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Belton, Chapter 14
1929: 95 Million
                           Movie Attendance (in millions)
War Years: 85
1945-1948: 90        100
1953: 46
late-60s: below 20    50
1971: 15.8
                       0
2002: 30+
•  Between 1948 and 1968 Hollywood
   lost three quarters of its audience
•  Traditional historians assume that
   the post war decline in motion
   picture attendance was
   related to television
•  In fact, television was a superficial
   symptom of a much more profound
   change in  post
   war entertainment patterns
•  Direct cause of downfall was the social and
   economic transformation of post-war Americans to
   the leisured masses

•  Passive entertainment vs. action

•  The house, the car

•  The drive in
•  Response of motion
   picture industry was to
   make fewer, but more
   expensive films
•  Cinerama-three strips of
   film projected from three
   separate booths in the
   theater
•  3-D Assault- 3-D movies
   pulled audiences into
   the action of the film
•  3-D craze wanes, but Cinerama
   suceeded
•  Fox perfected Henry Chreiten's
   anamorphic lens for cinerama
•  Projection of wide screen films
   as well as stereo sound was
   meant to provide an
   experience dramatically
   superior to black and white
   television
•  Cinerama used curtains for
   dramatic effect
•  Also used advertisements with
   audiences sharing in this "on
   screen spectacle
•  Todd-AO Process Began with
   Oklahoma and claimed movie
   goers could "live" the
   experience
•  Todd-AO was the first
   commercially successful wide
   film format and spawned many 
   wide film processes
War with Television, Peace with its Revenues
•  Various films such as The Moon is Blue (1953) and
   Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) lampooned
   television commercials.
•  Sometimes things even got violent, one character
   kicking in a series of tv screens.
•  But Belton tells us that while on the silver screen,
   the rivalry seems obvious enough, the reality is that
   film is battling more with other, less two-
   dimensional leisure-time activities.
•  The dollar sign ($) changes hearts and minds: in
   1954, Disney and ABC partner up for a Disney show
   which promotes its theme park;
•  in 1955, General Teleradio sells its RKO library to a
   station;
•  Columbia, Warner Bros, Fox, M-G-M do the same
   with their pre-1948 films.
•  Sometimes the sales even saved the studio.
•  Around this time, many studios began to produce
   their own shows, airing more recent movies.
•  Packaging the silver screen to fit the sad, curved
   1950s TV tube took some not-so-subtle cropping,
   scanning, and panning.
•  Networks paid more and more for the rights to play
   films, in the 60s rising from $180k to $800k in ten
   years. Some very recent releases cost as much as $5
   million.
•  Let s consider for a moment the artistic quandary
   caused by cropping. . . .
•  Between 1985 to 2002 the VCR became a standard
   househould feature, 91% of households owned one.
•  But the DVD market, since their arrival in 1997
   (that s really not very long ago, is it), has exploded.
•  DVD player sales: $320k in 1997 to $25 million in
   2002
•  Available titles: 600 in 1997 to 20k in 2002
•  Percentage of households with DVD players: 35% by
   2002
•  Comparison of revenues in 2002:
   –  Theaters: $9.5 billion
   –  DVD sales and rentals: $22 billion
•  HBO in ‘75
•  Turner in ‘77
•  Showtime in ‘78
•  The Movie Channel in ‘79.
•  Now 2/3 US households have
   cable
•  Second-run movie theaters gone.
•  Porno houses gone.
•  Repertory theaters gone.
•  With the ability to replicate (in
   decent fashion, at least) the
   widescreen, surround sound
   experience of the movies, why
   should people bother going?
•  The answer is . . .
•  The heyday of widescreen
   blockbuster: mid-1950s to
   mid1960s.
•  War and Peace (1956), The Ten
   Commandments (1956), South
   Pacific (1958), Ben-Hur (1959),
   Spartacus (1960), Exodus (1960),
   Mutiny of the Bounty (1962),
   Lawrence of Arabia (1962),
   Cleopatra (1963), and The Sound
   of Music (1965)
•     This pattern of infrequent
     moviegoing could only sustain the
     industry in an era of blockbusters
     —an era in which each film
     became a special even that drew
     the sometime spectator away from
     other leisure-time activities and
     back into the movie
     theater (Belton 322).
•  Belton believes the viewer s
   expectations in the last three
   decades have narrowed, no longer
   drawn into the spectacle of films,
   such as those produced in the
   earlier panorama days.
•  The infrequent consumption of
   motion pictures has become
   automatic and habitual . . . (322)
•  But the new craze for special
   effects in the last decade has
   restored some of the wonder of the
   big screen movie-going experience.
•  Examples of spectacular digital
   effect films: Jurassic Park (1993),
   Titanic (1997), The Matrix (1999),
   Shrek (2001)
•  What are some common themes and/or
   motifs in the 1950s-60s blockbusters? Why
   do you think these types of films were so
   popular?
•  What are some more recent examples of
   Hollywood blockbusters? Notice any trends?

