fox Universal
67 57 10
Columbia
UnitedArtists 13
Source, Paul Morand, "Capitalism Hollywood" ... in Hollywood 1927-1941 ... Otherwise, 1991, p . 38

The studios are large capitalist firms. Between 1924 and 1925 Paramount made a profit of $ 24 million. Investment in technical sound between 1929 and 1931 require a lot of capital. The drop in cinema attendance, due to the economic crisis in the mid-thirties, then puts companies in a difficult position. They must turn to large investors and go public to raise capital. Warner is well supported by the Morgan Bank. RKO by the Chase National Bank, which belongs to the Rockefeller group.

2 ° Vertical Integration

Adolf Zukor is inaugurating the form of vertical integration in 1919 when it took control of distribution for Paramount and fund films in the Famous Players-Lasky. It invests in a network of 600 rooms and requires the block-booking (rental forced to work grouped) to independent operators.

In the early 1940s, Paramount has 1239 rooms, Warner 507, Loew's MGM 139. The studios are not content to show their films in their own rooms, they are also distributors and rent their movies at independent venues. This allows them to limit risks: it can be considered the minimum guaranteed revenue to a film is about $ 500 000.

The role of the studios is to supply films cinema networks. Production policy is subject to a strategy determined by estimating the likely revenues. Daniel wrote at the MGM Royot "the directors of New York establish the budget for production based on the needs expressed by the mining sector. They show the distribution of the financial burden by type of film and their wishes on the choice of celebs. Although these provisions are negotiable with management studio, the production policy is determined by the most profitable sector of the system. "(P. 31) All the studios produced about 500 films a year in the early 1940s. The

MPPDA (Motion Picture Producer and Distributor Association) is to organize agreements on prices, programs, loans actors, the industry's image among the public. Cartel (allowed) since 1918 organizes export: negotiations with foreign governments on Tariffs and quotas. Export reports in the late 1930s, roughly one third of the revenue the studios.

Another third of revenue comes from the studios of direct exploitation films and the rest of dividends from foreign subsidiaries. This system
lamin independent distributors who are obliged to accept the films they are offered


2 ° Division and rationalization of work

The studios are specialized areas that contain all that is necessary for production. Trades and professions are specialized hierarchy.

* Producers
At the top are the producers. The most powerful are the owners of the studios. The "Mughal" is the origin of entertainers. They have an amazing career longevity and their mark on the studios. Harry Cohn of Columbia rules the 1931 to 1958. Joseph Schenk founded the Loew's in 1910, leaving in 1917, became president of United Artists in 1925, led the Fox from 1935 to 1941 (and returning as producer in 1952). Louis B Mayer remains at the head of MGM studios until 1951. Adolph Zukor, founder of Famous Players in 1912 was president of Paramount after 1935.Cecil B De Mille, co founder Lasky in 1913 became a producer at MGM in 1929 before moving to the Paramount, where he remained until the 1950s.

The best-known independent producers are Sam and David Glodwyn O'Selznick. At a lower level, the studio producer, under the authority of the head of production, oversees all stages of the film, the screenplay to its release.

* Developers
The director leads a host of assistants, cameramen, editors. From the late twenties and forties studios have contracted directors whom they outsource everything from the production. A Western film series B may be asked six westerns per year. Before we move to production of a movie everything is recorded. When a film attacking the filmmakers take the scenario in a locker: budget, time, actors, number of horses everything is clear.

The most famous directors (Capra at Columbia, John Ford at Fox, King Vidor (MGM) have more freedom. They have a say on the script and editing. The final cut (final cut) belongs the studio.

· The technicians
Trades film techniques individualized sound, image, decor, makeup, costumes ... Pierre Renoir writes "You have the operations department, itself divided into special effects department , Dept. of tricks, Department of operators who travel outside off etc.. I spend Departments advertising, scripts, service commitment of the actors, the finance department, legal department "... (1927-1941 Hollywood, Otherwise p. 49)

In the late 1930's there to Hollywood 30 000 employees including 13,000 in the month. The hiring is controlled via a union "International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employee" that exists in Hollywood since 1920. He signed in 1926 the Studio Basic Accreditation. In 1933 a major strike occurs. IATSE in 1936 has over 12,000 members, but "is gradually infiltrated by gangsterism and racketeering (Royot).

In 1927 is created sous le contrôle des studios l’Academy of Motion Picture qui rassemble les acteurs. Scénaristes et acteurs engagés ( Hammett) s’organisent au sein de la Screen Actor’s Guild qui tente de résister à la baisse des salaires lors de la crise des années 1930.

