AllExperts > Encyclopedia 
Search      
Find out about volunteering to AllExperts

Silent film: Encyclopedia BETA


Free Encyclopedia
 Home · Index · Browse A-Z  · Questions and Answers ·
Encyclopedia

Browse A-Z
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZNum


License
Disclaimer

 
 
 
 
Free Online Courses
12 Weeks to Weight Loss
Take Charge of Stress
Learn How to Bake
Budgeting 101
Deeper Faith
DIY Fashion Makeover

       MORE E-COURSES
 
   

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z  Misc

Silent film

For the Mel Brooks parody film, see Silent Movie.

A silent film is a film with no accompanying, synchronized recorded spoken dialogue. The technology for silent films was invented around 1860, but remained a novelty until around 1880 - 1900, when films on a single reel became easily produced.

The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as the motion picture itself, but because of the technical challenges involved, most films were silent before the late 1920s. But the silent picture was a universal language through its messages. The silent film era is sometimes referred to as the "Age of the Silver Screen".[[Image:Metropolis-new-tower-of-babel.jpg|thumb|right|460px|Scenery art from {{Fritz Lang}}'s {{Metropolis (1927 movie)|Metropolis}}(Germany, 1927)]]

History

Harold Lloyd hanging from a clock face

See also: History of 35 mm (movie) film

The years before sound came to the movies are known as the silent era among film scholars and historians. The art of motion pictures grew into full maturity before silent films were replaced by talking pictures or talkies and many film buffs believe the aesthetic quality of cinema decreased for several years as the new medium of sound was adapted to the movies. The visual quality of silent movies (especially those produced during the 1920s) was often extremely high but later televised presentations of poor, second or even third generation copies made from already damaged and neglected stock (usually played back at incorrect speeds and with inappropriate music) led to the widely held misconception that these films were primitive and barely watchable by modern standards.

Intertitles

Since silent films had no synchronized sound for dialogue, onscreen intertitles were used to narrate story points, present key dialogue and sometimes even comment on the action for the cinema audience. The title writer became a key professional in silent film and was often separate from the scenario writer who created the story. Intertitles (or titles as they were generally called at the time) often became graphic elements themselves, featuring illustrations or abstract decorations that commented on the action of the film or enhanced its atmosphere.

Live music and sound

Showings of silent films almost always featured live music, starting with the pianist at the first public projection of movies by the Lumière Brothers on December 28, 1895 in Paris (Cook, 1990). From the beginning, music was recognized as essential, contributing to the atmosphere and giving the audience vital emotional cues (musicians sometimes played on film sets during shooting for similar reasons). Small town and neighborhood movie theaters usually had a pianist. From the mid-teens onward, large city theaters tended to have organists or entire orchestras. Massive theatrical organs such as the famous "mighty Wurlitzer" could simulate some orchestral sounds along with a number of sound effects.

The scores for silents were often more or less improvised early in the medium's history. Once full features became commonplace, however, music compiled from Photoplay music by the pianist, organist, orchestra conductor or the movie studio itself, which would send out a cue sheet with the film. Starting with mostly original score composed by Joseph Carl Breil for D.W. Griffith's groundbreaking epic The Birth of a Nation (USA, 1915) it became relatively common for films to arrive at the exhibiting theater with original, specially composed scores (Eyman, 1997).

By the height of the silent era, movies were the single largest source of employment for instrumental musicians (at least in America) and the introduction of talkies, which happened simultaneously with the onset of the Great Depression, was devastating.

Film industries in some countries devised other ways of bringing sound to silents. The early cinema of Brazil featured fitas cantatas, filmed operettas with singers lip-synching behind the screen (Parkinson, 1995, p. 69). In Japan, films had not only live music, but the benshi, a live narrator who provided commentary and character voices. The benshi became a central element in Japanese film form, as well as providing translation for foreign (mostly American) movies (Standish, 2005). Their popularity was one reason why silents persisted well into the 1930s in Japan.

Composers such as Carl Davis have specialised in writing new orchestral scores for silent classics. There are many silent film accompanists working today - such as Ben Model, Neil Brand, Phillip C. Carli, Jon Mirsalis and Donald Sosin -- creating and performing live musical scores on piano or theatre organ.

Acting techniques

One of the most enduring images of the silent era: Lon Chaney Sr. in The Phantom of the Opera (USA, 1925)

The medium of silent film required a great emphasis on body language and facial expression so the audience could better understand what an actor was feeling and portraying on screen. The gesticulations common to much silent film acting are apt to strike modern-day audiences as simplistic or campy. For this reason, silent comedies tend to be more popular in the modern era than drama, partly because overacting is more natural in comedy. However, some silent films were quite subtly acted, depending on the director and the skill of the actors. Overacting in silent films was sometimes a habit actors transferred from their stage experience and directors who understood the intimacy of the new medium discouraged it.

