| 1802 |
Thomas Wedgwood, following the experiments of
Schulze and Scheele, produces silhouettes by use of silver nitrate but is
unable to fix the images. |
| 1806 |
William Hyde Wollaston invents the camera
lucida. |
| 1816 |
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce's attempts at
photography he called heliography (sundrawing) records a view from his
workroom window on paper sensitized with silver chloride, but he is only
partially able to fix the image. |
| 1816 |
Single-wire telegraph is introduced. |
| 1816-26 |
Niépce achieves his first photographic image
with a camera obscura. |
| 1819 |
Sir John Herschel discovers the photographic
fixative, hyposulfite of soda. |
| 1822 |
Niépce succeeds in obtaining a photographic
copy of an engraving superimposed on glass. |
| 1826 |
The invention of the Thaumatrope, a
"persistence of vision" toy, is credited to John Ayrton Paris. |
| |
Niépce, using a camera, makes a view from his
workroom window on a pewter plate. |
| 1827 |
Charles Wheatstone describes a moving shutter. |
| 1829 |
Niépce and Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre form a
10-year partnership to develop photography. |
| 1832 |
Joseph Plateau builds the Phenakisticope, an
optical toy, that creates the illusion of movement by mounting drawings on
the face of a slotted, twirling disk. Another image animation novelty, the
Zoetrope (c. 1834) uses a rotating drum. |
| |
Wheatstone invents a non-photographic
stereoscopic viewing device. |
| 1833 |
William Henry Fox Talbot begins experimenting
with photogenic drawings. |
| 1835 |
Talbot photographs window at Lacock Abbey. |
| 1837 |

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre (portrait shown) creates his first
daguerreotype. |
| 1839 |
The daguerreotype is publicly announced at the Academy of Sciences in
Paris. |
| |
Hippolyte Bayard produces direct-positive
images on sensitized paper. |
| 1839 |
Giroux Daguerreotype camera is introduced; first commercially-manufactured
camera.. |
| |
Alexander Wolcott receives first American
patent in photography for his camera. |
| |
The Petzval lens is introduced. |
| 1840s |
Portrait
photography studies by D.O. Hill and Robert Adamson. |
| |
American
photographers Albert Sands Southworth and Josiah Johnson Hawes become known
for their distinctive daguerreotype portraits. Well-known American figures
of the day, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Daniel Webster, and Oliver
Wendell Holmes are photographed by Southworth and Hawes. |
| 1841 |
William Henry Talbot patents the Calotype
process. |
| 1843 |
D.
O. Hill and Robert Adamson open portrait studio in Edinburgh. |
| 1843 |
Anna Atkins produced the first photographically
illustrated album entitled: British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions. |
| 1844 |
Talbot
publishes Pencil of Nature. |
| 1845 |
Mathew Brady begins to photograph famous
persons of his time, including Daniel Webster, Edgar Allan Poe, James
Fenimore Cooper. |
| 1846-47 |
Also in History: Irish potato famine. |
| 1847 |
Louis Désiré Blanquard-Evard improves Talbot's
Calotype process and sets up a photographic printing establishment. |
| 1848 |
Claude Felix Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor uses
albumen on glass plates for negatives. |
| 1849 |
Maxime Du Camp travels to Egypt to photograph
monuments. |
| |
Stereophotography,
which uses a double lens camera to produce two views that together produce a
three- dimensional view, is developed. |
| 1850 |
Mathew Brady publishes a collection entitled
A Gallery of Illustrious Americans. |
| |
Albumen printing paper is introduced by L. D.
Blanquart-Evrard. |
| 1851 |
Talbot makes first instantaneous photographs
using electric spark illumination. |
| |
Frederick Scott Archer publishes wet-collodion
process. |
| 1852 |
Talbot patents photoglyphic engraving which
produces printable steel plates. |
| 1854 |
George Eastman born July 12, 1854, in Marshall,
NY. He grew up in the family home which was in Waterville, NY (outside of
Utica, NY). The old Eastman homestead has since been moved to the Genesee
Country Museum in Mumford, NY. |
| |
A.-A.-E.
Disdéri patents carte-de-viste portraiture. |
| |
Ambrotype, a positive collodion image, is
patented in US. |
| 1855 |
Ferrotype
process (tintypes) is introduced to US. |
| 1856 |
Photojournalism
of Crimean War documented by Roger Fenton, James Robertson, and Carol Popp
de Scathmari. |
| 1857 |
In
Britain, photographer Oscar Rejlander creates allegorical multiphoto
compositions. |
| 1858 |
Francis
Frith photographs scenes from Upper Egypt and Ethiopia. |
| |
Henry
Peach Robinson's photograph Fading Away, establishes him as a
chronicler of the Victorian scene with multiple negative compositions of a
life near its end. |
| 1859 |
Sutton panoramic camera is patented. |
| 1860 |
George Eastman, five years old, moves to
Rochester, NY with his family. |
| |
Abraham Lincoln is photographed during his
first presidential campaign by Mathew Brady. |
| |
Abraham
Lincoln is elected 16th president of the United States. |
| |
Nadar (Gaspard F. Tournachon) photographs Paris
from a balloon. |
| 1860s |
Julia Margaret Cameron is known for her lyrical
portraits of Victorian men and women. |
| 1861 |
Francois Willeme opens a photosculpture studio
in Paris. |
| |
Oliver Wendell Holmes invents popular
stereoscope viewer. |
| |
James Clerk Maxwell's On the Theory of the
Three Primary Colours. |
| |
Chambre
Automatique de Bertsch; first sub-miniature camera. |
| 1861-65 |
Mathew Brady, Alexander Gardner, and others
document the Civil War. |
| 1861-65 |
U.S.
Civil War |
| 1863 |
The Sharpshooter by Alexander Gardner
(taken after the Battle of Gettysburg). |
| 1864 |
Julia
Margaret Cameron begins to photograph soft and impressionistic portraits
that challenge the accepted ideas of focus. |
| |
Joseph Wilson Swan perfects the carbo process. |
| 1865 |
Abraham
Lincoln is assassinated by John Wilkes Booth. The photograph to the left is
an image of the execution of the Lincoln conspirators. |
| 1865 |
Dubroni-In-Camera
processing. The plates were sensitized, developed, and fixed within the
camera inside a glass bottle that was part of the camera body. |
| 1866 |
Carleton Watkins photographs Yosemite Valley. |
| |
Woodburytype process is patented. |
| 1868 |
George Eastman leaves school to help support
the family. He works for an insurance company as a messenger boy earning $3
a week. |
| 1869 |
George Eastman starts work for another
insurance company with additional responsibilities, earning $5 a week. |
| |
A Golden Spike for the Transcontinental
Railway by Andrew J. Russell. |
| |
Louis Ducos du Hauron's Colors in
Photography describes the principle of color photography. |
| 1870s |
Pioneering
landscape photography of the American West by Timothy O'Sullivan. Other
notable landscape photographers include William Henry Jackson and Carleton
Watkins. |
| 1870-1871 |
During the Siege of Paris, pigeons are used to
carry microphotographed messages across enemy lines. |
| |
William
Henry Jackson photographs Yellowstone. |
| |
Richard Leach Maddox invents the gelatin dry
plate silver bromide process. |
| 1872 |
John W. Hyatt begins manufacturing celluloid. |
| 1873 |
First photo is reproduced by the halftone
method. |
| |
Hermann Wilhelm Vogel increases the spectral
sensitivity of photographic emulsions by adding dyes. |
| 1874 |
George Eastman is hired as a junior clerk at
Rochester Savings Bank, earning more than $15 a week. |
| |
Léon Vidal combines chromolithography with
Woodburytype printing. |
| 1875 |
Émile Reynaud invents the Praxinoscope. |
| 1877 |
Eadweard Muybridge experiments with multiple cameras to take successive
photographs of horses in motion. He continued his photographic studies of
motion, including human movements, from 1884-1887 at the University of
Pennsylvania. |
| 1877-78 |
George Eastman begins to take an interest in
photography and takes lessons from George Monroe, a local photographer, for
$5 to learn the process. He purchases his first photographic outfit for $49. |
| 1878 |
George Eastman begins to simplify the
complicated wet plate process. |
| |
Karl Klic invented the most precise and
commercially successful method of photogravure printing. |
| 1879 |
George Eastman invents an emulsion-coating
machine which enables the mass-production of photographic dry plates. |
| |
Dennis Redmond develops the electric telescope
to produce moving images. |
| 1880 |
George Eastman begins to commercially
manufacture dry plates. |
| |
Muybridge demonstrates to an audience at the
San Francisco Art Association Rooms his Zoopraxiscope, a Zoetrope adapted to
project photographic images in motion. |
| 1881 |
Eastman
Dry Plate Company is founded. |
| |
First book about television, The Electric
Telescope, is published. |
| |
Stephen Horgan's A Scene in Shantytown
is printed in 'halftone' in the New York Daily Graphic. |
| 1882 |
George Eastman begins experimenting with
different emulsion support bases other than glass. With William Walker, a
research person at Eastman's company, they devise a roll film holder, a
flexible film and a machine to produce the film. The film is layered with
gelatin emulsions on paper backing, which is stripped away after
development. |
| |
French physiologist Étienne-Jules Marey invents
the chronophotographic gun, a camera shaped like a rifle that records twelve
successive photographs per second. |
| 1883 |
Eastman Dry Plate Company transfers operations
from rented loft space to a four story building at 343 State Street. |
| 1884 |
Ottomar Anschutz's Stork's in Flight
captures multiple images. |
| |
Stebbing Automatic Camera is the first
production camera to use roll film. |
| 1885 |
EASTMAN American Film is introduced as the
first transparent film negative. |
| 1886-69 |
Heinrich R. Hertz produces radio waves. |
| 1887 |
Thomas Alva Edison commissions W. K. L. Dickson
to invent a motion picture camera. |
| 1888 |
First motion picture films are made on
sensitized paper rolls taken with a camera by Louis Aime Augustin Le Prince. |
| |
The name Kodak is born and the KODAK Camera is
placed on the market. It is loaded with 100 exposures on a film roll for
$25. It is simply operated: Pull the string to cock the shutter, press the
button to expose the film, and turn the key to advance the film. The
advertising slogan is: "You press the button and we do the rest". After all
the film is exposed, the camera and the film are sent back to the Eastman
Dry Plate and Film Co. in Rochester for developing. The Kodak camera-fixed
focus, 57mm lens, f/9, sharp from 3 1/2 ft. to infinity. |
| 1889 |
Kodak
#2 is introduced. |
| |
The first commercial transparent roll film,
perfected by Eastman and his research chemist, is put on the market. The
availability of this flexible film makes possible the development of Thomas
Edison's motion picture camera in 1891. A new corporation, The Eastman
Company is formed, taking over the assets of the Eastman Dry Plate and Film
Company. |
| |
Development of motion-picture roll film. |
| |
Peter
Henry Emerson's Naturalistic Photography handbook outlines
aesthetics, which he calls naturalism. |
| 1890 |
Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives.