*Le texte comme matière première
Le texte peut être considéré comme une matière première. Le studio se procure des histoires et optimise leur utilisation.
Le Reader Digest fournit ainsi des idées de scénario pour les films de série B. Hollywood acquiert à Broadway les droits des pièces à succès : en 1925 la Fox dépense 150000$ dans ce but ce qui déstabilise l’économie des théâtres et provoque une réaction. Ces textes sont retravaillés par une armée de spécialistes : script editor, dialoguistes.…La MGM salarie plus de 60 écrivains-scénaristes qui travaillent sous une même direction. À un moment elle a sous contrat W. Faulkner, F Scott Fitzgerald, Joseph Mankiewicz …Le séjour de Faulkner à Hollywood inspire aux frères Cohen le film Barton Fink.

4° Marketing et publicité
* Une gamme de produits ?
En 1927-28 le schéma de production de la Universal répond à la notion de gamme (développée à l’origine dans l’industrie l’automobile)

• 11 films de prestige (5 tirés de romans célèbres, 2 de pièces à succès)
• 33 films « ordinaires » (fictions type Reader Digest)
• 22 films populaires ( surtout des westerns issus de Western Novels)

Les films partagent avec les produits industrialisés de la consommation de masse (savon, corn-flakes, boissons…) le fait qu’ils sont calibrés pour que le consommateur sache toujours à quoi s’attendre lorsqu’il effectue un achat et que le produit corresponde toujours à son attente.

*Le goût du public

- Les « moghuls » souvent issus d’une immigration récente, se targuent de connaître et de partager le goût du grand public au contraire des écrivains ou des « intellectuels de la Côte Est ». Samuel Goldwyn en fait un système.
- C’est au producteur qu’il revient d’arbitrer entre les contraintes financières, les désirs supposés du public, les choix des scénaristes et ceux du réalisateur. Le « happy ending » est souvent imposé ;
- Le système des previews permet d’éliminer au montage les parties qui heurtent le public (voir cahier de documents, le compte-rendu de la preview de Citizen Kane).

L’autocensure participe du souci de ne pas laisser partir sur le market a film that faces problems of distribution, will not shock or a portion of public opinion.

Films in effect are considered commercial and do not enjoy the protection of first amendment. At the beginning of the century a system of censorship was established in municipalities and local police. Is cut before showing scenes that show attacks on police or suggestive themes. This makes censorship dispersed yield more random movies.

In the early 1920s, Hollywood has a bad reputation. Scabrous films are many, the image in the opinion poor. The death of a starlet at a party raises a watered scandal resulting in the sidelining of the comic Fatty Arbuckle, Buster Keaton partner. Mary Pickford "Little America's sweetheart" shocked public opinion by divorcing to remarry quickly with Douglas Fairbanks.

To avoid intervention by the federal government and unite the studios recruit H. Hays, lawyer, former head of the Post Office to develop a "code of conduct." The Hays Office (1922-193) multiplies the public relations with women's leagues, decency and religious ... bureaux municipaux de censure des grandes villes. Les représentants de la culture traditionnelle s’accordent pour penser que montrer des conduites transgressives au cinéma peut entraîner à les reproduire dans la réalité par imitation et que certains publics sont particulièrement sensibles à la suggestion : gens de condition modeste, immigrés récents, enfants, femmes …

En 1930, lors de l’avènement du parlant, les studios adoptent le Hays Code qui indique aux producteurs et aux réalisateurs au moment de l’écriture du tournage et du montage des films ce qu’ils doivent éviter. Il est appliqué généralement après 1934. La plupart des interdictions sont en rapport avec le respect du aux autorités et aux religions, les conduites transgressives ( assassinats, viols) et le sexe. Le résultat devient parois burlesque : on mesure la hauteur des jupes, la profondeur des décolletés, le torse de Tarzan est rasé ( pas de poils …), deux personnages, même mariés ne peuvent s’asseoir sur le même lit…

Jean-Luc Douin, Dictionnaire de la Censure au cinéma , PUF, 1998, p. 166Confidences de Joseph Breen, responsable du bureau Hays« …périodiquement je fais passer des circulaires qui donnent le ton et la tension du monde : « Attention ! Plus de jarretelles visibles ! L’Europe centrale does not. Less than adultery. Massachusetts protested. "Thus our policy of black stockings and corset she evolves each year, depending on whether or not the universe melted on evoking the Cancan ..."

