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Jaakko Seppälä. Hollywood in the 1930s, Poetic Realism, Japanese Cinema in the 1930s. http://www.helsinki.fi/taitu/tet/Jaakko/WorldFilmHistory1.html. Hollywood’s Depression Age. The stock market crash of 1929 ( Black Tuesday ) led to the Great Depression
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Jaakko Seppälä Hollywood in the 1930s, Poetic Realism,Japanese Cinema in the 1930s http://www.helsinki.fi/taitu/tet/Jaakko/WorldFilmHistory1.html
Hollywood’s Depression Age • The stock market crash of 1929 (Black Tuesday) led to the Great Depression • The depression caught up with the film industry in 1931 (1930 had been a boom year) • People had little money for film tickets • Hollywood fought the depression with double bills and B movies • Wall Street’s involvement increased in the 1930s • The National Industrial Recovery Act went into effect in 1933
The Production Code • In 1930 the president of the MPPDA Will Hays authorised the drafting of the production code • Code enforcement was rather lax and inconsistent until late 1933 (pre-code films) • The Production Code Administration led by Joseph Breen began to regulate movie content • PCA approval was required on all scripts before production and then on the finished film • Hollywood’s self-censorship set the boundaries for what could be seen, heard or even implied on screen
The Studio System THE BIG FIVE Paramount Loew’s (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer) Twenties Century Fox Warner Bros. RKO THE LITTLE THREE Universal, Columbia, United Artists
Hollywood Cinema in the 1930s • The era of the movie palace came to an end • Methods of sound recording improved: unidirectional microphones, light booms, multiple-track recording, new camera support (dolly) • Technicolor introduced a new system in the early 1930s • The 1930s saw the began of the golden age of Hollywood cinema (the age of the genre film) • Major genres of the 1930s: the musical, the screwball comedy, the horror film, the social problem film, the gangster film, the war film
French Cinema in the 1930s • French studio system was weak but it offered filmmakers flexibility and freedom • Gaumont-Franco-Film-Aubert and Pathé-Natan • A period of well-defined film genres and industrial structures, and a time when the cinema was the main form of popular entertainment began in the 1930s • Spoken French increased the popularity of the national cinema • Hollywood films still dominated the market • Emigrant filmmakers arrived from Germany
French Poetic Realism • Poetic realism was not a unified movement but a looser tendency • Realism: films are set in working class environments and characters live on the margins of the society • Poetic: pessimistic narratives about love and disappointment, tone of nostalgia and bitterness, night-time settings, dark and contrasted visual style • Films reflect the gloomy morale of the 1930s • Major films: Le Grand Jeu, Pépé le Moko, La Béte Humaine, La Règle du jeu, Les Enfants du paradis
Japanese Cinema in the 1930s • A benshi = a person who explained the filmic image to the audiences • Japanese cinema resisted the transformation to synchronised sound • The biggest companies: Nikkatsu, Shochiku and Toho • Hollywood films did not overshadow domestic production • The director and scriptwriter had a considerable control over their projects • Directors were encouraged to specialise in certain genres and to cultivate personal styles