Projection speed

Up until around 1925, most silent films were shot at slower speeds (or "frame rates") than sound films, typically at 16 to 23 frames per second depending on the year and studio, rather than 24 frames per second. Unless carefully shown at their original speeds they can appear unnaturally fast and jerky, which reinforces their alien appearance to modern viewers. At the same time, some scenes were intentionally undercranked during shooting in order to accelerate the action, particularly in the case of slapstick comedies. The intended frame rate of a silent film can be ambiguous and since they were usually hand cranked there can even be variation within one film. Film speed is often a vexed issue among scholars and film buffs in the presentation of silents today, especially when it comes to DVD releases of "restored" films; the 2002 restoration of Metropolis (Germany, 1927) may be the most fiercely debated example.

Projectionists frequently showed silent films at speeds which were slightly faster than the rate at which they were shot. Most films seem to have been shown at 18 fps or higher - some even faster than what would become sound film speed (24 fps). Even if shot at 16 fps (often cited as "silent speed"), the projection of a nitrate base 35mm film at such a slow speed carried a considerable risk of fire. Oftentimes projectionists would receive instructions from the distributors as to how fast particular reels or scenes should be projected on the musical director's cue sheet. Theaters also sometimes varied their projection speeds depending on the time of day or popularity of a film in order to maximize profit.[1]

Lost films

Thousands of silent films were made during the years before the introduction of sound but some historians estimate between 80 and 90 percent of them have been lost forever. Movies of the first half of the 20th century were filmed on an unstable, highly flammable nitrate film stock which required careful preservation to keep it from decomposing over time. Most of these films were considered to have no commercial value after they were shown in theaters and were carelessly preserved if at all. Over the decades their prints crumbled into dust (or goo). Many were recycled and a sizable number were destroyed in both studio fires and space-saving projects. As a result, silent film preservation has been a high priority among movie historians.

Major Silent Films Presumed to be Lost

* Cleopatra - 1918
* Gentlemen Prefer Blondes - 1927
* The Great Gatsby - 1927
* London After Midnight - 1927

Later homages

Several filmmakers have paid homage to the comedies of the silent era, including Jacques Tati with his Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953), Mel Brooks with Silent Movie (1976) and indie filmmaker Eric B. Borgman with his film The Deserter (2004). Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien's acclaimed drama Three Times (2005) is during its middle third a silent, complete with intertitles; Stanley Tucci's The Impostors has an opening silent sequence in the style of early silent comedies. The style is also echoed in the 1999 German film Tuvalu. Guy Maddin won awards for his homage to Soviet era silent films for his short The Heart of the World. Shadow of the Vampire (2000) is a highly fictionalized depiction of the filming of the classic silent vampire movie Nosferatu (1922).

Some notable silent films

With director and year of release:

Before 1915

La Fée aux Choux, Alice Guy Blaché, 1896
Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon), George Méliès, 1902
Alice in Wonderland, Cecil Hepworth, 1903
The Great Train Robbery, Edwin S. Porter, 1903
La Presa di Roma, Filoteo Alberini, 1905
The Night Before Christmas, 1905
The Story of the Kelly Gang, 1905 (World's first feature length film)
Ben-Hur, Sidney Olcott, 1907
Frankenstein, J. Searle Dawley, 1910 (Produced by Thomas Edison)
From the Manger To the Cross, Sidney Olcott, 1912
Oliver Twist, 1912 (First American feature film made)
Richard III, 1912 (Second American feature film made and oldest surviving complete feature film)
Cabiria, Giovanne Pastrone, 1914
The Perils of Pauline, Louis J. Gasnier & Donald MacKenzie 1914
Kid Auto Races at Venice, Charlie Chaplin, 1914

1915â€"1919

Honeymoon for Three, Sir Charles Hawtrey, 1915
The Birth of a Nation, D. W. Griffith, 1915
The Tramp, Charles Chaplin, 1915
The Awakening, William Desmond Taylor, 1915
Les Vampires, Louis Feuillade, 1915â€"1916
Intolerance, D.W. Griffith, 1916
Cleopatra, J. Gordon Edwards, 1917
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Marshall Neilan, 1917
The Dying Swan, Yevgeni Bauer, 1917
Father Sergius, Yakov Protazanov, 1918
Masks and Faces, with cameo from Sir Charles Hawtrey, George Bernard Shaw and J. M. Barrie, 1918
Shoulder Arms, Charles Chaplin, 1918
Broken Blossoms, D. W. Griffith, 1918
Anne of Green Gables, William Desmond Taylor, 1919
Within Our Gates, Oscar Micheaux, 1919

1920â€"1925

Aelita.jpg

A 1927 poster advertising Aelita: Queen of Mars (1924).


