The Photoplay
The PhotoplayINTRODUCTIONCHAPTER I CHAPTER IIPART ICHAPTER III [1]CHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VIPART IICHAPTER VIICHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IXCHAPTER XCHAPTER XICopyright
The Photoplay
Hugo Münsterberg
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I
THE OUTER DEVELOPMENT OF THE MOVING PICTURES
It is arbitrary to say where the development of the moving pictures
began and it is impossible to foresee where it will lead. What
invention marked the beginning? Was it the first device to
introduce movement into the pictures on a screen? Or did the
development begin with the first photographing of various phases of
moving objects? Or did it start with the first presentation of
successive pictures at such a speed that the impression of movement
resulted? Or was the birthday of the new art when the experimenters
for the first time succeeded in projecting such rapidly passing
pictures on a wall? If we think of the moving pictures as a source
of entertainment and esthetic enjoyment, we may see the germ in
that camera obscura which allowed one glass slide to pass before
another and thus showed the railway train on one slide moving over
the bridge on the other glass plate. They were popular half a
century ago. On the other hand if the essential feature of the
moving pictures is the combination of various views into one
connected impression, we must look back to the days of the
phenakistoscope which had scientific interest only; it is more than
eighty years since it was invented. In America, which in most
recent times has become the classical land of the moving picture
production, the history may be said to begin with the days of the
Chicago Exposition, 1893, when Edison exhibited his kinetoscope.
The visitor dropped his nickel into a slot, the little motor
started, and for half a minute he saw through the magnifying glass
a girl dancing or some street boys fighting. Less than a quarter of
a century later twenty thousand theaters for moving pictures are
open daily in the United States and the millions get for their
nickel long hours of enjoyment. In Edison's small box into which
only one at a time could peep through the hole, nothing but a few
trite scenes were exhibited. In those twenty thousand theaters
which grew from it all human passions and emotions find their
stage, and whatever history reports or science demonstrates or
imagination invents comes to life on the screen of the picture
palace.Yet this development from Edison's half-minute show to the
"Birth of a Nation" did not proceed on American soil. That slot
box, after all, had little chance for popular success. The decisive
step was taken when pictures of the Edison type were for the first
time thrown on a screen and thus made visible to a large audience.
That step was taken 1895 in London. The moving picture theater
certainly began in England. But there was one source of the stream
springing up in America, which long preceded Edison: the
photographic efforts of the Englishman Muybridge, who made his
experiments in California as early as 1872. His aim was to have
photographs of various phases of a continuous movement, for
instance of the different positions which a trotting horse is
passing through. His purpose was the analysis of the movement into
its component parts, not the synthesis of a moving picture from
such parts. Yet it is evident that this too was a necessary step
which made the later triumphs possible.If we combine the scientific and the artistic efforts of the
new and the old world, we may tell the history of the moving
pictures by the following dates and achievements. In the year 1825
a Doctor Roget described in the "Philosophical Transactions" an
interesting optical illusion of movement, resulting, for instance,
when a wheel is moving along behind a fence of upright bars. The
discussion was carried much further when it was taken up a few
years later by a master of the craft, by Faraday. In theJournal of the Royal Institute of Great
Britainhe writes in 1831 "on a peculiar class of
optical deceptions." He describes there a large number of subtle
experiments in which cogwheels of different forms and sizes were
revolving with different degrees of rapidity and in different
directions. The eye saw the cogs of the moving rear wheel through
the passing cogs of the front wheel. The result is the appearance
of movement effects which do not correspond to an objective motion.