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Belton (14) Hollywood in the Age of Television

  • 2. 1929: 95 Million Movie Attendance (in millions) War Years: 85 1945-1948: 90 100 1953: 46 late-60s: below 20 50 1971: 15.8 0 2002: 30+
  • 3. •  Between 1948 and 1968 Hollywood lost three quarters of its audience •  Traditional historians assume that the post war decline in motion picture attendance was related to television •  In fact, television was a superficial symptom of a much more profound change in  post war entertainment patterns
  • 4. •  Direct cause of downfall was the social and economic transformation of post-war Americans to the leisured masses •  Passive entertainment vs. action •  The house, the car •  The drive in
  • 5. •  Response of motion picture industry was to make fewer, but more expensive films •  Cinerama-three strips of film projected from three separate booths in the theater •  3-D Assault- 3-D movies pulled audiences into the action of the film
  • 6. •  3-D craze wanes, but Cinerama suceeded •  Fox perfected Henry Chreiten's anamorphic lens for cinerama •  Projection of wide screen films as well as stereo sound was meant to provide an experience dramatically superior to black and white television
  • 7. •  Cinerama used curtains for dramatic effect •  Also used advertisements with audiences sharing in this "on screen spectacle •  Todd-AO Process Began with Oklahoma and claimed movie goers could "live" the experience •  Todd-AO was the first commercially successful wide film format and spawned many  wide film processes
  • 8. War with Television, Peace with its Revenues •  Various films such as The Moon is Blue (1953) and Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) lampooned television commercials. •  Sometimes things even got violent, one character kicking in a series of tv screens. •  But Belton tells us that while on the silver screen, the rivalry seems obvious enough, the reality is that film is battling more with other, less two- dimensional leisure-time activities.
  • 9. •  The dollar sign ($) changes hearts and minds: in 1954, Disney and ABC partner up for a Disney show which promotes its theme park; •  in 1955, General Teleradio sells its RKO library to a station; •  Columbia, Warner Bros, Fox, M-G-M do the same with their pre-1948 films. •  Sometimes the sales even saved the studio. •  Around this time, many studios began to produce their own shows, airing more recent movies.
  • 10. •  Packaging the silver screen to fit the sad, curved 1950s TV tube took some not-so-subtle cropping, scanning, and panning. •  Networks paid more and more for the rights to play films, in the 60s rising from $180k to $800k in ten years. Some very recent releases cost as much as $5 million. •  Let s consider for a moment the artistic quandary caused by cropping. . . .
  • 11. •  Between 1985 to 2002 the VCR became a standard househould feature, 91% of households owned one. •  But the DVD market, since their arrival in 1997 (that s really not very long ago, is it), has exploded. •  DVD player sales: $320k in 1997 to $25 million in 2002 •  Available titles: 600 in 1997 to 20k in 2002 •  Percentage of households with DVD players: 35% by 2002 •  Comparison of revenues in 2002: –  Theaters: $9.5 billion –  DVD sales and rentals: $22 billion
  • 12. •  HBO in ‘75 •  Turner in ‘77 •  Showtime in ‘78 •  The Movie Channel in ‘79. •  Now 2/3 US households have cable
  • 13. •  Second-run movie theaters gone. •  Porno houses gone. •  Repertory theaters gone. •  With the ability to replicate (in decent fashion, at least) the widescreen, surround sound experience of the movies, why should people bother going? •  The answer is . . .
  • 14. •  The heyday of widescreen blockbuster: mid-1950s to mid1960s. •  War and Peace (1956), The Ten Commandments (1956), South Pacific (1958), Ben-Hur (1959), Spartacus (1960), Exodus (1960), Mutiny of the Bounty (1962), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Cleopatra (1963), and The Sound of Music (1965) •  This pattern of infrequent moviegoing could only sustain the industry in an era of blockbusters —an era in which each film became a special even that drew the sometime spectator away from other leisure-time activities and back into the movie theater (Belton 322).
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17. •  Belton believes the viewer s expectations in the last three decades have narrowed, no longer drawn into the spectacle of films, such as those produced in the earlier panorama days. •  The infrequent consumption of motion pictures has become automatic and habitual . . . (322) •  But the new craze for special effects in the last decade has restored some of the wonder of the big screen movie-going experience. •  Examples of spectacular digital effect films: Jurassic Park (1993), Titanic (1997), The Matrix (1999), Shrek (2001)
  • 18. •  What are some common themes and/or motifs in the 1950s-60s blockbusters? Why do you think these types of films were so popular? •  What are some more recent examples of Hollywood blockbusters? Notice any trends?