But the studios have to deal with public interest and the transformation of society: women liberated heroines constraints of the Victorian era or gangster movies reflect the society of the thirties. Applying a kind of "law of compensation," the producers leave a little room in the portrayal of gangsters and killers provided that the corporation is saved to the end and 'bad' are always punished. The writers and directors learn to outwit censorship (words with double meanings, situations ... transposed). This is one of the springs' Screwball Comedy. Developers need to dial: John Houston is asked to represent more discreetly homosexual in The Maltese Falcon.
The system begins to expire in 1953 when United Artists decided to leave The Moon Is Blue Preminger without the seal of the Hays Office.

- The Star system
The star system is part of advertising. Some actors are being equipped with a borrowed personality that sets the fantasies of the audience. Their name, physical appearance (hair color), their personal history: everything is invented. An image is produced, reproduced millions of copies in popular magazines (pinup).

The images thus produced are not without complexity. Jean-Loup Bourget offers a typology of stars

journalists specialized in gossip (Louella Parsons, Hedda Hopper) feeding a press echoes in the lives of stars widening the gap between real life and made life. Some die no more successful to conform to their image (Marilyn Monroe).

Result: world domination
American cinema in the classic era Hollywood to conquer international markets.

At the silent era, there is no language barrier. The war of 1914-18 closed the U.S. market to European products and "studios" Europeans are struggling.

In France Gaumont and Pathé gradually cease to produce and fold over the distribution activities. But there are only 4,500 rooms in France in the war between two cons 25 000 United States. In 1926 we import 444 American films per year in France. Production in France increased from 150 major films in 1921 to 52 in 1929.

Parliament is more market-friendly "national". Paramount studios in Joinville installs to run again with French actors of the films produced in Hollywood already closely following the indications of staging. This is not a success. The films are shot in studios d'Epinay and Boulogne remains of empires Gaumont and Pathé and the Victorine in Nice but the French cinema remains vulnerable because the system of film production on an ad coup qui se met en place est vulnérable aux crises. En 1935 Gaumont dépose son bilan. Nathan qui avait repris les studios Pathé a fait faillite peu avant. Jean Zay ministre du Front populaire n’arrive pas à imposer une intervention des pouvoirs publics dans un secteur économique qui demeure hostile à l’intervention de l’Etat.

C’est pourtant l’intervention de l’Etat qui permet dans les régimes autoritaires d’Allemagne et d’Italie de construire une industrie nationale du cinéma profondément liée aux capitaux publics autour en Allemagne de la UFA et des studios de Babelsberg et en Italie de Cinecitta. Le projet des régimes fasciste est de faire obstacle à penetration of American cinema they see as a cultural threat. In 1937, on 324 films in Italian, 250 are American. Even the USSR was subjected to the onslaught of American films during the NEP, Stalin did not resume until the matter in hand.



III. Creative works (to follow)

Sunday, February 7, 2010

What Does Ondeandas Mean

Course No. 1 (continued) Cinema and Popular Culture: American cinema in the early twentieth century

Cinema was born as an element of popular culture in Europe and the United States. We will try to see how this statement, developed by many historians in reference books, peut être vérifiée, précisée et développé dans le cas de films précis. On considérera ici Le court métrage « The Rink » (La patinoire) tourné par Charlie Chaplin en 1916 pour la firme hollywoodienne Keystone, spécialisée dans les films burlesques. On se demandera ce qui permet d’associer ce film à la culture populaire américaine. On considérera ensuite le film choisi du point de vue du contexte de la production et de son esthétique. On s’intéressera à la parenté entre la tradition du music-hall anglais, d’où est issu Charlie Chaplin, et le burlesque américain. On notera par ailleurs l’inscription des films burlesque Americans in the carnival tradition, characteristic of European urban popular culture.