The impression of backward movement can arise from forward motions,
quick movement from slow, complete rest from combinations of
movements. For the first time the impression of movement was
synthetically produced from different elements. For those who fancy
that the "new psychology" with its experimental analysis of
psychological experiences began only in the second half of the
nineteenth century or perhaps even with the foundation of the
psychological laboratories, it might be enlightening to study those
discussions of the early thirties.The next step leads us much further. In the fall of 1832
Stampfer in Germany and Plateau in France, independent of each
other, at the same time designed a device by which pictures of
objects in various phases of movement give the impression of
continued motion. Both secured the effect by cutting fine slits in
a black disk in the direction of the radius. When the disk is
revolved around its center, these slits pass the eye of the
observer. If he holds it before a mirror and on the rear side of
the disk pictures are drawn corresponding to the various slits, the
eye will see one picture after another in rapid succession at the
same place. If these little pictures give us the various stages of
a movement, for instance a wheel with its spokes in different
positions, the whole series of impressions will be combined into
the perception of a revolving wheel. Stampfer called them the
stroboscopic disks, Plateau the phenakistoscope. The smaller the
slits, the sharper the pictures. Uchatius in Vienna constructed an
apparatus as early as 1853 to throw these pictures of the
stroboscopic disks on the wall. Horner followed with the daedaleum,
in which the disk was replaced by a hollow cylinder which had the
pictures on the inside and holes to watch them from without while
the cylinder was in rotation. From this was developed the popular
toy which as the zoötrope or bioscope became familiar everywhere.
It was a revolving black cylinder with vertical slits, on the
inside of which paper strips with pictures of moving objects in
successive phases were placed. The clowns sprang through the hoop
and repeated this whole movement with every new revolution of the
cylinder. In more complex instruments three sets of slits were
arranged above one another. One set corresponded exactly to the
distances of the pictures and the result was that the moving object
appeared to remain on the same spot. The second brought the slits
nearer together; then the pictures necessarily produced an effect
as if the man were really moving forward while he performed his
tricks. In the third set the slits were further distant from one
another than the pictures, and the result was that the picture
moved backward.The scientific principle which controls the moving picture
world of today was established with these early devices. Isolated
pictures presented to the eye in rapid succession but separated by
interruptions are perceived not as single impressions of different
positions, but as a continuous movement. But the pictures of
movements used so far were drawn by the pen of the artist. Life
showed to him everywhere continuous movements; his imagination had
to resolve them into various instantaneous positions. He drew the
horse race for the zoötrope, but while the horses moved forward,
nobody was able to say whether the various pictures of their legs
really corresponded to the stages of the actual movements. Thus a
true development of the stroboscopic effects appeared dependent
upon the fixation of the successive stages. This was secured in the
early seventies, but to make this progress possible the whole
wonderful unfolding of the photographer's art was needed, from the
early daguerreotype, which presupposed hours of exposure, to the
instantaneous photograph which fixes the picture of the outer world
in a small fraction of a second. We are not concerned here with
this technical advance, with the perfection of the sensitive
surface of the photographic plate. In 1872 the photographer's
camera had reached a stage at which it was possible to take
snapshot pictures. But this alone would not have allowed the
photographing of a real movement with one camera, as the plates
could not have been exchanged quickly enough to catch the various
phases of a short motion.Here the work of Muybridge sets in. He had a black horse trot
or gallop or walk before a white wall, passing twenty-four cameras.
On the path of the horse were twenty-four threads which the horse
broke one after another and each one released the spring which
opened the shutter of an instrument. The movement of the horse was
thus analyzed into twenty-four pictures of successive phases; and
for the first time the human eye saw the actual positions of a
horse's legs during the gallop or trot. It is not surprising that
these pictures of Muybridge interested the French painters when he
came to Paris, but fascinated still more the great student of
animal movements, the physiologist Marey. He had contributed to
science many an intricate apparatus for the registration of
movement processes. "Marey's tambour" is still the most useful
instrument in every physiological and psychological laboratory,
whenever slight delicate movements are to be recorded. The movement
of a bird's wings interested him especially, and at his suggestion
Muybridge turned to the study of the flight of birds. Flying
pigeons were photographed in different positions, each picture
taken in a five-hundredth part of a second.But Marey himself improved the method. He made use of an idea
which the astronomer Jannsen had applied to the photographing of
astronomical processes. Jannsen photographed, for instance, the
transit of the planet Venus across the sun in December, 1874, on a
circular sensitized plate which revolved in the camera. The plate
moved forward a few degrees every minute. There was room in this