Way Down East, D. W. Griffith, 1920
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Robert Wiene, 1920
The Golem: How He Came Into the World, Paul Wegener, 1920
The $1,000,000 Reward, Harry Grossman and George Lessey, 1920
Huckleberry Finn, William Desmond Taylor, 1920
The Mark of Zorro, Fred Niblo, 1920
Destiny, Fritz Lang, 1921
The Kid, Charlie Chaplin, 1921
Orphans of the Storm, D. W. Griffith, 1921
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Rex Ingram, 1921
The Sheik, George Melford, 1921
God's Crucible, 1921
Blood and Sand, Fred Niblo, 1922
Nosferatu, F.W. Murnau, 1922
Beyond the Rocks, Sam Wood, 1922
Häxan, Benjamin Christensen, 1922
Nanook of the North, Robert Flaherty, 1922
The Ten Commandments, Cecil B. deMille, 1923
A Woman of Paris, Charlie Chaplin, 1923
The Thief of Bagdad, Douglas Fairbanks, 1923
Aelita, Yakov Protazanov, 1924
Sherlock, Jr., Buster Keaton, 1924
Strike, Sergei Eisenstein, 1924
The Iron Horse, John Ford, 1924
Greed, Erich von Stroheim, 1924
Battleship Potemkin, Sergei Eisenstein, 1925
Ben-Hur, Charles Brabin, J.J. Cohn, and Fred Niblo, 1925
The Gold Rush, Charlie Chaplin, 1925
Safety Last, Harold Lloyd, 1925
The Phantom of the Opera, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1925
The Big Parade, King Vidor, 1925
The Last Laugh, F.W. Murnau, 1925
The Joyless Street, G.W. Pabst, 1925
The Street of Forgotten Men, Herbert Brenon, 1925

1926â€"1930

Bronenosets.jpg

A 1926 Soviet poster for The Battleship Potemkin.

Our Hospitality, Buster Keaton, 1926
The Lodger, Alfred Hitchcock, 1926
Mother, Vsevolod Pudovkin, 1926
The Adventures of Prince Achmed, Karl Koch, Lotte Reiniger, 1926
The Man in the Iron Mask
Faust, F.W. Murnau, 1926
Brown of Harvard (Jack Conway), 1926
The Son of the Sheik, George Fitzmaurice, 1926
It, Clarence G. Badger (1927)
Napoléon, Abel Gance, 1927
The General, Buster Keaton, 1927
Sunrise, F.W. Murnau, 1927
Metropolis, Fritz Lang, 1927
October: Ten Days That Shook The World, Sergei Eisenstein, 1927
Berlin, Die Symphonie Einer Grosstaldt, Walther Ruttman, 1927
Wings, William Wellman, 1927
The Cat and the Canary, Paul Leni, 1927
Flesh and the Devil, Clarence Brown, 1927
The Private Life of Helen of Troy, Alexander Korda, 1927
Seventh Heaven, Frank Borzage, 1927
Underworld, Josef von Sternberg, 1927
The Unknown, Tod Browning, 1927
Steamboat Bill, Jr, Buster Keaton, 1928
The Last Command, Josef von Sternberg, 1928
L'Argent, Marcel L'Herbier, 1928
The Passion of Joan of Arc, Carl Theodor Dreyer, 1928
The Crowd, King Vidor, 1928
Storm Over Asia, Vsevolod Pudovkin, 1928
The Wind, Victor Sjöström, 1928
Beggars of Life, William Wellman, 1928
Un chien andalou, Luis Buñuel, 1928
The Docks of New York, Josef von Sternberg, 1929
Diary of a Lost Girl, GW Pabst, 1929
Pandora's Box, GW Pabst, 1929
Man With a Movie Camera, Dziga Vertov, 1929
Earth, Aleksandr Dovzhenko, 1930

1931 and later

City Lights, Charlie Chaplin, 1931
Tabu, F. W. Murnau, Robert Flaherty, 1931
I Was Born, But...,Yasujiro Ozu, 1932
A Story of Floating Weeds,Yasujiro Ozu, 1934
Modern Times, Charlie Chaplin, 1936

Modern silent films

These movies are silent intentionally for artistic, not technical reasons.
Silent Movie, Mel Brooks, 1976
Juha, Aki Kaurismäki, 1999
The Heart of the World, Guy Maddin, 2000
Tuvalu, Veit Helmer, 2001
Dracula, Pages From a Virgin's Diary, Guy Maddin, 2002
Cowards Bend the Knee, Guy Maddin, 2003
The Call of Cthulhu, Andrew Leman, 2005
The Brand Upon the Brain, Guy Maddin, 2006