Realistic photographs of New York City living conditions prompts revision of
tenement housing laws. |
| |
Charles Driffield and Ferdinand Hurter publish
their work on emulsion sensitivity and exposure measurement. |
| |
Nadar,
a famous Parisian photographer makes several studio portraits of George
Eastman. |
| |
Karl Ferdinand Braun invents the Cathode Ray
Tube (CRT). |
| 1890s |
Dickson's kinetophone synchronizes the
kinetograph and the phonograph. |
| |
British
photographer Frederick Henry Evans becomes known for artistic photography.
He is part of the group known as the Linked Ring. |
| 1891 |
Daylight loading film is introduced. |
| |
W. K. L. Dickson and Thomas A. Edison patent
the Kinetoscope, a type of viewing device in which a film loop ran on spools
between an incandescent lamp and a shutter for individual viewing. |
| 1892 |
The
company becomes Eastman Kodak Company of New York. |
| |
Frederick
Ives develops first complete system for natural color photography. |
| 1893 |
Fred Ott sneezing in Edison Kinetoscopic
Record of a Sneeze, January 7, 1894, filmed at the "Black Maria," a
motion picture studio that rotates on tracks to follow the light of the sun
built by Edison in West Orange, NJ. |
| |
Thomas Alva Edison commissions W.K.L.Dickson to
invent a motion-picture camera in 1887. Dickson's contribution to
motion-picture and projection technology was a device to ensure intermittent
but regular motion of the film strip and regularly perforated celluloid film
strip to ensure precise synchronization between the film strip and the
shutter. Dickson's camera is patented as the Kinetograph in 1893. |
| 1894 |
Louis and Auguste Lumière invent the
Cinématographe in Lyon, a combination camera-projector that can project
moving images onto a screen. |
| |
Edison opens the first Kinetoscope parlor in
New York City. |
| |
Photo Club of Paris is established. |
| 1895 |
The Pocket KODAK Camera is announced. |
| |
The birth of cinema: In Berlin, Max and Emil
Skladanowsky show a 15-minute public program of films made using their
Bioscop. |
| |
First advertised public screening of films at
LeGrand Café, Paris. The Lumière brothers' Arrival of a Train at a
Station, one of the many actuality films or documentary views they made
is screened. |
| |
Auguste and Louis Lumière's Workers Leaving
the Lumière Factory. |
| |
The Lumières and Edison demonstrate motion
picture cameras and projectors. |
| |
Eugene
Atget begins to photograph Paris. |
| |
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen discovers x-rays. |
| 1896 |
Public demonstration in New York City of the
Edison Vitascope designed by Thomas Armat, bringing projection to the United
States. |
| |
Britain's first projector, the Theatrograph
(later the Animatograph) is demonstrated by Robert W. Paul. |
| |
Founding of Gaumont, oldest extant film
company. |
| |
Edison's John Rice-May Irwin Kiss (peep
show epic showing a prolonged kiss). |
| |
Josef Maria Eder and Eduard Valenta publish
stereoscopic Röntgen photographs. |
| 1896-98 |
British photographers George Albert Smith and
James Williamson construct their own motion picture cameras and begin
production of trick films. |
| 1897 |
Herman Casler and W.K.L. Dickson's American
Mutoscope is the most popular film company in the United States. |
| |
125 people, most of them from the upper
classes, die during a film screening at the Charity Bazaar in Paris after a
curtain is ignited by the ether used to fuel the projector lamp. |
| 1899 |
Founding of Pathé-Frères, the world's largest
film producer and distributor through WW I. |
| |
Pascal - First roll film spring wind motor
advance. |
| 1900 |
First mass-marketed camera, the Brownie, costs
$1. |
| |
Max Planck introduces the Quantum Theory in
Physics. |
| |
Beginning of film production in Czechoslovakia,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, Scandinavia. |
| 1901 |
Also in History: Queen Victoria dies. |
| 1902 |
A Trip to the Moon by Georges Méliès,
pioneer of film fantasy, special effects, and "trick films". |
| |
Pathé acquires the Lumière patents and
commissions the design of an improved studio camera. |
| |
George Eastman purchases 8 1/2 acre East Avenue
property in Rochester, NY. |
| |
Alfred
Stieglitz founds the Photo-Secession Group, dedicated to promoting
photography as a fine art. |
| |
Otto von Bronk applies for German patent on
color television. |
| |
Alfred
Stieglitz edits and publishes the magazine Camera Work. |
| 1902-05 |
Construction
begins on George Eastman's house and grounds. |
| 1902-12 |
Leon Gaumont's Chronophone in France and Cecil
Hepworth's Vivaphone system in England produced hundreds of synchronized
(sound and picture) shorts. |
| 1903 |
American filmmaker Edwin S. Porter's The
Great Train Robbery, is important for its use of realistic narrative and
continuity of action. |
| 1904-08 |
Alvin
Langdon Coburn creates memorable portraits of famous men. |
| 1905 |
Lewis
Hine: "Ellis Island" series. |
| |
Alfred
Stieglitz and Edward Steichen open the Little Galleries of the
Photo-Secession (called "291") in New York City. |
| 1905-07 |
Growth of film theatres in the United States.
Named after the Nickelodeon, which opens in Pittsburgh in1905, they are
makeshift facilities frequently in storefront properties. |
| 1906 |
Screen aspect ratio of 1.33 : 1 established as
an international viewing standard. |
| |
Beginning of the animated film industry: J.
Stuart Blackton's Humorous Phases of Funny Faces. |
| |
Formation of Danish entrepreneur Ole Olsen's
Nordisk, one of the decade's most successful production companies. |
| |
Panchromatic plates are marketed by Wratten and
Wainright in England. |
| 1906-08 |
George Albert Smith and Charles Urban develop
first commercially successful photographic colour process; Kinemacolor. |
| 1907 |
Lee de Forest perfects the Audion tube, a
triode vacuum tube that magnifies sound. |
| |
Formation of Svenska Biografteatern, the
leading Swedish film firm. |
| |
Multiple-reel film comes to be called a
feature: Adolph Zukor distributes Pathe's three reel Passion Play.
