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Text 6. Motion Picture Industry



Thomas Edison's Kinetoscope invented, 1894 / First projected film-showing in US, 1896 / First movie theatre opened Los Angeles, 1902 / First narrative feature, The Great Train Robbery, 1903 / First Hollywood "epic", Birth of a Nation, 1915 / Sound succesfully introduced with The Jazz Singer, 1927 / First Technicolor feature, 1935 / Impact of television led to decline of major Hollywood studios, 1950s.

During the Great Depression, going to the movies once a week was almost as much a part of the American experience as Thanksgiving turkey. Every year the major motion picture studios — Metro-Gold-mynMayer, Wather Brothers, Paramount, Universal and 20th-century Fox — turned out hundreds of films, the vast majority of them light, airy comedies, flossy musicals, adventure yarns and detective stories. For the most part such fare had few artistic pretension. The films were calculated to charm, excite and amuse the movie going public, which by 1938 was represented by some 80 million movie-theatre tickets sold weekly: a figure indicating that perhaps half of all Americans — allowing for those who saw more than one movie a week — spent several hours weekly at either small neighbourhood theatres or in the ornate surroundings of "down­town" motion picture business, these depression years, and the 1940s that followed, were a golden age; a time when a star like crooner-actor Frank Sinatra could draw thousand of shrieking teenagers, when the faces of such film luminaries as Clark Gable, Humphrey Bogart, child star Shirley Temple, Greta Garbo, Ingrid Bergman, Rita Hayworth and a host of others were as familiar to Americans as that of President Franklin D.Roosvelt.

The glamour surrounding the American motion picture industry in the 1930s and 1940s was a far cry from its primitive beginnings near the turn of the century. Although inventors and technicians of many nations had a hand in developing early motion picture cameras and projectors, the American experience with film began in 1894 when Thomas Edison unveiled his Kinetoscope "peep shows".

The earliest films relied on the novelty of the medium to attract customers. Little effort was made to develop a story line until Edwin S.Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" (1903) — the prototype of thousands of Western adventure movies — proved to be so great a hit that it cast the mold in which film entertainment was to be formed.

By the early 1920s the movies had already carved a place for themselves in the entertainment habits of millions of Americans who flocked to theatres to see such stars as Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charles Chaplin, Joan Crawford and Tom Mix on the still-silent screen.

At about the same time, a young cartoonist, Walt Disney, began to achieve success with his animated films, which in 1928 introduced "Mickey Mouse" to the world. Seven years later the first Technicolor feature, "Becky Sharp", signaled the arrival of full-color movies. Scores of films made in the 1930s and 1940s have retained a wide audience through their frequent revivals in motions picture theatres of via showing on television. "Gone with the wind" (1939), the Technicolor epic of the Old South, remains a Hollywood standby, its 77 million gross (1973) making it one of the most profitable movies ever produced. Numerous other films of Hollywood's "golden age" — including Charles Chaplin's "City Lights" (1931); "Grand Hotel" (1932); starring Greta Garbo; John Huston's "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1948); and Joseph Mahkiewiz's "All About Eve" (1950), to name just a few — have retained audience interest. Television, which by the early 1950s was luring millions away from the movie theatres. At first the major studios fought back. It was a futile effort, for by the early 1960s television had claimed the lion's share of the entertainment audience and the major studios first cut back their production schedules, then changed their methods of operation, becoming little more than packages of both movies and situation comedies for the new medium. For all its problems, the motion picture industry still attracts some 20 million Americans each week for whom the movies remain a prime source of entertainment.

to declineубывать, уменьшаться, приходить в упадок; experienceопыт; vast majorityогромное большинство; flossyшелковистый; pretensionпретензия, предъявление прав, претенциозность; to calculateвычислять, рассчитывать, полагать, думать; to indicateуказывать, ознакомлять, показывать; ornateочень украшенный, витиеватый (стиль); surroundingsокрестности, среда; golden ageзолотой век, золотое время; croonerисполнитель или исполнительница сентиментальных песенок

teen-agerподросток; luminaryсветило, знаменитость; host ofмножество, толпа; to be familiar to smb.быть хорошо знакомым, известным кому-либо;glamourчары, колдовство; inventorизобретатель; peep showнебольшая коллекция картинок для стереоскопа; to rely onполагаться на; the medium ofпосредством, через; to attractпривлекать, притягивать; effortусилие, напряжение; to carveпробить дорогу, место; to flockсобираться в толпу; to achieve successдостигать успеха; revivalвозрождение, оживление; profitableприбыльный, полезный; treasureсокровище, клад; futileбесполезный, пустой, тщетный, ничтожный, недействительный; to claimтребовать, претендовать на; primeлучший, главный

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