Transcript Slide 1

Looking at Movies
Fourth Edition
Richard Barsam  Dave Monahan
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Filmmaking
Technologies and
Production Systems
The Whole Equation
• Moviemaking is, above all, a moneymaking enterprise.
• Moviemaking is a collaborative enterprise.
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Film Technology: An Overview
• Analog medium
• Three stages – shooting, processing, projecting
• Format – gauge, or width, of the film stock; its
perforations; and the shape and size of the image we
see on the screen
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Film Stock: An Overview
• Format – measured in millimeters
• Film stock length – the number of feet (or meters) or
reels for a particular film
• Film stock speed – the degree of light-sensitivity
• Exposure – the length of time the film is exposed to
light
• Resolution – the capacity to provide fine detail in an
image
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Video Technology
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Video image consists of pixels (picture elements)
Low picture quality compared to film
Video’s strengths – cheap stock and no processing
Used in amateur filmmaking and low-budget
documentary productions
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Digital Technology
• An electronic process that creates images though a
numbered system of pixels stored on a flash card or
computer hard drive
• More versatile, easier, and cheaper to use than film
• Uses less light than film, requires no processing, easily
duplicated
• Involves an electronic process that creates its images
through a numbered system of pixels
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Film vs. Digital
• Film stock is a physical thing; digital is virtual
representation
• Computer-manipulated digital requires no lab
processing
• Film has a particular aesthetic – film grain, depth of
color and shadow
• The key factor for a digital conversion is economic
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Film vs. Digital: Economics
• Digital distribution is cost-effective compared with
film distribution
• The threat of pirating digital formats remains the same
as film
• Hollywood has used digital systems to produce less
than 1 percent of movies released
• Virtually 100 percent of all feature films are digitally
edited
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How a Movie Is Made: Preproduction
• Filmmakers develop an idea or obtain a script
• Arrange the financing
• Begin discussions with key people responsible for
design, photography, music, and sound
• Rewriting, scheduling, rehearsals with cast and crew
• Overall, can take one to two years
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How a Movie Is Made: Production
• Shooting can last six weeks to several months, or more
• Director designs the shooting script, sets schedule
• Director does rehearsals and blocking, filming and
watching dailies
• Number and type of shots dictates number of crew
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How a Movie Is Made:
Postproduction
• Editing – visual images and sound
• Preparing the final print
• Marketing and distribution
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The History of Hollywood in Three
Periods
• The Studio System
• The Independent System
• Combined System – today’s current model
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The Studio System before 1931
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Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC) (1908–1915)
Hollywood, California, attracted filmmakers
Studios dominated by central producers (moguls)
Central-producer system valued quantity over quality
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The Studio System after 1931
• Producer-unit system
• Each studio had its own organizational system
• Created an industry that favored standardization and
created a “look”
• Established a collaborative, industrial mode of
production
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The Golden Age (1940s)
• Majors / Minors / “B” studios / Independent producers
• Majors: Paramount, MGM, Warner Bros., 20th CenturyFox, RKO
• Minors: Universal, Columbia, United Artists
• B Studios: Republic Pictures, Monogram Productions,
Grand National Films, Producers Releasing Corporation,
and Eagle-Lion Films
• Studios were vertically integrated companies
• Producers dominated the studio system
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The Actual, Physical Studios:
“Dream Factories”
• Studios were high-walled industrial complexes with
guarded gates
• MGM covered more than 117 acres, had 10 miles of
paved streets, and 137 totally self-contained buildings
• 29 air-conditioned, soundproofed sound stages, some
having almost an acre of floor space
• MGM produced an average of 50 full-length features
and 100 shorts a year, employing nearly 5,000 people
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Decline of the Studio System
(1950s)
• Federal government actions signaled a change in studio
business
• Studios reorganized producer-unit systems
• Shift in the relations between top management and
creative personnel
• World War II
• The rise of television
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The Independent System
• 1930s–1940s: The package-unit system
• Role of the independent producer
• Producer’s team – may include an executive producer,
line producer, and associate and assistant producers.
• Allows for more creative innovation
• Total cost / Creative financing of salaries
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Labor and Unions
• Studio Basic Agreement (1926)
• Screen Actors Guild (1933)
• Management and labor carry out the three phases of
moviemaking
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Professional Organizations and
Standardization
• Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers
(1916)
• American Society of Cinematographers (1918)
• Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (1927)
• American Cinema Editors (1950)
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Financing in the Industry
• Vertically integrated studio system – direct or indirect
costs
• No rule governs the arranging of financing
• Independent system – above-the-line (30%) or belowthe-line (70%) costs
• Accounting practices for films can be highly creative
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Marketing and Distribution
• Answer prints are screened for test audiences and focus
groups
• Independent producers have various distribution
options
• Professionals are in charge of advertising, distribution,
exhibition
• Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) –
ratings system
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MPAA Movie-Rating System
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G – General Audience
PG – Parental Guidance Suggested
PG-13 – Parents Strongly Cautioned
R – Restricted
NC-17 – No One 17 and Under Admitted
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Production in Hollywood Today
• Mixture of studio system (radically different than in
“golden age”) and independent production companies
• No studio “system”; few truly independent producers
• Major studios define the nature of U.S. movie
production
• Independent producers distribute through the “big six”
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Major Studios and Owners
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20th Century Fox (News Corporation)
Warner Bros. Pictures (Time Warner Inc.)
Sony Pictures (Sony Corporation of America)
Universal Studios (NBC Universal)
Walt Disney Pictures (Walt Disney Pictures)
Paramount (Viacom Inc.)
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3-D Movies: Gimmick or Trend of
the Future?
– Not a new process; experimented with since 1900s
– 38 3-D features in 2011, including films by Martin
Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Francis Ford
Coppola
– Converting nondigital screens costs about $70,000
each
– Even with recent successes, it’s still an open
question whether 3-D movies are here to stay
Foreign Influences on Hollywood
Films
• In 2011, foreign ticket sales accounted for 68% of the
global film market, up 10% in 10 years
• To enhance appeal to global market:
– Collaboration with local (foreign) producers
– Hire more foreign actors in blockbusters
– Rewrite scripts to enhance global appeal
– Focus on action films that are by far the most
successful
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Maverick Producers and Directors
• Mavericks refuse to conform to the accepted way of
making movies
• Producers: Scott Rudin, Jerry Bruckheimer, Brian Grazer
• Directors: John Sayles, Robert Rodriguez, Mel Gibson
• Other Notable Mavericks: George Lucas, Spike Lee,
Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese
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Review
1. Today, what is the average cost to produce and market a
Hollywood film?
a. $25 million
b. $50 million
c. $100 million
d. $150 million
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Review
2. Which is NOT a filmmaking technology?
a. film
b. video
c. analog
d. digital
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Review
3. In the old studio system, the film budget consisted of
which two categories?
a. Above-the-line costs, below-the-line costs
b. Production costs, postproduction costs
c. Direct costs, indirect costs
d. Overhead costs, underhead costs
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Review
4. Which of the following organizations is in charge of the
Oscars?
a. Motion Picture Association of America
b. Motion Picture Patents Company
c. Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers
d. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
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Review
5. In filmmaking today, major studios account for what
percentage of gross income?
a. 15%
b. 50%
c. 80%
d. 95%
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