- The beginnings of cinema in the United States
cinema in its infancy in the United States is controlled by the entrepreneur Edison, through an association system called by his detractor "The Trust and control patents on shooting equipment and production, receives royalties on all films. These are first-time shot in the workshops of Edison by technicians converted into operators. The bands are very short. The subjects are diverse: burlesque, pantomime, incidents borrowed from urban life, transposition of famous tales. The films are first screened in arcades and in specialized theaters, especially numerous in areas of poor immigrants. The silent films are not the language barrier.
Owners music hall or theater folk complain about the lack of quick movies. They contribute to the creation on the West Coast (Hollywood) small production company seeking to loosen the grip of Edison. these small companies produce so industrialized in a record time of short films (two coils) which are not intended to be works, although a cinematic language is being elaborated. These films are screened and distributed without much regard for their contents: the coils can be thrown into disorder, pieces of film cut. Censorship settled at local level in some U.S. cities (Chicago). At the request of the police scenes where we see police officers killed or beaten are removed. A decision Justice said that cinema is a business and that the studios can not rely on the First Amendment which guarantees freedom of conscience (religious). The expected decision of censorship or censorship attempts emphasized that the public cinema is because of "weak minds that must be protected" illiterate, children, women ...
The first films therefore, represent a urban popular culture. (Robert Sklar).

http://www.archive.org/details/CC_1916_12_04_TheRink

- The film The Rink , 1916 is the eighth film by Chaplin made for Mutual Film. It shows, if we analyze its mode of production, the process of industrialization of culture, moreover, it allows us to understand more fully how the film collects the legacy of another urban popular culture: the English music hall.
-Chaplin in Hollywood
Chaplin is a character who makes the link between the tradition of 'farce' (in the English sense of the word) and English music hall and the 1890 film of the year 1910. He was born in Britain in a family of theater artists and music hall, he toured the United States and was recruited by Mark Sennett for Keystone Film Company.
At the Chaplin Keystone acquires a skill. The gags are developed by specialists gathered in a workshop. Films made very quickly and directors / technicians tried solely on the importance of public success (number of entries).
in 1914 for his second film Kid Auto Races in Venice, he created the "character" of Charlie Chaplin (French name character). It is easy to recognize a character for the audience (brand). It is characterized by clothes, props (cane, hat) and theatrical gestures. His way of walking legs apart, to turn around by moving the torso, bend your legs straight is directly borrowed from the knowledge of the theater.
Chaplin will try to identify the mode of production of rigid Keystone does not allow him to use all the possibilities.

- Aesthetics and content
• In 1916 the Mutual Film Corporation offers Charlie Chaplin 670 000 dollars to make twelve comedies of two coils. The Rink is the eighth. It is still a work in a very brief bill, consisting of the combination of sketches linked by a tenuous narrative thread. This is an opportunity given to Chaplin put in place in front of the camera gags whose analysis shows a part they are related to the tradition of burlesque, secondly we can link them to own an older tradition in European popular culture: taste of violent overthrow of the social order. This tradition is illustrated in France by the Lyon Guignol in France and carnivals past.
• In The Rink there
• A physical violence on the screen, the "rich" customers or citizens have fought and are identified by their clothing and body mass (in the tradition Wholesale is the rich)
• The denial of social codes of deference (Charlot key client-server anywhere on the body, he deliberately puts a brush to clean their plate, hits ...)
• Physical assaults against the femmes (grosses/riches).

- Réception
Ces films de Chaplin obtiennent un succès public aux Etats-Unis qui dépasse le public populaire. En Europe il en est de même. Les surréalistes les apprécieront pour deux raisons
- leur côté agressif vis à vis de l’ordre établi;
- leur expressivité formelle (rompant avec le théâtre bavard qu’ils exècrent). Ce faisant, paradoxalement, ils réintégreront le cinéma burlesque américain dans la culture savante via l’avant-garde.
------------------

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

How To Word A Request For Money Gifts

COURSE No. 1. INTRODUCTION

X tenth century: new media and interpretation of cultural transformations

the twentieth century, the emergence of new technologies is radical alterations in the field of culture. Film, disc, radio, television and internet imply changes in the economy and cultural practices. The book, theater, music hall, popular music, so take new forms. Information systems and communication is also changing when the radio and then television to replace the press as a normal information. These changes give rise to a critical contemporaries. The concepts of mass media and mass culture are developed during the 1930s and then criticized and questioned. We will study the lessons of the second half of both the development of cultural industries and the emergence of critical discourse against them.