Vitagraph produces the five-reel The Life of Moses in 1909, released
at rate of one reel a week. Louis Mercanton's three-and-one-half reel Les
Amours de la Reine Elizabeth (Queen Elizabeth, 1912), stars Sarah
Bernhardt. |
| |
Lumière Brother's autochrome color process is
marketed. |
| |
Alfred Korn announces Fac-Simile telegraphy. |
| |
Édouard Belin makes the first
telephoto transmission, from Paris to Lyon to Bordeaux and back to Paris. |
| 1908 |
Film d'Art's The Assassination of the Duc de
Guise, is a transference of a stage play to the screen in an effort to
legitimize motion pictures. |
| |
Hollywood is founded in the Los Angeles area. |
| |
The most powerful American film companies form
the Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC), pool the 16 most significant US
patents in order to establish a monopoly on domestic film production. |
| |
Gabriel Lippmann wins a Nobel Prize for his
method of reproducing color by photography. |
| 1908-10 |
Working for Gaumont, Émile Cohl is the first
person to devote his energies to drawn animation. |
| 1908-14 |
D.W. Griffith and other American filmmakers
systematize the use of the close-up, fade-out, iris dissolve, back lighting,
soft focus, cross-cutting. |
| 1909 |
Winsor McCay, cartoonist, produces first
animated cartoon. Gertie the Dinosaur. |
| 1910 |
Thomas Ince's New York Motion Picture Co. and
the Selig company of Chicago set up studios near Los Angeles, initiating the
establishment of west coast studio production. |
| |
American cartoonist John Randolph Bray patents
the cell process for film animation. |
| 1910s |
Lewis
Hines: "Child Labor" series |
| |
The serial episode film is the main attraction
in many theaters in France, Germany, and the United States. |
| |
Melodramas, westerns, and slapstick comedy are
popular American film genres. |
| |
Beginning of film production in Australia,
Argentina, Canada, Ireland, Spain. |
| 1911-16 |
Danish actress Asta Nielsen is the first
international star whose fame is wholly dependent on her screen appearances. |
| 1912 |
Mary Pickford in the leading role of D. W.
Griffith's The New York Hat. |
| |
Nikkatsu is formed out of several smaller
companies to become the most powerful studio in Japan. |
| |
Also in History: Titanic sinks. |
| |
Vest Pocket Camera is introduced. |
| |
First Model Speed Graphic is introduced. |
| 1913 |
Italy's Cines company's nine-reel Quo Vadis?,
shot using huge three-dimensional sets and 5,000 extras, establishes
standard for superspectacles. |
| |
Victor Sjöstrom's early masterpiece Ingeborg
Holm. |
| |
Eastman Kodak Company establishes first
industrial photographic research laboratory. |
| 1914 |
The 3,300-seat Strand opens in New York City,
marking the end of the nickelodeon era and the beginning of an age of the
movie palaces. |
| |
Keystone Cops; slapstick comedy; visual humor. |
| |
Autographic Film. |
| |
First 35mm still cameras are developed. |
| 1914-18 |
World War I |
| 1915 |
D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation,
a film of great technical assurance and innovation, is strongly attacked in
the liberal and black press for its racist content and is banned in several
states through the efforts of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP). |
| |
Charlie Chaplin's The Tramp. |
| 1916 |
Charlie Chaplin, international star of the
American silent comic cinema, stars in The Pawnshop. |
| |
Alvin Langdon Coburn's Vortographs: deliberate
abstractions. |
| |
Paul
Strand's photographs emphasize abstract and objective qualities. |
| |
3A Autographic with coupled Rangefinder is
introduced. |
| 1917 |
Mexico is the first country to formally protest
the misrepresentation of its people by Hollywood. |
| |
Foundation of Universum Film Aktiengesellschaft
(UFA), the largest studio in Europe for the next decade. |
| |
George Eastman acquires additional 4 acres on
western side of property; creates west garden. |
| 1918 |
Following litigation for anti-trust activities,
the MPPC is ordered to disband by the US Supreme Court. |
| |
Oscar Micheaux, the most successful early
African American producer/director, begins making films on black-related
topics. |
| |
Agit-prop trains, self-contained mobile
propaganda centers equipped to disseminate entertainment and information to
faraway posts, leave Moscow for the Eastern front. |
| |
American cartoonist Winsor McCay creates what
may be the first feature-length animated film, The Sinking of the
Lusitania. |
| 1919 |
Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charles
Chaplin, and D. W. Griffith establish United Artists, a prestigious firm
distributing only independently produced films. |
| |
Lee de Forest, in collaboration with Theodore
Case and E. I. Sponable, develop an optical sound-on-film process patented
as Phonofilm. |
| |
Nationalization of the Soviet film industry and
foundation of the State Film School. |
| |
George Eastman House is cut in two and
conservatory is enlarged to improve acoustics. |
| 1919-33 |
Golden Age of German cinema . UFA conglomerate
becomes single largest studio in Europe. |
| 1920 |
Robert Wiene's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,
a foundation work of German Expression. |
| |
Lev Kuleshov's Soviet State Film School
workshop conducts experiments on film space and time. |
| |
Formation of Shochiku studio in Japan. |
| |
Also in History: In the US, women are allowed
to vote for the first time. |
| 1920s |
Murder trial of film comedian Roscoe "Fatty"
Arbuckle, murder of director William Desmond Taylor, and drug-addicted death
of Wallace Reid are part of a cycle of scandals that increase public demands
for greater industry regulation. |
| |
Soviet cinema is influential for its strategies
of montage, graphic approach to the film frame, "biomechanical" acting, and
political use of the motion picture medium. |
| |
French Impressionism is founded, a movement
predicated on the belief that cinema is an artform of personal expression. |
| |
Soviet silent era filmmaker, Dziga Vertov, now
acknowledged as the father of cinema-verite (realistic documentary movement
of the 1960s - 70s), produces a series of newsreel-documentaries. |
| |
German Tri-Ergon process is developed, whose
flywheel mechanism is essential to the continuous reproduction of optical
sound. |
| |
Edward Steichen becomes chief photographer for
the fashion magazines Vogue and Vanity Fair. His well known
portraits include the veiled Gloria Swanson, the hands-to-head image of
Greta Garbo, and the smiling Charlie Chaplin. |
| |
American photographer James Van Der Zee creates
memorable portraits of African-Americans. |
| |
American artist Man Ray creates the Rayogram, a
collage of objects placed onto photographic paper and exposed to light. |
| 1921 |
First transatlantic telephoto
transmission is made between Annapolis, Md., and Belin's laboratories at La
Malmaison, Fr. |
| 1922 |
Will H. Hays, former Postmaster General for
President Harding, is appointed head of the newly created Motion Picture
Producers and Distributors of America (MPPDA), a self-regulatory
organization comprised of industry leaders. |
| |
Founding of the Mingxing Film Company in
Shanghai, the center of Chinese film production. |
| |
Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North, a
point of reference for nonfiction and popular adventure filmmakers to
follow. |
| |
Successful subtractive process for two-color
film introduced by Herbert Kalmus' Technicolor Corporation. Uses a special
camera and procedure to produce two separate positive prints that are then
cemented together into a single print. Used in films: Toll of the Sea
(1922) and Douglas Fairbank's The Black Pirate (1926). |
| 1923 |
Kodak introduces 16mm movie film for amateur
use. |
| |
Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments
and James Cruze's The Covered Wagon, are examples of silent era
big-budget filmmaking. |
| |
Pola Negri and Ernst Lubitsch are wooed by
American studios following the success of Madame Dubarry; starting a
regular flow of European talent to Hollywood. |
| |
Vladimir Zworykin patents television picture
tube. |
| |
First radio network is established by AT&T. |
| 1924 |
Erich von Stroheim's naturalistic epic Greed
is mutilated by studio interference. |
| |
F. W. Murnau's The Last Laugh, notable
for its innovative use of camera movement, subjective point-of-view shots,
and optical effects. |
| 1924-25 |
Ernst Leitz designs and markets the 35mm Leica
cameras. |
| 1925 |
Sergei Eisenstein's Potemkin, a powerful
film retelling of the 1905 Russian Revolution. |
| |
Western Electric, the manufacturing subsidiary
of AT&T, perfects a sound-on-disc system called Vitaphone. |
| |
"Little cinema" movement begins with the
establishment of the Screen Guild in New York, a group dedicated to
screening experimental works and films of historical and aesthetic
significance. |
| |
RCA patented sound-on-film system RCA
Photophone. |
| |
László Moholy-Nagy's Painting Photography
Film. Experiments with photograms. |
| 1926 |
George
Eastman travels on his first safari to Africa to collect specimens for the
American Museum of Natural History with big game hunters Martin and Osa
Johnson. |
| |
Fritz Lang's Metropolis, a triumph of
production design. |
| |
Following the completion of Son of the Sheik,
Rudolph Valentino dies at 31 and is mourned by millions. |
| |
Warner Bros. debuts Vitaphone to the public
with a series of demonstration shorts and the feature film Don Juan. |
| |
William Fox responds to Warners' success with
Movietone, the first commercially successful sound-on-film process developed
in conjunction with General Electric. |
| 1927 |
Abel Gance's Napoléon is partially
filmed in Polyvision and utilizes triptych sequences to produce wide and
multiscreen effects. |
| |
Walter Ruttmann's Berlin: Symphony of a City
captures the kaleidoscopic movements of urban life. |
| |
Box office success of The Jazz Singer
sets film industries worldwide on the course of sound film production. |
| |
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
is founded by industry leaders in response to mounting labor unrest in
Hollywood. |
| |
The Production Code of America, a
self-regulatory code of ethics setting forth standards of good taste and
specific "Don'ts and Be Carefuls," is created by the MPPDA under Will H.