way to have eighteen pictures of different phases of the transit on
the marginal part of the one plate. Marey constructed the apparatus
for the revolving disk so that the intervals instead of a full
minute became only one-twelfth of a second. On the one revolving
disk twenty-five views of the bird in motion could be taken. This
brings us to the time of the early eighties. Marey remained
indefatigable in improving the means for quick successive snapshots
with the same camera. Human beings were photographed by him in
white clothes on a black background. When ten pictures were taken
in a second the subtlest motions in their jumping or running could
be disentangled. The leading aim was still decidedly a scientific
understanding of the motions, and the combination of the pictures
into a unified impression of movement was not the purpose. Least of
all was mere amusement intended.About that time Anschütz in Germany followed the Muybridge
suggestions with much success and gave to this art of photographing
the movement of animals and men a new turn. He not only
photographed the successive stages, but printed them on a long
strip which was laid around a horizontal wheel. This wheel is in a
dark box and the eye can see the pictures on the paper strip only
at the moment when the light of a Geissler's tube flashes up. The
wheel itself has such electric contacts that the intervals between
two flashes correspond to the time which is necessary to move the
wheel from one picture to the next. However quickly the wheel may
be revolved the lights follow one another with the same rapidity
with which the pictures replace one another. During the movement
when one picture moves away and another approaches the center of
vision all is dark. Hence the eye does not see the changes but gets
an impression as if the picture remained at the same spot, only
moving. The bird flaps its wings and the horse trots. It was really
a perfect kinetoscopic instrument. Yet its limitations were
evident. No movements could be presented but simple rhythmical
ones, inasmuch as after one revolution of the wheel the old
pictures returned. The marching men appeared very lifelike; yet
they could not do anything but march on and on, the circumference
of the wheel not allowing more room than was needed for about forty
stages of the moving legs from the beginning to the end of the
step.If the picture of a motion was to go beyond these simplest
rhythmical movements, if persons in action were really to be shown,
it would be necessary to have a much larger number of pictures in
instantaneous illumination. The wheel principle would have to be
given up and a long strip with pictures would be needed. That
presupposed a correspondingly long set of exposures and this demand
could not be realized as long as the pictures were taken on glass
plates. But in that period experiments were undertaken on many
sides to substitute a more flexible transparent material for the
glass. Translucent papers, gelatine, celluloid, and other
substances were tried. It is well known that the invention which
was decisive was the film which Eastman in Rochester produced. With
it came the great mechanical improvement, the use of the two
rollers. One roller holds the long strip of film which is slowly
wound over the second, the device familiar to every amateur
photographer today. With film photography was gained the
possibility not only of securing a much larger number of pictures
than Marey or Anschütz made with their circular arrangements, but
of having these pictures pass before the eye illumined by quickly
succeeding flashlights for any length of time. Moreover, instead of
the quick illumination the passing pictures might be constantly
lighted. In that case slits must pass by in the opposite direction
so that each picture is seen for a moment only, as if it were at
rest. This idea is perfectly realized in Edison's
machine.In Edison's kinetoscope a strip of celluloid film forty-five
feet in length with a series of pictures each three-quarters of an
inch long moved continuously over a series of rolls. The pictures
passed a magnifying lens, but between the lens and the picture was
a revolving shutter which moved with a speed carefully adjusted to
the film. The opening in the shutter was opposite the lens at the
moment when the film had moved on three-quarters of an inch. Hence
the eye saw not the passing of the pictures but one picture after
another at the same spot. Pretty little scenes could now be acted
in half a minute's time, as more than six hundred pictures could be
used. The first instrument was built in 1890, and soon after the
Chicago World's Fair it was used for entertainment all over the
world. The wheel of Anschütz had been widespread too; yet it was
considered only as a half-scientific apparatus. With Edison's
kinetoscope the moving pictures had become a means for popular
amusement and entertainment, and the appetite of commercialism was
whetted. At once efforts to improve on the Edison machine were
starting everywhere, and the adjustment to the needs of the wide
public was in the foreground.Crowning success came almost at the same time to Lumière and
Son in Paris and to Paul in London. They recognized clearly that
the new scheme could not become really profitable on a large scale
as long as only one person at a time could see the pictures. Both
the well-known French manufacturers of photographic supplies and
the English engineer considered the next step necessary to be the
projection of the films upon a large screen. Yet this involved
another fundamental change. In the kinetoscope the films passed by
continuously. The time of the exposure through the opening in the
revolving shutter had to be extremely short in order to give
distinct pictures. The slightest lengthening would make the
movement of the film itself visible and produce a blurring effect.
