Week 4: Classical Hollywood Narration Flashcards

1
Q

Define classical Hollywood narration

A
  • Long, stable history
  • Informed by an inherited tradition - shared rules and conventions
  • Self-effacing craftsmanship (“classicism” vs. “romanticism”)
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2
Q

What is the east coast industry?

A

Fort Lee, New Jersey was America’s first film capital prior to the mitigation west

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3
Q

What is “The Edison Trust?”

A

Inventor Thomas Edison’s monopolistic Motion Picture Production Company (Est. 1908). Many exhibitors clashed with his company.

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4
Q

Who are some exhibitors that clashed with the Edison Trust?

A

Carl Laemmle, William Fox, the Warner Brothers

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5
Q

When did the first Hollywood studio establish?

A

1912

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6
Q

When did the break-up of the Edison Trust and the emergence of the Hollywood “Studio system” happen?

A

1918

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7
Q

What did the Studio System include?

A
  • Studio contracts
  • Vertical integration of studios (production, distribution, exhibition)
  • “Integrated majors” and “minor” studios
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8
Q

Who was the first American to earn a million-dollar salary?

A

Louis B. Mayer

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9
Q

What is the Paramount Decision and when did it happen?

A

After Paramount sold, all major studios were compelled to see their cinema chains, 1948

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10
Q

What is narrative?

A

A chain of events in cause-effect relationship occurring in time and space

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11
Q

What is cause and effect?

A
  • The all-important unifying principle
  • Action springs primarily from individual characters as causal agents
  • Some goal and desire will motivate the action
  • Chain of actions leading toward a clear resolution
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12
Q

What is double causal structure?

A

Typically, two intertwined plot lines (ex. quest and romance)
- Each has its own goal, obstacles and climax
- Two lines will often coincide at film’s climax

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13
Q

What are typical plot patterns?

A

Goal-oriented plot:
- familiar devices: the appointment or the deadline
- delays, obstructions
- climax and anticlimax

  • time or space as patterning device
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14
Q

What happens when a film is time subordinated to the cause-effect chain?

A

The plot will eliminate significant durations of time in order to focus on events of causal importance. Plot will organize story chronology to present the cause-effect chain most strikingly

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15
Q

What are examples of time subordination?

A
  • Elliptical edit
  • Flashback
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16
Q

What is the “closure effect” or “pseudo-closure?”

A

Relies in part on our having forgotten about the initial problem, which remains unsolved