Hays. |
| |
First Laurel and Hardy film Leave 'Em
Laughing. |
| |
Also in History: Charles Lindbergh's solo
flight across the Atlantic. |
| |
General Electric invents the modern flashbulb. |
| |
Bell Laboratories perform the first mechanical
television transmission in United States. |
| 1928 |
Kodak
introduces 16mm lenticular KODACOLOR Film for making motion pictures in
color. |
| |
Walt Disney's Steamboat Willie, starring
Mickey Mouse, the first animated cartoon designed for synchronized sound. |
| |
Technicolor introduces an imbibition or
dye-transfer process for two-color films. |
| |
RCA enters into film production by forming RKO
(Radio-Keith-Orpheum) and Warner Bros. takes over First National Pictures.
Along with 20th Century-Fox, they join Loews and Paramount to form the "big
five," an oligopoly that controls the American film industry for the next 30
years. |
| |
Danish director Carl Theodor Dreyer's The
Passion of Joan of Arc, is shot in France with massive technical and
financial resources. |
| 1929 |
The Academy Awards are presented for the first
time, with the Best Picture honor going to Wings. |
| |
Motion picture cameras are standardized to run
at a speed of 24 frames per second to ensure consistent sound
synchronization. |
| |
Postsynchronization is used by King Vidor in
Hallelujah. |
| |
Dziga Vertov's The Man with a Movie Camera,
is a film essay on the vicissitudes of perceptual reality. |
| |
Also in History: The N.Y. stock market crash
begins the Depression. |
| |
Film and Foto exhibition that synthesized
modernism in photography is held in Stuttgart. |
| 1930 |
The Blue Angel, is an early
dual-language production and the first of a series of films directed by
Josef von Sternberg and starring Marlene Dietrich. |
| |
Luis Buñuel's and Salvador Dali's surrealist
L'Age d'or provokes riots in Paris. |
| |
Also in History: In India, Gandhi challenges
British rule with civil disobedience. |
| |
Chicago gangsters are a national fad; Al Capone
in real life and Edward G. Robinson in the film Little Caesar. |
| |
Gaspar bleached-color process is announced. |
| 1930s |
Nickolas
Muray's photographs from the 1930s. |
| |
Japan is the world's largest producer of film
entertainment and the only country in which Hollywood films do not
overshadow domestic product. Popular genres include the historical drama,
the contemporary-life film, and melodramas. |
| |
Gangster films and romantic comedies become
staples of American sound cinema. |
| |
Double features are introduced to counter
Depression-era box-office slump, with "B" films shown for the second half of
double bills. |
| |
Opens with the Depression and closes with the
beginning of WWII. Movies from this golden age of Hollywood help people
escape or understand the troubled world. Child star Shirley Temple, Marx
Brothers, Fred Astaire, and Ginger Rogers are popular. |
| |
Significant genre of movie musicals contingent
upon sound. |
| 1931 |
René Clair's early sound feature Le million
and À nous la liberté combine musical comedy and politics. |
| |
Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff chill millions in
Dracula and Frankenstein. |
| |
Also
in History: The world's highest structure, the Empire State Building opens. |
| |
The Great Depression worsens - breadlines are
common. |
| |
Harold Edgerton invents a repeatable
short-duration electronic flash, which captured stop-action images that were
beyond the perceptive capacity of the eye. |
| 1932 |
George Eastman dies on March 14, 1932, in
Rochester, New York. |
| |
Walt Disney's cartoon short Flowers and
Trees is the first film made using new three-strip, three-color
Technicolor and is the first cartoon to win an Academy Award. |
| |
Johnny Weismuller plays Tarzan in Tarzan the
Ape Man. |
| |
"Mostra Internazionale d'Arte Cinematografica,"
the world's first film festival, is inaugurated by Mussolini at the Lido in
Venice. |
| |
Technicolor, a three-color system, is
introduced. |
| |
Ansel Adams founds Group f.64 dedicated to
straight photography. Group f.64 photographers use large cameras and small
apertures to record nature's light. |
| |
First light meter with photoelectric cell is
introduced. |
| |
Phil T. Farnesworth demonstrates electronic
television. |
| |
8 mm Cine Camera and film are introduced. |
|
Electron microscope is developed in Germany. |
| 1932-47 |
Eastman House serves as the residence for the
president of the University of Rochester. |
| 1933 |
In Queen Christina, Greta Garbo places
affairs of state over those of the heart. |
| |
With the Nazis' rise to power, Dr. Josef
Goebells becomes Minister of Propaganda and gradually nationalizes the film
industry. More than 1,500 filmmakers flee Germany. |
| |
John Grierson, father of the British
documentary movement, heads up the General Post Office (GPO) Film Unit. |
| |
The British Film Institute is established in
London to "encourage the use and development of the cinematograph as a means
of entertainment and instruction." |
| |
Ernest B. Schoedsack's King Kong. |
| |
Walt Disney's cartoon The Three Little Pigs
in three-color Technicolor |
| |
Technology is developed to mix separately
recorded tracks for music, sound effects, and dialogue at a dubbing stage. |
| |
Also in History: Prohibition ends. |
| |
FDR launches the New Deal. |
| 1934 |
It Happened One Night, is the first of
series of populist Frank Capra comedy-dramas. |
| |
Leni Riefenstahl, using 30 cameras and 120
assistants, films Triumph of the Will, a powerful Nazi propaganda
film. |
| |
Joseph I. Breen, director of the Production
Code Administration, implements the Production Code in response to pressure
from the Catholic Legion of Decency. It will remain in effect for more than
thirty years. |
| |
Bombay Talkies studio is formed in India. |
| |
Retina I introduced using standard 35mm case. |
| 1935 |
Rouben Mamoulian's Becky Sharp, is the
first three-strip Technicolor feature. |
| |
"The March of Time," a monthly documentary
newsreel series is produced by Time magazine. |
| |
Foundation of the National Film Library (later
National Film Archive) in London, the Museum of Modern Art Film Library in
New York, and the Reichsfilmarchiv in Berlin. |
| |
Frank Lloyd's Mutiny on the Bounty |
| |
Eastman Kodak markets Kodachrome film. |
| 1936 |
Charlie Chaplin speaks on film for the first
time in Modern Times. |
| |
Pépé le Moko starring Jean Gabin, is the
fatalistic hero of French Poetic Realism. |
| |
The Cinémathèque Française is founded in Paris
by Henri Langlois and Georges Franju. |
| |
Migrant
Mother by Dorothea Lange |
| |
American combat photographer, Robert Capa
captures on film the Spanish Civil War, notably Death of a Loyalist
Soldier. |
| |
Life magazine begins. |
| |
American photographer Margaret Bourke-White
takes the cover photo for first issue Life magazine. |
| |
The Spanish Earth, directed by Joris
Ivens with commentary written and narrated by Ernest Hemingway, is made as a
response to the Spanish Civil War. |
| 1937 |
Walt Disney produces Snow White and the
Seven Dwarfs, the first feature-length animated cartoon. |
| |
Saint Tukaram, is a hugely popular
Indian "devotional" film and winner at the Venice Film Festival. |
| |
Opening of Cinecittá, a modern government-owned
studio complex, is built on the outskirts of Rome. |
| |
Zeppelin
Hindenburg is destroyed by fire. |
| 1938 |
Sergei Eisenstein and Sergei Prokofiev
collaborate on Alexander Nevsky. |
| |
Leni Riefenstahl completes her two-part
Olympia, a film record of the 1936 Berlin Olympics. |
| |
Foundation of the International Federation of
Film Archives (FIAF). |
| |
American
photographer Walker Evans has his first showing at the Museum of Modern Art,
the basis for his book American Photographs. |
| |
Chester Carlson invents Xerography. |
| |
Super Kodak Six 20-Autoexposure is developed. |
| 1939 |
Farmer and Wife by Arthur Rothstein from
portfolio of FSA Photographs. |
| |
David O. Selznick's Gone With the Wind
and MGM's The Wizard of Oz, two enduring Technicolor classics, debut. |
| |
French films Le Jour se lève and The
Rules of the Game sum up the pessimism of a nation on the verge of war
and occupation. |
| |
The National Film Board of Canada is
established under the directorship of British documentary filmmaker John
Grierson. |
| |
Hitler invades Poland, unleashing World War II. |
| |
Television broadcast from New York World Fair. |
| 1940 |
The Grapes of Wrath, John Ford's
panoramic adaptation of John Steinbeck's novel deals with the Great
Depression, debuts on film. |
| |
Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca, is his first
Hollywood film following years of outstanding work in Britain. |
| |
First of the Bing Crosby / Bob Hope / Dorothy
Lamour "road" movies, Road to Singapore. |
| |
Ansco, Agfa, and Sakura Natural color films are
introduced. |
| 1941 |
Orson Welles's Citizen Kane is
celebrated for its innovative use of sound and flashback structure and for
the deep-focus cinematography of Gregg Toland. |
| |
Following the German invasion of the USSR,
Mosfilm compiles short film reports, documentary sketches, satirical scenes,
and musical numbers into several "Fighting Film Albums" to aid the war
effort. |
| |
Due to a nitrate fire at Svenska, the
preeminent preserver of its nation's film heritage, the negatives of 95% of
all films produced in Sweden in the preceding 34 years are destroyed in
minutes. |
| |
Japan attacks Pearl Harbor. The United States
passes the declaration of war. |
| |
First commercial television license is issued
in US. |
| |
Eastman Kodak introduces KODACOLOR negative
film. |
| 1942 |
WW II romantic drama Casablanca,
starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, debuts as one of the most
popular films of all time. |
| |
United States government establishes Office of
War Information to coordinate wartime propaganda with Hollywood. Frank
Capra's seven-part "Why We Fight" series is produced over the next two
years. |
| |
Ansel Adam's Moonrise, Hernandez. |
| 1943 |
The spirit of a nation at war: Fires Were
Started, by British documentarist Humphrey Jennings. |
| |
Maya Deren's Meshes of the Afternoon, is
a key work of American avant-garde cinema. |
| 1944 |
Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity starring
Barbara Stanwyck, who is declared by the Internal Revenue Service the
highest-paid woman in the United States. |
| |
D-day. |
| 1945 |
Marcel Carné's and Jacques Prévert's The
Children of Paradise is released following the Liberation of France from
German Occupation. |
| |
Roberto Rossellini's Rome, Open City
launches the Italian neorealist movement. |
| |
The Motion Picture Export Association of
America (MPEAA) is created to promote the elimination of international trade
barriers, negotiate agreements with other nations, and protect American
copyrights. |
| |
Nationalization of film industries in
Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Yugoslavia |
| |
Atomic bomb on Hiroshima ends fighting, opens
nuclear age. |
| |
U.S.
