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U.S. History 1877-Present 7: Time for the Talkies 27 Views
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Description:
And we're not talking about the walkie kinds. Back in the day talking in movies was rare and advanced technology that was differentiated from other "normal" movies. We'll learn all about the movie industry of this era in our little talkie above.
Transcript
- 00:04
While plenty of Americans tuned in to their favorite radio station [Boy runs into room with family]
- 00:07
every day the movies had a glamour that radio just couldn't match Radiohead
- 00:13
voices movies had faces radio had familiar shows movies were always new
- 00:19
people listen to the radio while they did housework without pants on and we [Man dusting while listening to radio]
- 00:24
still do but people went to the movies in their best attire usually with pants
Full Transcript
- 00:28
on well some I've gone to the movies without pants on but so we doubt they [Man sitting down at the movies]
- 00:32
stayed long movies offered new worlds of adventure romance comedy and drama there
- 00:37
were westerns gangster movies musicals historical themes slapstick comedies and [People firing guns and people dancing in movies]
- 00:43
costume dramas all the same star could be a cowgirl one week and an 18th
- 00:48
century princess the next and a glamorous modern flapper risk the week [Princess wearing pink dress]
- 00:52
after that in the 1920s the blockbuster movie with its cast of thousands became
- 00:56
very popular well Cecil B DeMille the most famous movie director of his day
- 01:00
made the Ten Commandments in 1923 you know it was a mega hit people love the
- 01:07
huge set and the special effects which included the parting of the Red Sea
- 01:11
recreated by a close-up of jell-o yes before CGI there was jell-o we've come [People watching Ten Commandments at theater]
- 01:17
so far they also loved the sex and violence in
- 01:20
the movie which raised some outcry in society critics called for censorship
- 01:24
but DeMille defended himself saying he was only telling a story from the Bible [Critic appears talking to Cecil]
- 01:28
with the critics dare censor the Word of God himself well it was harder to defend
- 01:34
the new sex symbols Greta Garbo Louise Brooks Clara Bow and Theda Bara put
- 01:40
their sexuality up in front of movies like Garbo's slash in the devil these [Woman dancing with man in movie]
- 01:45
ladies wore the latest revealing dresses and played women who had no time for
- 01:49
plan by society's rules then there were the male sex symbols like Errol Flynn
- 01:53
Clark Gable and that hunky dreamboat Rudolph Valentino who made the ladies
- 01:58
swoon when he played Arabian sheiks and Latin pirates Hollywood was torn it
- 02:03
loved the money it made from its sex symbols but it didn't want its critics
- 02:06
to force the federal government to regulate its movie well to stop the [Woman dancing and critic appears]
- 02:10
government from censoring its movies the largest film produced
- 02:13
created the motion pictures producers and distributors association in 1922 yes
- 02:20
mouthful well led by will Hays the NP PDA created a list of do's and don't
- 02:25
seems like sex drug use gun violent surgery interracial dating
- 02:31
series that was a big deal back then and anything critical of America were all no [Men hitting each other with bags]
- 02:35
notes will Hays would have lost his mind if he could have peaked the future and [Will Hays screaming and head falls off]
- 02:39
watch one of today's reality TV shows well the controversy over wild movies
- 02:44
only drove profit by the end of the decade ninety million people were going
- 02:49
to the movies every week out of a total population of 122 million in this
- 02:53
country catching movie palaces and small theaters alike saw a constant parade of [People running into theaters]
- 02:58
patrons from children attending afternoon matinees
- 03:01
to adults taking in the evenings main feature well most theaters even small
- 03:06
ones had room up front for musicians whether it was a full orchestra or a [Man with big instrument appears on stage]
- 03:09
three-piece band to play musical accompaniment to the movies because they
- 03:13
almost have more silent oh yeah did we mention that silent movie all these [Little girl puts finger over lips]
- 03:17
money-making blockbusters had no recorded sound just little sentences
- 03:21
that would pop up once in a while when things got really confusing you know the
- 03:25
armadillos are loose and stuff like that all that changed when lee deforest [Armadillos running down a hill]
- 03:30
and inventor built on previous men's work to create a way to record sound on
- 03:35
film as early as 1923 DeForest showed 18 short movies with sound at the Rivoli
- 03:40
theatre in New York City but Hollywood was not interested no one wanted to mess
- 03:45
with his success by introducing a new technology there were flaws and lead to
- 03:50
Forrest machine that he did not work too hard to fix way to be a slacker there
- 03:55
Lee so it wasn't until 1926 that a Hollywood studio made a sound movie done
- 04:00
hewan with the star John Barrymore why isn't this movie famously known as the [John Barrymore appears looking at a woman]
- 04:05
first talkie well it didn't actually have any talking the sound was just
- 04:09
music and special effects the movie industry still needed some baby steps [Baby taking steps]
- 04:14
there that meant that the first major talkie came one year later the jazz
- 04:18
singer started the popular singer Al Jolson and he actually talked and sang
- 04:23
and played the piano in the movie after that there was no turning back [Man singing in movie]
- 04:27
took a little while for all movies to turn into talkies but ever since
- 04:30
well they can't shut Hollywood [Woman watching TV]
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