Reading 4: Maturing Forms & Advent of Sound (EuroCin 1) Flashcards

1
Q

M was a ____ film

A

German Expressionist

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2
Q

M setting and resulting pathology

A

dark cityscape, unstable environment, paranoid pathology

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3
Q

M based on

A

Real life child killer

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4
Q

M director

A

Fritz Lang

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5
Q

What is left out of M

A

Killing of victim, left to be imagined. IMPLIED

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6
Q

Police & criminals in M

A

Indistinguishable, both want killer dead

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7
Q

Killer in M

A

Beckert

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8
Q

How is Beckert found

A

criminals trap him in extensive network of spies

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9
Q

How does Beckert respond to being found

A

Breaks down uncontrollably and plays victim

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10
Q

M and sound + ex.

A

innovative use of sound (motif whistle phrase becomes more and more ominous)

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11
Q

Whistle phrase in M

A

Originally used to lure & eventually used to find Beckert out, his downfall

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12
Q

Magazine phrase that inspired M

A

“Murderer amoung us” quoted in film

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13
Q

M killer psycho actor

A

Peter Lorne’s portrayal sets film standard

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14
Q

Cabinet of Dr. Caligari Dir.

A

Wiene

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15
Q

Dr. Caligari’s exhibition

A

Somnabolist @ fair

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16
Q

Romance in Dr. C

A

Love triangle

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17
Q

Mysterious stabbing of town clerk ______

A

incites confusion and action in Dr. C

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18
Q

What does Cesare predict?

A

Alan has “til dawn” to live

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19
Q

Who kills Alan

A

Cesare (unknown to viewer)

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20
Q

Who suspects Dr. C of murder?

A

Francis

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21
Q

Sets of Caligari

A

Contorted scenery & Bauhaus sets

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22
Q

Ambiguous ending of Dr. C

A

Ending w/ asylum & inmate… which is the murderer?

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23
Q

Nosferatu Dir.

A

Marnau

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24
Q

importance of nosferatu

A

earliest screen adaptation of dracula

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25
Q

Romance in nosferatu

A

love triangle between count orlok, ellen, and hutter

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26
Q

Nosferatu b&w?

A

Not fully, tints used

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27
Q

Orlok’s tastes in movie

A

primal sexual tastes for ellen (and possibly hutter)

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28
Q

Hero in noseferatu

A

Ellen sacrifices life to save community

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29
Q

Metropolis Director

A

Fritz Lang

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30
Q

Metropolis had monumental _______

A

production/themes addressed

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31
Q

Genre of Metropolis

A

Sci-Fi fantasy

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32
Q

What were audiences initially critical of in Metropolis?

A

socialist/communist aspects

33
Q

Metropolis & time

A

Film too long for US & short cut made little sense

34
Q

Audience best responded to (Metropolis)

A

Shocking visuals

35
Q

REAL first sound film

A

Lights of NY (Not the Jazz Singer)

36
Q

Why is Jazz Singer not first sound film

A

has several spots of silence

37
Q

Transition to talkies results on careers

A

Some flourished some tanked

38
Q

Who’s set looked like German Expressionist painting

A

Dr. Caligari

39
Q

Nosferatu rights

A

Bram Stroker’s wife wouldnt give rights to Dracula

40
Q

Special fx in Nosferatu (3)

A

Fast speed/reversal of shot/negative film

41
Q

One of the last major silent productions

A

Metropolis

42
Q

Metropolis introduced first image of _____ in cinema

A

robot

43
Q

Metropolis is about ______ vs ________

A

Elite versus working class

44
Q

Start of film Noir

A

M, Fritz Lang

45
Q

Metropolis villian

A

mad scientist

46
Q

Birth of psychology goes with birth of _______

A

films that deal with serial killers

47
Q

M utilized

A

off-screen sound (i.e. children playing in beginning)

48
Q

M debates b/w ____ & _____ of killer

A

guilt & mental illness

49
Q

Building blocks that contribute to maturing of narrative form

A

Impact of German Expressionism & Advent of sound synch

50
Q

What was so special about German Expressionism?

A

Element of psychology, power of atmosphere created (decor)

51
Q

Who used 1st person style

A

German Expressionists

52
Q

German expressionist’s emphasis on (Hint: French)

A

Mise-en-scene

53
Q

German Expressionist art reflected

A

Fine Art

54
Q

German Expressionist psych. often seeped in

A

Freud

55
Q

2 German Expressionist roots

A

WWI loss & expressionist art

56
Q

German expressionism opposite of

A

Impressionism (outward), expressionism looks inward

57
Q

Dr. C expresses

A

social collapse & confusion of Germany

58
Q

Why was German expressionism so accepted/popular?

A

It deals MOSTLY with human need to understand world around us + dealt with sense of misplacement

59
Q

Why was German expressionism scarier than Universal monsters?

A

What’s INSIDE of us is the scariest thing

60
Q

German expressionist “LOOK”

A

High contrast, eccentric/angled sets, dream-like haziness

61
Q

German expressionist big hit

A

Golem: How he came into the world

62
Q

Golem about

A

Hebrew clay monster

63
Q

Unsuccessful German Expressionist film, why?

A

Vampyr b/c it was unorthodox

64
Q

Now how is Vampyr seen?

A

Horror classic

65
Q

Beginning talkies were ______, why?

A

awkward: dialogue reverted to static stagey convos/presentation due to recording limitations

66
Q

Global talkies first huge in

A

US & India

67
Q

How did Europe @ first feel about talkies

A

suspicious

68
Q

How did talkies pick up in Japan

A

slowly

69
Q

Talkies created ______ & ________

A

New jobs and new mechanisms on set

70
Q

Major consequence of advent of sound

A

Industry wide panic, movie czars resising. MASSIVE $$$

71
Q

Who survived transition to talkies?

A

Those who didn’t resist it

72
Q

Early talky technical issue

A

STATIC & capturing sound

73
Q

3 major struggles to get to SOUND film

A

sound synch, amplification, and recording fidelity

74
Q

Combo of inventions to make new one

A

Kinetoscope+Zoopractiscope= Kinetophone

75
Q

What happened to Kinetophone?

A

Failure due to projections

76
Q

What did Jazz Singer do?

A

Commercially begin sound era

77
Q

Western’s first sound film device

A

vitaphone

78
Q

Issue w/ recording fidelity

A

poor sound unless subjects directly in front of camera