flag waves over Iwo Jima. |
| |
V-J Day in Times Square by Alfred
Eisenstaedt (sailor kissing a nurse). |
| |
Arthur C. Clark proposes a geosynchronous
satellite. |
| 1946 |
Eastman Kodak introduces KODAK Ektachrome, the
company's first color film processable by the photographer. |
| |
Howard Hawks's The Big Sleep, starring
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, sets the standard for urban American
crime dramas for the next decade. |
| |
Hollywood's most successful year in its history
in terms of motion picture attendance and box-office earnings. |
| |
Establishment in Berlin of Deutsche Film
Aktiengesellschaft (DEFA), a Soviet company that will soon pass into East
German control. |
| |
The first Cannes Film Festival is held, planned
to open in 1939 but canceled because of the war. The first winner of the
Palme d'Or is Maria Candelaria, a Mexican film photographed by one
the world's greatest masters of black and white cinematography, Gabriel
Figueora. |
| 1946-50 |
New film types introduced in the late '40s:
American films dealing with social consciousness; problems of racism,
alcoholism, mental illness; semi-documentaries about criminal cases and film
noir (fatalistic, dark interpretations of contemporary American reality). |
| 1947 |
Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's
Black Narcissus, is a masterpiece of Technicolor design. |
| |
In the first round of House Un-American
Activities (HUAC) hearings in Hollywood, political conservatives seek
leftist content in film scripts. The "Hollywood Ten" are held in contempt of
Congress and jailed for invoking the Fifth Amendment. |
| |
Formation in New York of the Actors' Studio,
soon to become the center for advancing "The Method" technique of acting
embodied in the styles of Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, James Dean, Paul
Newman, and Joanne Woodward. |
| |
Also in History: Princess Elizabeth marries
Prince Philip. |
| |
Also in History: Britain grants India
independence. |
| |
George Eastman House, Inc., chartered as a
museum of photography. |
| |
Dennis Gabor describes the principles of
holography. |
| |
Bell Laboratories invents the transistor. |
| 1948 |
The Bicycle Thief brings worldwide
recognition to neorealist director Vittorio De Sica and screenwriter Cesare
Zavattini. |
| |
S. S. Vasan's historical superproduction
Chandralehka sets Indian cinema on the course of big-budget
entertainment. |
| |
Roberto Rossellini's The Miracle is
denied an exhibition permit by the New York State of Censors on the grounds
that it is blasphemous, setting in motion a series of ground-breaking court
cases dealing with film censorship. |
| |
Nationalization of film industries in Bulgaria,
Hungary, and Rumania. |
| |
Also in History: The independent Jewish state
of Israel comes into existence. |
| |
Milton Berle begins Texaco Star Theatre. |
| |
First 35mm Nikon camera is introduced. |
| |
First U.S. cable television systems appear. |
| |
Edwin Land markets the Polaroid camera. |
| |
Hasselblad 1600F introduced. |
| 1948-49 |
A wave of protectionist legislation in France,
Britain, and Italy sets quotas on American film imports or screen time
allotted to domestic product. |
| 1949 |
Britain's Ealing Studios establishes its
reputation for witty comedies with Passport to Pimlico, Whiskey
Galore!, and Kind Hearts and Coronets. |
| |
Following a decade of anti-trust litigation,
the United States Supreme Court finds Hollywood guilty of monopolistic
practices and hands down the Paramount decision, ordering the studios
to divorce and divest their theater chains. |
| |
Columbia Pictures converts its short-subject
division to television production, beginning a trend other Hollywood studios
would soon follow. |
| |
The Communist Party in the newly established
People's Republic of China founds the Beijing Film Studio and nationalizes
the film industry. |
| |
Also in History: NATO formed. |
| |
Division of Germany |
| 1950 |
Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard
with Gloria Swanson and Joseph L. Mankiewicz's All About Eve starring
Bette Davis, are the first of a series of films critical of Hollywood
mythology. |
| |
Kodak introduces a new multilayered
film stock in which emulsions sensitive to red, green, and blue are bonded
together on a single roll. Patented as Eastmancolor. |
| |
Dryden Theatre is built as part of
museum complex, made possible by George Eastman’s niece Ellen Dryden and her
husband George Dryden. |
| 1950-53 |
Also in History: Korean War |
| 1950s |
Revival of the Western and the
movie musical. Historical epics and science-fiction films represent the
myths and fears of modern America. |
| |
Dramatic rise in independent
production marks the dwindling power of the Hollywood studio system. |
| |
One-quarter of the total American
box-office income comes from drive-in theaters. |
| |
European nations enter into
bilateral coproduction agreements to increase access to international
markets, spread out financial risks, and produce big-budget films to compete
with Hollywood. |
| |
American photographers Irving Penn
and Richard Avedon become known for their work in advertising and fashion
photography. |
| 1951 |
The second round of HUAC hearings
requires witnesses to "name names" of others they know to be members of the
Communist Party or face unemployment through an industry "blacklist," which
would remain in effect for more than a decade. |
| |
Akira Kurosawa's award-winning
Rashomon focuses world attention on
Japanese cinema. |
| |
Founding of Cahiers du cinéma,
an influential Parisian journal notable for its politique des auteurs,
or celebration of the film director as author and source of meaning. |
| |
After decades of research, acetate
film stock is developed and becomes the industry standard, replacing
unstable and highly flammable cellulose
nitrate. |
| |
The Berlin International Festival
is launched. |
| |
Aaron Siskind's photograph New
York 2, demonstrates a trend toward abstraction. |
| |
W. Eugene Smith’s photo essay,
Spanish Village |
| |
The first Dryden Theatre series is
devoted to "The Transition From Silence to Sound." |
| 1952 |
Vittorio De Sica's Umberto D
causes controversy in Italy for centering on the plight of the nation's aged
and urban poor. |
| |
Luis Garcia Berlanga's Welcome,
Mr. Marshall!, Spain's first official entry at the Cannes Film Festival,
satirizes America's expanding power. |
| |
The US Supreme Court declares that
films are protected by the First Amendment's guarantee of free speech. |
| |
Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen's
Singin' in the Rain, a peak in the movie musical form. |
| |
Norman McLaren's animated short
Neighbours develops pixillation technique. |
| |
Fred Waller premieres his
three-screen, three-projector widescreen process with This Is Cinerama. |
| 1953 |
The success of Arch Oboler's
independent production Bwana Devil, made with a polarized 3-D process
requiring special lenses and glasses, spawns a brief craze for 3-D films. |
| |
Teinosuke Kinugasa's Gate of
Hell, Kenji Mizoguchi's Ugetsu Monogatari, and Yasujiro Ozu's
Tokyo Story bring international acclaim to Japanese cinema. |
| |
Jacques Tati introduces his
enduring comic persona in Mr. Hulot's Holiday. |
| |
Henry Koster's The Robe, the
first CinemaScope film, premieres at the Palace Theatre in Rochester. The
next half-decade will witness a host of competing widescreen technologies. |
| 1953-58 |
Stalin's death and Krushchev's
policy of de-Stalinization create a "thaw" within many eastern European
countries, bringing a cultural renaissance and innovative new ideas to
cinemas of the Soviet bloc. |
| 1954 |
Eastman Kodak introduces high speed
black-and-white Tri-X film. |
| |
Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window,