I. twentieth century. New Technologies
From the last decade of the nineteenth century, new technologies are emerging which have in common that allow recording and reproducing works by mechanical methods and their dissemination for a mass audience.

a. Cinema (mute) appears in 1895 - The Lumiere Brothers, and industrial Pathe and Gaumont in France creating powerful companies. Edison United States controls the production until 1913. Après quelques  hésitations, la projection publique s’impose comme mode usuel de diffusion des films. Ces derniers sont projetés dans des « théâtres » spécialisés, souvent d’anciens music-halls. Au début des années 1930 les films deviennent « parlants » (1927 « The Jazz Singer  »), ce qui entraîne un renouvellement complet des procédés de tournage et de projection. Les brevets pour l’enregistrement des disques, ceux du cinéma sonore et ceux de la radio sont contrôlés par des firmes apparentées. Les Etats-Unis et l’Allemagne sont en compétition pour le contrôle des  techniques du son.    

b. Disque-radio . Dès les années 1880 on peut enregistrer paroles et musiques sur des rouleaux de cire et le restituer pour une écoute collective. L’inventeur et industriel américain Edison est très présent sur ce marché tandis que le marché européen est dominé par des firmes anglaises, allemandes et française (Marconi, Pathé). Après 1925-30 on procède à des enregistrements électriques sur disques 33 tours. De grosses compagnies se put in place (Edison, Pathe, Decca). From 1922, all industrialized countries, networks of stations broadcasting live from beginning to the combination of advertising and distributing recorded music and entertainment.

c. TV. Prototypes of television sets are presented to the public in late 1930 but the networks for dissemination to the general public does not really make up the United States and Europe after 1945. They take the technical model Economic and broadcast networks: networks of transmitters connected to each other, recording studios centralized funding through advertising. The value of advertising is pegged to the number of listeners. The hearing is measured by special devices ..
d. The appearance of VHS, DVD and Internet (1970-2000) forced to renegotiate the boundaries between the areas and economic interests involved. Only Internet, in the form taken by the network after 2000, amends economy considerably by multiplying the mass media program sources and generalizing the peer exchange.



2. shifts in cultural boundaries

The new media are developed based on know-how developed within the existing cultural fields
Considering the Cinema and forms the narrative we see that the old forms (the tale, the saga) were erased before the new forms preferred by the publishing industry: the novel and the novel series, which gives rise to the series (serial).
draws from the repertoire of writing , considered in its entirety, from the Bible to Western Novel. It also reuses forms of popular theater mime, melodrama, music hall and those of (Melies and magic for example. There are built in parallel as an art scholar (cine-clubs).
Broadcasting course draws in the repertoire of song and du disque (cabaret, music-hall), mais aussi dans celui du théâtre ("drama", Orson Welles), et du livre. Elle adapte la forme de la série et donne naissance aux soap opera.
La télévision recycle à la fois les modèles venus de la radio (série,feuilleton, drame,théâtre en direct, comédie) et ceux venus du cinéma (western). Elle adopte, au cours de ses cinquante première années, le même modèle économique que celui de la radio : une écoute familiale collective, dans l'espace privé ce qui favorise une programmation assez semblable à celle de la radio. 
La multiplication chains in the 1980s, the emergence of the VHS / DVD and internet profoundly alter the pattern of consumption and supply are changing programs. The digitization of images is such aesthetic forms evolve the series and its relationship to cinema as a place of creation.

3. critique of mass culture
These developments are pushing writers and intellectuals to examine the profound transformation of popular culture, culture in general, and the relationship between high culture and popular culture. ;
a. The German sociologist Walter Benjamin s inquires about the loss of sacredness of the artwork in a text written in 1935 and again became famous in the 1970's "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. " Regarding the reception, the French writer Georges Duhamel in the 1930 (Scenes of a future life , 1930) examines the difference between the act of reading and that of watching a film, condemning the film (an entertainment helots) .


bL'auteur Canadian Marshall McLuhan in a series of works extremely read in the 1970s, trying to conceptualize the effect on the culture of domination and networks substitution of the image written as dominant medium ( Understanding Media , 1968, The Gutenberg Galaxy, 1967 Message Is Massage, v.1967 ). It was he who introduced the concept of "global village". A dimension that will hold us back not here but is important is the question of manipulation of public opinion through the mass media. The Americans, who attended during the First World War to sophisticated propaganda operations in their own countries produce books on the manipulation of minds.

c. N IRTH concepts of "mass culture" and "industrialization of culture '.
Analysis of" mass media "also leads to develop two related concepts ;: the industrialization of culture and "mass culture". The word "mass", used since the 1930s in the expression "mass culture" has ideological and political connotations that will ensure his fortune first and then decline. It is part of the critical social and political relations of a society where individuals are no longer enrolled in traditional social settings (church, village, occupation) are atomized but within an urban society that does consider more than as consumers. Devoid of structural frames (party, church, nation), these consumers would be vulnerable to manipulation. Moreover, they would have to consume cultural products of poor quality, degraded form of merchandise. Products at low cost in a series by the "cultural industries", the "cultural products" would have lost the creative force and content of criticism of the world that are characteristic of "real" work Art.