This time was sufficient for the seeing of the picture; it could
not be sufficient for the greatly enlarged view on the wall. Too
little light passed through to give a distinct image. Hence it
became essential to transform the continuous movement of the film
into an intermittent one. The strip of film must be drawn before
the lens by jerking movements so that the real motion of the strip
would occur in the periods in which the shutter was closed, while
it was at rest for the fraction of time in which the light of the
projection apparatus passed through.Both Lumière and Paul overcame this difficulty and secured an
intermittent pushing forward of the pictures for three-quarters of
an inch, that is for the length of the single photograph. In the
spring of 1895 Paul's theatrograph or animatograph was completed,
and in the following year he began his engagement at the Alhambra
Theater, where the novelty was planned as a vaudeville show for a
few days but stayed for many a year, since it proved at once an
unprecedented success. The American field was conquered by the
Lumière camera. The Eden Musée was the first place where this
French kinematograph was installed. The enjoyment which today one
hundred and twenty-five thousand moving picture theaters all over
the globe bring to thirty million people daily is dependent upon
Lumière's and Paul's invention. The improvements in the technique
of taking the pictures and of projecting them on the screen are
legion, but the fundamental features have not been changed. Yes; on
the whole the development of the last two decades has been a
conservative one. The fact that every producer tries to distribute
his films to every country forces a far-reaching standardization on
the entire moving picture world. The little pictures on the film
are still today exactly the same size as those which Edison used
for his kinetoscope and the long strips of film are still gauged by
four round perforations at the side of each to catch the sprockets
which guide the film.As soon as the moving picture show had become a feature of
the vaudeville theater, the longing of the crowd for ever new
entertainments and sensations had to be satisfied if the success
was to last. The mere enjoyment of the technical wonder as such
necessarily faded away and the interest could be kept up only if
the scenes presented on the screen became themselves more and more
enthralling. The trivial acts played in less than a minute without
any artistic setting and without any rehearsal or preparation soon
became unsatisfactory. The grandmother who washes the baby and even
the street boy who plays a prank had to be replaced by quick little
comedies. Stages were set up; more and more elaborate scenes were
created; the film grew and grew in length. Competing companies in
France and later in the United States, England, Germany and notably
in Italy developed more and more ambitious productions. As early as
1898 the Eden Musée in New York produced an elaborate setting of
the Passion Play in nearly fifty thousand pictures, which needed
almost an hour for production. The personnel on the stage increased
rapidly, huge establishments in which any scenery could be built up
sprang into being. But the inclosed scene was often not a
sufficient background; the kinematographic camera was brought to
mountains and seashore, and soon to the jungles of Africa or to
Central Asia if the photoplay demanded exciting scenes on
picturesque backgrounds. Thousands of people entered into the
battle scenes which the historical drama demanded. We stand today
in the midst of this external growth of which no one dreamed in the
days of the kinetoscope. Yet this technical progress and this
tremendous increase of the mechanical devices for production have
their true meaning in the inner growth which led from trite
episodes to the height of tremendous action, from trivial routine
to a new and most promising art.
CHAPTER II
THE INNER DEVELOPMENT OF THE MOVING
PICTURESIt was indeed not an external technical advance only which
led from Edison's half a minute show of the little boy who turns on
the hose to the "Daughter of Neptune," or "Quo Vadis," or
"Cabiria," and many another performance which fills an evening. The
advance was first of all internal; it was an esthetic idea. Yet
even this does not tell the whole story of the inner growth of the
moving pictures, as it points only to the progress of the
photoplay. It leaves out of account the fact that the moving
pictures appeal not merely to the imagination, but that they bring
their message also to the intellect. They aim toward instruction
and information. Just as between the two covers of a magazine
artistic stories stand side by side with instructive essays,
scientific articles, or discussions of the events of the day, the
photoplay is accompanied by a kinematoscopic rendering of reality
in all its aspects. Whatever in nature or in social life interests
the human understanding or human curiosity comes to the mind of the
spectator with an incomparable intensity when not a lifeless
photograph but a moving picture brings it to the
screen.The happenings of the day afford the most convenient
material, as they offer the chance for constantly changing
programmes and hence the ideal conditions for a novelty seeking
public. No actors are needed; the dramatic interest is furnished by
the political and social importance of the events. In the early
days when the great stages for the production of photoplays had not
been built, the moving picture industry relied in a much higher
degree than today on this supply from the surrounding public life.