is a complex murder mystery starring James Stewart and Grace Kelly. |
| |
Federico Fellini's La Strada
sets the stage for the next decade of European art cinema addressing the
"human condition". |
| |
Launching of film festivals in San
Sebastian, Sydney, Tokyo. |
| |
Ampex markets first commercial
video tape recorder. |
| 1955 |
Bengali Satyajit Ray's Pather
Panchali, is the first of his famous Apu Trilogy. |
| |
After only three major film roles,
James Dean dies in a car crash just before gaining major stardom. |
| |
Edward Steichen organizes The
Family of Man, one of the most popular exhibitions of photographs ever
presented. |
| |
Kukla, Fran and Ollie begin color
television broadcast. |
| |
First all-color television series,
Howdy Doody begins. |
| 1955-58 |
Major Hollywood studios enter into
"telefilm" series production and sell or lease their pre-1948 feature films
to TV syndicators. |
| 1956 |
John Ford's The Searchers,
an influential John Wayne Western. |
| |
Roger Vadim's And God Created
Woman launches Brigitte Bardot as the female sexual myth of 1950s. |
| |
Foundation of the Zagreb studio in
Yugoslavia, whose animation unit will attract international attention for
its lyrical, highly stylized cartoons. |
| |
First television program broadcast
from tape - Douglas Edwards and The News. |
| |
Leica M3 introduced. |
| 1957 |
Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh
Seal and Wild Strawberries establish him as the world's
preeminent filmmaker. |
| |
Terence Fisher's The Curse of
Frankenstein, first of Hammer Films's long-running horror series
starring Christopher Lee and/or Peter Cushing. |
| |
Launching of film festivals in
London and San Francisco. |
| |
Also in History: Sputnik, the first
satellite, is launched. |
| 1958 |
Andrzej Wajda's Ashes and
Diamonds completes his trilogy on war and resistance in Poland. |
| |
Orson Welles's Touch of Evil
marks the end of the American film noir cycle. |
| |
Gilles Groulx's Les Raquetteurs,
shot at the annual congress of the snowshoes clubs with the camera as
participant, soon becomes a
manifesto for Québécois filmmaking. |
| 1958-63 |
Documentary film practice is
transformed by the introduction of lightweight 16mm professional cameras and
portable tape recorders utilizing the Pilitone system to synchronize
soundtrack to image track during shooting. The new documentary, called
"uncontrolled," "observational," or Direct Cinema in the United States and
Canada, cinéma verité in France, seeks to study individuals and
situations on a moment-by-moment basis. |
| 1959 |
Alain Resnais's Hiroshima mon
amour and François Truffaut's The 400 Blows win at Cannes and
confer international prestige to a growing young French film movement, la
nouvelle vague. |
| |
The portable Nagra tape recorder is
developed by Swiss inventor Stefan Kudelski. |
| |
Launching of film festivals in
Barcelona and Moscow. |
| |
Robert Frank’s The Americans
is a controversial and ironic commentary on the emptiness of modern America. |
| |
Nikon F is introduced. |
| |
Bob Noyce of Fairchild
Semiconductor, U.S., prints an entire electronic circuit on a single crystal
or microchip of silicon using a photographic process. This breakthrough
enables the computer revolution to begin. |
| 1960 |
Federico Fellini's La dolce vita,
Michelangelo Antonioni's L'avventura, and Luchino Visconti's Rocco
and His Brothers spearhead the European art cinema's modern turn. |
| |
Breathless, Jean-Luc
Godard's debut feature |
| |
Karel Reisz's Saturday Night and
Sunday Morning, is one of a cycle of British "Kitchen Sink" films
dealing with everyday working-class life. |
| |
Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho
and Michael Powell's Peeping Tom break new ground for representations
of violence and criminal pathology. |
| |
First ruby laser is built by
Theodore Maiman. |
| |
First successful hologram is
produced. |
| |
EG&G develops an extreme depth
underwater camera for U.S. Navy. |
| 1960s |
American drive-in theater
attendance peaks, then begins to decline as a
new exhibition trend makes its appearance in the latter half of the decade:
the shopping mall multiplex. |
| |
Cinema, youth, and political
cultures meet to produce several "new waves" around the world, most notably
in Brazil, Britain, Czechoslovakia, France, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Latin
America, Poland, and Yugoslavia. |
| |
Commercial color film is perfected. |
| 1961 |
Eastman Kodak introduces faster
Kodachrome II color film. |
| |
Alain Resnais's Last Year at
Marienbad, is a touchstone of reflexive, cerebral art cinema. |
| |
Chronicle of a Summer by
Jean Rouch and Edgar Morin, an experiment in collaborative ethnography and
cinéma verité techniques. |
| |
New York premiere of John
Cassavetes's Shadows, a gritty, improvisational film exploring the
theme of "passing for white" against the backdrop of white racism. |
| |
In Hong Kong, the Shaw Brothers (Shaoshi)
builds Movietown, a 46-acre
complex of studios, sets, laboratory facilities, and dormitories. |
| |
Notable films include Blake
Edwards's Breakfast at Tiffany’s and Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins’s
West Side Story. |
| |
Also in History: First manned space
flight. |
| 1962 |
Terence Young's Dr. No,
stars Sean Connery as Cold War superspy
James Bond. |
| |
Glauber Rocha's Barravento,
is a foundation work for Brazil's Cinema Nôvo movement. |
| |
New York Filmmaker's Co-op is
organized by Jonas Mekas to support the production, distribution, and
exhibition of experimental and avant-garde film. |
| |
After a decade as Hollywood's
reigning starlet, Marilyn Monroe dies of a drug overdose. |
| |
David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia
stars Peter O’Toole and Omar Sharif. |
| 1962-64 |
Stan Brakhage's Dog Star Man,
emblematic of a cycle of lyric films aiming to record the act of seeing, the
flow of imagination, and the sensation of emotion. |
| 1962-69 |
The major Hollywood studios are
bought by and become subsidiaries of American conglomerates. |
| 1963 |
The film director as superstar:
Federico Fellini's 8½. |
| |
Senegalese writer/director Ousmane
Sembene's Borom Sarret is the first indigenous black African film. |
| |
William Asher's Beach Party,
is the first in a series of teen-oriented beach films starring Frankie
Avalon and Annette Funicello. |
| |
Foundation of the Swedish Film
Institute, revolutionary in its system of awards to quality films. |
| |
Alfred Hitchock’s The Birds |
| |
President Kennedy is shot to death
in Dallas by a sniper, Lee Harvey Oswald. |
| |
Also in History: Racial clashes,
civil rights demonstrations, mass march in Washington |
| |
Civil Right Demonstration,
Birmingham by Charles Moore |
| |
126 Cartridge / Instamatic Cameras
are introduced. |
| |
Polaroid introduces instant color
film. |
| 1964 |
Police arrest theater owners on
obscenity charges in Los Angeles and New York City for screening Jack
Smith's Flaming Creatures and Kenneth Anger's Scorpio Rising,
two scandalous works of the American underground. |
| |
Popular films: Robert Stevenson’s
Mary Poppins, George Cukor’s My Fair Lady, Blake Edwards’s
The Pink Panther. |
| 1965 |
Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville,
is a stylized science-fiction adventure set in the future and shot entirely
on location in Paris. |
| |
Introduction of Super 8, a new
amateur format. |
| |
David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago. |
| |
Robert Wise’s The Sound of
Music. |
| 1965-73 |
Also in History: Vietnam War. |
| 1966 |
Michelangelo Antonioni's Blow-Up,
emblematic of pop art cinema and of "Swinging London". |
| |
Gillo Pontecorvo's The Battle of
Algiers relocates neorealism in Third World struggles. |
| |
Andy Warhol's Chelsea Girls,
a two-screen film with random reel order,