Recovered and found silent films

These films have survived in film archives or have been found in private collections.
Defense d'afficher, Georges Méliès', 1896
X-Rays, G.A. Smith, 1897
La Tosca, André Calmettes and Charles Le Bargy, 1909
Jephtah's Daughter: A Biblical Tragedy, 1909
A Manly Man, Thomas H. Ince, 1911
At the Duke's Command, Thomas H. Ince, 1911
The Colleen Bawn, Thomas H. Ince, 1911
The Mirror, 1911
Maid or Man, Thomas H. Ince, 1911
The Sultan's Garden, Thomas H. Ince, 1911
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Lucius Henderson, 1912
A Fool and His Money, Alice Guy-Blaché, 1912
Under Two Flags, 1912
The Prisoner of Zenda, Edwin S. Porter, 1913
Der Hund von Baskerville, Rudolf Meinert, 1914
Double Trouble, William Christy Cabanne, 1915
Youth, Harry Handworth, 1915
Mysteriet natten tell den 25:e, Georg al Klercker, 1916
Purity, Rea Burger, 1916
Bucking Broadway, John Ford, 1917
His Wedding Night, Roscoe Arbuckle, 1917
The Image Maker, Eugene Moore, 1917
Max and His Taxi, 1917
Max Comes Across, 1917
Max Wants a Divorce, 1917
The Rough House, Roscoe Arbuckle, 1917
Hell Bent, John Ford, 1918
Oh Baby!, 1918
Back Stage, Roscoe Arbuckle, 1919
Scarlet Days, D.W. Griffith, 1919
If I were King, J. Gordon Edwards, 1920
In the Days of St. Patrick, Norman Whitten, 1920
The Blue Fox, Duke Worne, 1921
Beyond the Rocks, Sam Wood, 1922
The Young Rajah, Phill Rosen, 1922
$20 A Week, Harmon F. Weight, 1924
The Breaking Point, Herbert Brenon, 1924
Pied Piper Malone, 1924
The Boob, William Wellman, 1926
The Exquisite Sinner, Josef von Sternberg, 1926
The Flaming Frontier, Edward Sedgwick, 1926
You Never Know Women, William Wellman, 1926
A Page of Madness, Kinugasa Teinosuke, 1926
The Ridin' Rowdy, Richard Thorpe, 1927
The Rough Riders, Victor Fleming, 1927
Senorita, Alfred E. Green, 1927
Sorrell and Son, Herbert Brenon, 1927
The Constant Nymph, Adrian Brunel, 1928
Drag, Frank Lloyd, 1929
Why Be Good?, William Seiter, 1929
Wonder of Women, Clarence Brown, 1929

Top grossing silent films

#The Birth of a Nation (1915) - $10,000,000 #The Big Parade (1925) - $6,400,000#Ben-Hur (1925) - $5,500,000#Way Down East (1920) - $5,000,000 #The Gold Rush (1925) - $4,250,000#The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (film) (1921) - $4,000,000#The Circus (1928) - $3,800,000#The Covered Wagon (1923) - $3,800,000#The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) - $3,500,000#The Ten Commandments (1923) - $3,400,000#Orphans of the Storm (1921) - $3,000,000#For Heaven's Sake (1926) - $2,600,000#Seventh Heaven (1926) - $2,400,000#Abie's Irish Rose (1928) - $1,500,000

See also

*:Category:Silent films
*:Category:Silent film actors
*Laurel and Hardy films
*List of film formats
*Sound stage

References

*Brownlow, Kevin. Behind the Mask of Innocence. New York: Knopf, 1990. ISBN 0-394-57747-7
*Bean, Jennifer M., and Diane Negra, eds. A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema (Camera Obscura Book). Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002. ISBN 0822329999
*Cook, David A. A History of Narrative Film, 2nd edition. New York: W.W. Norton, 1990. ISBN 0-393-95553-2
*Eyman, Scott. The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution, 1926-1930. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997. ISBN 0-684-81162-6
*Parkinson, David. History of Film. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1995. ISBN 0-500-20277-X
*Standish, Isolde. A New History of Japanese Cinema: A Century of Narrative Film. New York: Continuum, 2005. ISBN 0-8264-1709-4

External links

* Silent Movies on DVD
* Overview on silent movie festivals
* The Silent Era
* Photo galleries of the Silent Ladies and Gents
* Books on Silent Films
* Internet silent movie society



Email this page
About Us | Advertise on This Site | User Agreement | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy | Help
About and About.com are registered trademarks of About, Inc. The About logo is a trademark of About, Inc. All rights reserved.
This is the "GNU Free Documentation License" reference article from the English Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. See also our Disclaimer.