But while the material was abundant, it soon became rather insipid
to see parades and processions and orators, and even where the
immediate interest seemed to give value to the pictures it was for
the most part only a local interest and faded away after a time.
The coronation of the king or the inauguration of the president,
the earthquake in Sicily, the great Derby, come, after all, too
seldom. Moreover through the strong competition only the first
comer gained the profits and only the most sensational dashes of
kinematographers with the reporter's instinct could lead to success
in the eyes of the spoiled moving picture audiences.Certainly the history of these enterprises is full of
adventures worthy to rank with the most daring feats in the
newspaper world. We hear that when the investiture of the Prince of
Wales was performed at Carnarvon at four o'clock in the afternoon,
the public of London at ten o'clock of the same day saw the
ceremony on the screen in a moving picture twelve minutes in
length. The distance between the two places is two hundred miles.
The film was seven hundred and fifty feet long. It had been
developed and printed in a special express train made up of long
freight cars transformed into dark rooms and fitted with tanks for
the developing and washing and with a machine for printing and
drying. Yet on the whole the current events were slowly losing
ground even in Europe, while America had never given such a large
share of interest to this rival of the newspaper. It is claimed
that the producers in America disliked these topical pictures
because the accidental character of the events makes the production
irregular and interferes too much with the steady preparation of
the photoplays. Only when the war broke out, the great wave of
excitement swept away this apathy. The pictures from the trenches,
the marches of the troops, the life of the prisoners, the movements
of the leaders, the busy life behind the front, and the action of
the big guns absorbed the popular interest in every corner of the
world. While the picturesque old-time war reporter has almost
disappeared, the moving picture man has inherited all his courage,
patience, sensationalism, and spirit of adventure.A greater photographic achievement, however, than the
picturing of the social and historic events was the marvelous
success of the kinematograph with the life of nature. No explorer
in recent years has crossed distant lands and seas without a
kinematographic outfit. We suddenly looked into the most intimate
life of the African wilderness. There the elephants and giraffes
and monkeys passed to the waterhole, not knowing that the moving
picture man was turning his crank in the top of a tree. We followed
Scott and Shackleton into the regions of eternal ice, we climbed
the Himalayas, we saw the world from the height of the aëroplane,
and every child in Europe knows now the wonders of Niagara. But the
kinematographer has not sought nature only where it is gigantic or
strange; he follows its path with no less admirable effect when it
is idyllic. The brook in the woods, the birds in their nest, the
flowers trembling in the wind have brought their charm to the
delighted eye more and more with the progress of the new
art.But the wonders of nature which the camera unveils to us are
not limited to those which the naked eye can follow. The technical
progress led to the attachment of the microscope. After overcoming
tremendous difficulties, the scientists succeeded in developing a
microscope kinematography which multiplies the dimensions a hundred
thousand times. We may see on the screen the fight of the bacteria
with the microscopically small blood corpuscles in the blood stream
of a diseased animal. Yes, by the miracles of the camera we may
trace the life of nature even in forms which no human observation
really finds in the outer world. Out there it may take weeks for
the orchid to bud and blossom and fade; in the picture the process
passes before us in a few seconds. We see how the caterpillar spins
its cocoon and how it breaks it and how the butterfly unfolds its
wings; and all which needed days and months goes on in a fraction
of a minute. New interest for geography and botany and zoölogy has
thus been aroused by these developments, undreamed of in the early
days of the kinematograph, and the scientists themselves have
through this new means of technique gained unexpected help for
their labors.