is the first mainstream success of the American underground. |
| |
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf,
the first American film released with a rating ("SM"–Suggested for Mature
Audience). |
| 1967 |
Mike Nichols's The Graduate
and Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde garner huge ticket sales by
appealing to young anti-establishment audiences. |
| |
Wavelength, a famous
Structural film by Canadian Michael Snow. |
| |
Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn
star in the last of nine films they made together in Stanley Kramer’s
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. |
| |
Also in History: Protests over
Vietnam reach climax when 35,000 demonstrate outside the Pentagon. |
| 1967-73 |
European art films link social with
sexual revolutions: Vilgot Sjöman's I Am Curious–Yellow, Pier Paolo
Pasolini's Teorema, Dušan Makavejev's WR: Mysteries of the
Organism. |
| 1968 |
Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space
Odyssey, is a science fiction film of great technical accomplishment and
a visionary quality without precedent. |
| |
Argentinean filmmakers Fernando
Solanas and Octavio Getino's Hour of the Furnaces and Cuban director
Tomás Gutiérrez Alea's Memories of Underdevelopment, key works of the
New Latin American cinema. |
| |
The Motion Picture Producers of
America (MPPA, formerly MPPDA) introduces a new four-point ratings system
ranging from "G" to "X" to replace the now defunct Production Code. |
| |
Student demonstrations in
Czechoslovakia, France, Japan, Spain, the
United States, and West Germany generate a wave of politically engaged
collective filmmaking. |
| |
Launching of the Journées
Cinématographiques de Carthage, an important festival for Arab cinema held
biennially in Tunis. |
| |
Also in History: Assassination of
Martin Luther King. |
| |
Also in History: Tet offensive
staggers Vietnam. |
| |
Vietnam Execution by Eddie
Adams (Viet Cong officer killed). |
| |
Robert Kennedy Moments After He
Was Shot by Bill Eppridge. |
| |
Photograph of Earth from the moon. |
| 1969 |
Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch
and Dennis Hopper's Easy Rider criticize the American myth of
individual freedom and appeal to a growing anti-Vietnam War protest
movement; John Schlesinger's X-rated Midnight Cowboy wins the Academy
Award for Best Picture. |
| |
Launching of the Pan-African Film
and Television Festival (FESPACO) in Ougadougou, Burkina Faso. |
| |
Also in History: Woodstock
Festival. |
| |
Man’s First Moon Walk by
Neil Armstrong. |
| 1970 |
David and Labert Maysles's Gimme Shelter,
is part of an emerging genre of "rockumentaries". |
| |
The IMAX process is introduced at Expo '70 in
Osaka, Japan. |
| |
African filmmakers create the Fédération Pan-Africaine
des Cinéastes (FEPACI), an association of more than 30 countries aiming to
solve common problems. |
| |
American photographer, Eliot Porter publishes
the collection of wildlife photos, Appalachian Wilderness. |
| 1970s |
As American horror and science-fiction films
are revived, the Western
and the movie musical go into decline. |
| |
Formation of "New Cinemas" in West Germany,
Australia, and the USSR. |
| |
German-born British photographer Bill Brandt
and American photographer Jerry Uelsmann practice the movement toward the
fantastic in photography through manipulation. |
| 1971 |
Melvin Van Peebles's independently made
Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, is a breakthrough in black film and
the establishes the black hero within popular American cinema. |
| |
Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange, is
the first film to employ the
Dolby noise reduction system during sound recording. |
| |
Hollis Frampton's (nostalgia), is a key
work of American Structural cinema examining elements of film form. |
| |
Also in History: Voyager I & II space probes
are launched. |
| 1972 |
Luis Buñuel's The Discreet Charm of the
Bourgeoisie, is a lucid and absurdist commentary on social pretensions. |
| |
Jean-Luc Godard and Edgar Morin's Tout va
bien, is an exemplary work of Brechtian cinema. |
| |
The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant is
the first of a series of "Hollywood revisionist" political melodramas
directed by West German, Rainer Werner Fassbinder. |
| |
Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather. |
| |
British researcher Godfrey Hounsfield develops
a computerized axiom
tomography CAT scanner to cross sectionally x-ray the brain. |
| |
Terror of War: children on Route 1 near
Trang Bang by Huynh Cong(Nick) Ut. |
| |
Pocket Instamatic Camera-110 is introduced. |
| |
Polaroid introduces one-step instant
photography with the SX-70 camera. |
| 1973 |
Bernardo Bertolucci's Italo-French coproduction
Last Tango in Paris
generates controversy for its sexual frankness. |
| |
Enter the Dragon, the first Hollywood
kung-fu film and the last of a series of internationally successful martial
arts movies starring Asian American Bruce Lee. |
| |
Erotic film Deep Throat ruled
indisputably and irredeemably obscene. |
| |
Also in History: Vietnam peace agreement is
signed. |
| 1974 |
The commercial and critical success of Francis
Ford Coppola's The
Godfather, Part II proves the viability of sequels. |
| |
Erotic and pornographic films reach widespread,
international audiences with Just Jaeckin's Emmanuelle and Gerard
Damiano's Deep Throat. |
| |
Ousmane Sembene's Xala |
| |
West German government signs the Film and
Television Agreement, earmarking state funds for script development and
offering favorable terms for joint productions between film and television. |
| |
Stan Brakhage's experimental film The Text
of Light. |
| |
Also in History: The two-year Watergate crisis
ends. Nixon resigns. |
| 1975 |
Chantal Akerman's Jeanne Dielman, 23,
Quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles and Marguerite Duras's
India Song, influential in the development of modern feminist film
practice. |
| |
The "event" status of Steven Spielberg's
Jaws, the first film to surpass $100 million in rentals, marks the
arrival of the New Hollywood: saturation advance television advertising,
commercial tie-ins, enormous budgets, and summer release become strategies
for creating blockbusters. |
| |
With the launching of America's first
commercially available geo-stationary orbit satellite, SATCOM I, Home Box
Office (HBO) initiates pay-cable television boom. |
| |
Sony Corporation introduces Betamax videotape. |
| |
India surpasses Japan as the world's most
prolific film-producing nation. |
| 1976 |
Nagisa Oshima's In the Realm of the Senses
directly challenges the Japanese system of film censorship that conceals sex
and permits violence. |
| |
Taxi Driver propels director Martin
Scorsese and actor Robert De Niro to stardom. |
| |
The Steadicam, a camera stabilizing system, is
first used to film sequences in Rocky. |
| |
American photographer Richard Avedon publishes
the collection Portraits. |
| |
Canon AE-1 first 35mm camera with built in
microprocessor is introduced. |
| 1977 |
The success of George Lucas's Star Wars
leads theater owners to install Dolby sound systems. |
| |
John Badham's Saturday Night Fever,
starring John Travolta, demonstrates the multimedia potential of movie hits
and keys a shift from the traditional Hollywood musical to the "music
movie". |
| |
Matsushita Electric Industrial Company
introduces its video home system (VHS), setting off a battle for the
home-video market. |
| |
Launching of the Hong Kong Film Festival. |
| |
American photographer Cindy Sherman creates the
photographic series Untitled Film Stills. |
| |
Apple home computer is introduced. |
| 1978 |
John Carpenter's Halloween, initiator of
a cycle of stalker-slasher films. |
| |
Egyptian Youssef Chahine's Alexandria...