This is particularly critical design developed by philosophers and social scientists gathered in the so-called Frankfurt School. Its first members are the German philosophers Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer. Forced to leave their chairs at the University of Frankfurt, they took refuge in the United States before returning to Frankfurt in 1953. They are both Marxists and representatives of the German intellectual elite steeped in culture. They are horrified by what they discover in the American mass culture seems to them a manipulation of American capitalism to disorganize the working class. The Dialectic of Enlightenment (published in German in 1947) is a protest as a critical analysis. The philosopher Herbert Marcuse Germano-American who is also in Frankfurt School teaches in California, where he became a reference for the movement of American culture-cons for years 1960-70. In One-Dimensional Man (1964) adapts to the contemporary world the Marxist concept of alienation by showing that the mass media contribute to making contemporary "strangers to themselves," unaware of their true place in the world and their interests, and therefore "insane." also belongs to the Frankfurt School essayist Siegfried Kracauer, who in 1948 published an analysis of German cinema " From Caligari to Hitler, a psychological analysis of German cinema " (published in French in 1973) in which he questioned the political responsibility of the fiction film; The work of the Frankfurt School in Europe will be developed by introducing the thought of German philosopher next generation Jürgen Habermas whose thesis introduces the concept of "public space" Public space: Archaeology of advertising as a constitutive dimension of bourgeois society (1963).
The background of these clearly Marxist thinkers is underlined by other authors, mostly American, who see a bias limiting the relevance of their analysis

d. Cultural studies and the question of popular culture
The cultural studies will address the issue of popular culture of the twentieth century from a perspective that is often involved but also more pragmatic ;; Instead of a philosophical analysis and a blanket condemnation, historians and cultural studies multiply the fine analysis of communicative situation or popular cultural practices and examine how industrialization transformed the culture. Two English authors are important: with Hoggart The Uses of litteracy (1957, translated by The culture of the poor , Editions de Minuit, 1970) offers a sensitive analysis, based on personal experience, culture, English working in the middle twentieth century. Raymond Williams, founder of the New Left review , publishes Culture and Society (1958) and then analyzes the English television, often in reports commissioned by the BBC .
vein American cultural studies is quite different. It is rooted in the desire to reconsider minorities (racial, sexual) and defend their rights. His early work wonder therefore how a dominant culture affects and diminished the representation of subordinate groups in society. They then development studies-colonial and post colonial, adapting to the challenges of the globalized economy of the media in the late twentieth century.

Conclusion . The current analysis of the mass media and their re lations with the transformations popular culture again, often without explicit, concepts or analysis borrowed from the authors cited above. We will consider in the following sessions of the course at a time that we say the historians of the establishment of cultural industries in the twentieth century and representation that have had some of the most influential contemporary.

Hair Blowout For Black Hair

"POPULAR CULTURE AND MASS MEDIA." PROGRAM.


"Popular culture, mass culture and mass media"
C Bertho Lavenir
-Cultural Mediation Course Licence 3 -
February-June 2010-room 331 - Censier

Session 1 Thursday, February 4, 2010
Introduction - The beginnings of cinema

Session 2 Thursday, February 11, 2010
Hollywood cinema in the classical

Session 3 Thursday, February 18, 2010
American radio: the model of mass media

Thursday, February 25, 2010 Ms. Bertho Lavenir absent
Thursday, March 4, 2010 Holidays university

Session 4 Thursday, March 11, 2010
The European radio: the notion of public service
Critical mass media

Session 5 Thursday, March 18, 2010
The 1950s American television

Session 6 Thursday, March 25, 2010
The European TV: the concept of public service

Session 7 Thursday 1 st April 2010
Private TV in Europe and the "neo television"

Session 8 Thursday, April 8
Hollywood face on television: the age of producers

Session 9 Thursday, April 15, 2010
" Internet and the media"

Thursday, April 22, 2010 Vacation of University
Thursday 29 avril  2010 vacances de l’université
Jeudi 6 mai 2010 Mme Bertho Lavenir à l’étranger –rattrapage à voir:
Jeudi13 mai férie

Séance n° 10 Jeudi 20 mai 
Dernier cours . Rendu des devoirs - Conclusion

Le devoir sur table se fera sous forme de « partiel final »