Why?, is the first of a celebrated trilogy of autobiographical films
that form the fullest self-portrait yet achieved by a Third World filmmaker. |
| |
New German films delve into Germany's Nazi
legacy: Rainer Werner Fassbinder's The Marriage of Maria Braun and
Hans-Jürgen Sybergberg's Hitler: A Film from Germany. |
| |
Konica introduces first point-and-shoot,
autofocus camera. |
| 1979 |
George Miller's Mad Max launches the
career of Mel Gibson and generates a cycle of masculinist action films to
replace the period film, the flagship genre of 1970s Australian cinema. |
| |
Launching of the International Festival of
Latin American Cinema in Havana, Cuba. |
| |
Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now. |
| 1980 |
Also in History: President Carter fails in a
daring plan to rescue 53 American hostages by a helicopter raid on Tehran. |
| |
Also in History: Ronald Reagan becomes 40th
president of the United States. |
| |
Sony demonstrates first consumer camcorder. |
| 1980-85 |
Scitex, Hell, and Crossfield introduce computer
imaging systems. |
| 1980s |
The age of the media empires: in the wake of
unprecedented profits, Hollywood studios are purchased by financial
interests lying outside the United States. |
| 1981 |
MTV begins broadcasting. |
| 1982 |
Jean-Jacques Bienix's Diva, the first of
a series of French thrillers combining punk/new wave guerilla aesthetics and
New Hollywood publicity and video style. |
| |
Steven Spielberg's E.T.­The
Extraterrestrial is the first film to surpass $200 million in rentals. |
| |
Yellow Earth, directed by Chen Kaige and
photographed by Zhang Yimou, offers critical insight into China's
contemporary political culture through austere landscape cinematography and
sparse dialogue. |
| 1982-85 |
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher cuts
government funding for film production, thrusting television producer
Channel 4 into a central position for film production. |
| 1984 |
Edgar Reitz's sixteen-hour Heimat, a
programmatic response to the American miniseries Holocaust, is
screened as a film in two parts at European festivals and released as an
eleven-part television series in Germany. |
| |
MPPA rating system is revised to include a
"PG-13" category. |
| |
Founding of Eurimages, a fund for European film
coproduction. |
| |
George Eastman House west garden restored. |
| |
Canon demonstrates first electronic still
camera. |
| |
Japanese newspapers cover the opening of the
Olympics in Los Angeles with Canon RC-701 Still Video Cameras and analog
transmitter. |
| 1985 |
Claude Lanzmann's Shoah, a twelve-hour
documentary of the Nazis' extermination of Polish Jews structured on
interviews with witnesses, survivors, and former Nazis. |
| |
Cable-TV mogul Ted Turner and publishing
magnate Rupert Murdoch buy MGM and 20th Century-Fox, respectively. |
| |
Rambo, a militarist fantasy typical of
Reagan-era Hollywood cinema. |
| |
Also in History: Mikhail Gorbachev becomes
Soviet leader promising perestroika and policy of glasnost. |
| |
Richard Avedon's The Great American West. |
| |
Minolta Maxxum 7000 auto-focus, 35mm SLR. |
| |
Pixar introduces digital imaging processor. |
| 1986 |
David Lynch's Blue Velvet |
| |
Canadian films attract international attention:
Patricia Rozema's I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, Denys Arcand's
The Decline of the American Empire, Atom Egoyan's Family Viewing. |
| |
John Woo's A Better Tomorrow starring
Chow Yun-Fat breaks box-office records in Hong Kong and initiates a cycle of
"hero films". |
| |
Half of major American film companies' domestic
revenues come from videocassette sales. |
| |
Joel Peter Witkin's The Kiss |
| |
World conference establishes standards for
sound, video, and digital recordings. |
| |
Minolta introduces first professional auto
focus camera, the Maxxum 9000. |
| 1987 |
Wim Wenders's Wings of Desire, a film
about Berlin and Germany's past and present. |
| |
Katsuhiro Otomo's Akira brings
international attention to the feature-length science-fiction Japanese
cartoon, or anime. |
| |
Eastman Kodak announces the 1.4
megapixel CCD for digital cameras. |
| |
The 12 nations of the European Community (EC)
found MEDIA and the European Film Distribution Office to offer financial
incentives for distributors to handle imported films. |
| |
Canal +, a French cable television company,
becomes the major source of funding for filmmaking in France. |
| |
Canon produces RC-760 Still Video Camera with a
600,000 pixel CCD. |
| |
USA Today begins to cover special events
with the Canon RC-760 camera. |
| |
Both Kodak and Fuji introduce novel disposable
cameras, such as the Kodak Fling. |
| 1987-89 |
New archive building constructed at George
Eastman House for storage and display of the Museum's collections. |
| 1988 |
Robert Zemeckis's Who Framed Roger Rabbit?,
is a triumph of animation technique combining cartoon characters with
live-action. |
| |
Vasily Pichul's Little Vera contains the
first sex scene in Soviet cinema and becomes a hallmark for glasnost
filmmaking. |
| |
Pédro Almodóvar's Women on the Verge of a
Nervous Breakdown, an energetic melodrama/sex comedy from Spain. |
| |
Arnold Newman: Five Decades
retrospective at the New York Historical Society. Black-and-white portraits
of famous people photographed during his career. |
| |
Garry Winogrand's massive retrospective at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York City and the book Winogrand: Figments
From the Real World. |
| |
Sony and Fuji announce new digital cameras. |
| |
Eastman Kodak announces a 4 megapixel CCD. |
| |
PhotoMac is the first image manipulation
program available for the Macintosh computer. |
| 1988-89 |
Polish director Krzysztof Kieslowski receives
international recognition for The Decalogue, a ten-part work made for
Polish television. |
| 1989 |
Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing examines
black oppression within a multi-ethnic urban environment. |
| |
Sony Corporation buys Columbia Pictures from
Coca-Cola; Time Inc. purchases Warner Communications, Inc. |
| |
In the wake of the Tiananmen Square Massacre,
China blocks the release of Zhang Yimou's Ju Dou, an angry critique
of patriarchy starring Gong Li. |
| |
After The Massacre In Beijing One Man Faces
Down The Army by Stuart Franklin. |
| |
Also in History: Berlin Wall pulled down. |
| |
Sony announces MCV-5000 twin ship camera with
two separate CCD elements for luminance and chrominance. |
| |
Letraset releases Color Studio 1.0 (TM), the
first professional image manipulation program for Macintosh computers. |
| 1989-90 |
Following the dismantling of the Soviet bloc,
film companies are privatized and western films are welcomed in eastern
Europe. |
| |
George Eastman House restored; Terrace garden
restored; Library garden rehabilitated |
| 1990 |
Kodak announces the development of its Photo CD
system. |
| |
Controversy over Philip Kaufman's Henry &
June causes the MPAA to create a new rating, "NC-17". |
| |
Hou Hsiao-Hsien's City of Sadness
broaches sensitive issues of Taiwanese history and identity. |
| |
Matsushita purchases the Music Corporation of
America (MCA), parent company of Universal Pictures, for $6 billion. |
| |
Adobe Photoshop 1.0 (TM) is the second
professional image manipulation program available for Macintosh computers. |
| |
Dycam releases an electronic camera for
business imaging applications. |
| |
Eastman Kodak prototypes an electronic camera
back designed for the needs of photojournalists. |
| 1990-92 |
Grape arbor and rock garden at George Eastman
House restored. |
| 1990s |
The "Eurofilm," with diversified funding from
six or more different countries, comes of age. |
| 1991 |
The Kodak Professional Digital Camera System is
introduced. |
| |
Jonathan Demme's The Silence of the Lambs,
the first horror film to win an Academy Award for Best Picture. |
| |
Peter Greenaway's Prospero's Books makes
extensive use of computer paintbox and window technologies. |
| |
Also in History: The Gulf War. |
| |
Sony releases the SEPS-1000 Digital Studio
Camera for modest quality advertising. |
| |
Rollei and Arca Swiss announce their digital
studio cameras. |
| |
Electronic imaging plays an important role in
coverage of the Gulf War. Although most still-image photojournalists on the
scene use conventional cameras and film for shooting, electronic techniques
are widely employed to transmit the pictures home. |
| 1992 |
James Cameron's Terminator 2: Judgment Day,
exemplary in its use of digital computer technology. |
| |
Banking concerns in France, Germany, and
Luxembourg form Films Ltd. to finance major coproduction projects. |
| |
Leaf Systems announces the Leaf camera back for
studio cameras, such as Hasselblad or Sinar. |
| 1993 |
Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park
surpasses E.T. as the top-grossing movie of all time. The film's
creatures were generated by computer. |
| |
Jane Campion's The Piano is part of a
worldwide cycle of "Heritage films," often adapted from acclaimed works of
literature and notable for their exquisite attention to period detail and
for reaching beyond the traditional art-film audience to the mainstream. |
| |
Nikon, Canon, Leaf Systems, and others announce
new digital cameras for photojournalists and studio photographers
respectively. |
| |
LivePicture image manipulation software is
announced by HSC, Inc. |
| |
Adobe Photoshop is available for MS-DOS/Windows
platforms. |
| 1994 |
Robert Zemeckis's Forrest Gump adds
digitally fabricated figures to historically famous documentary film
footage. |
| |
Apple Computer, Sony, and Kodak announce new
digital cameras. |
| |
Apple Computer introduces RISC technology to
the desktop computer market with the new PowerPC line. |
| |
Associated Press announces the AP/Kodak NC2000
digital camera for photojournalists. |
| 1995 |
Toy Story, the first full-length feature
composed completely of computer animation. |
| |
The film Lumière et Cie (Lumière and Company)
by 39 contemporary filmmakers - including directors Spike Lee, the
producer-director team of Ismail Merchant and James Ivory, and Zhang Yimou -
is made under the conditions in which the Lumière cameramen had worked,
using a restored Cinématographe camera and with film prepared according to
the original Lumière formula. |
| 1996 |
Advanced Photo System (APS) is introduced, a
new system of photography integrating a 24-mm film format, cameras, and
photofinishing equipment. Features of the system include: leaderless
cassette, easy loading and unloading, smaller cameras, three print formats -
standard, moderate wide-angle, and panoramic - interchangeable on the same
roll of film. |
| |
Advantix Camera is introduced. |
| |
Bill Gates releases Windows 95. |
| 1997-99 |
Front lawn rehabilitation at George Eastman
House. |
| 1998 |
Opening of George Eastman Archive and Study
Center at George Eastman House. |